Pakistan jets pound militant hide-outs, kill 9
DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — Pakistani jets pounded militant hide-outs along the Afghan border overnight as hundreds of thousands of civilians fled South Waziristan in anticipation of an expected government offensive there, government officials said Wednesday.
Government officials have threatened an operation in the lawless border area for months, but they said a string of recent suicide bombings blamed on the Taliban has strengthened their resolve to engage in what will likely be a long and bloody confrontation.
About 200,000 people have fled South Waziristan since August, moving in with relatives or renting homes in the Tank and Dera Ismail Khan areas in an exodus that has continued in recent days, a local government official said. About half of them registered with the government as displaced people, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
While there are no recent census data from South Waziristan, estimates of the population hover around 500,000.
Police officer Naimatullah Khan said that over the past few days 80 vehicles a day carried fleeing families past the Chonda checkpoint on the edge of the region, where security officials where screening the departing civilians.
Military jets have been hitting suspected Taliban strongholds in the region for weeks. The airstrikes have grown more frequent in recent days in what appears to be an effort to soften up the militants ahead of a ground assault.
Haji Ayub Mehsud, 55, said the increased bombing over the past three days left him no choice but to flee along backroads with his six children.
“It is difficult for local people to stay there in peace. I had to bring out my family,” Mehsud told an AP reporter after passing through Chonda checkpoint, where he had to go through the screening.
The military launched a new wave of air attacks across the militant heartland late Tuesday and early Wednesday, hitting at least five different areas, two intelligence officials said. One attack on a hide-out in Makeen killed three insurgents, and another in Barwand killed six, they said. Meanwhile, forces in an army camp in Razmak shelled militant positions in the surrounding mountains, they said.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Independent confirmation of the attacks was not available. The army has barred reporters from the region.
Pakistan has been hit by four major terrorist attacks over the last 10 days, including a suicide bombing of a U.N. office in the capital, Islamabad, and a 22-hour siege over the weekend of the army’s headquarters just outside the capital.
The military says 80 percent of the attacks in Pakistan are planned from South Waziristan but that militants from the Punjab province in the heart of the country helped the Taliban with the assault on army headquarters.
The U.S. has encouraged Pakistan to take strong action against insurgents who are using its soil as a base for attacks in Afghanistan, where U.S. troops are bogged down in an increasingly difficult war. But a push into rugged South Waziristan could be difficult for the army, which was beaten back on three previous offensives into the Taliban heartland there and forced to sign peace deals.
An army spokesman declined to say when the South Waziristan offensive would begin and gave no indication it was imminent.
The new airstrikes came as Pakistan’s foreign minister visited Washington to persuade U.S. officials to change the terms of a U.S. aid bill. The legislation promises $1.5 billion a year over the next five years — but on the condition that Pakistan’s weak, U.S.-backed civilian government maintain effective control over the military, including its budgets, the chain of command and top promotions.
Democratic Sen. John Kerry, who co-sponsored the aid bill, sought to soothe anger in Pakistan, saying lawmakers would provide written assurances that the United States has no intention of interfering with Pakistan’s sovereignty.
The objections to the bill have driven a wedge between the military and the government in Islamabad over an aid drive that was supposed to show American support for the country as it battles the insurgents.
Associated Press writers Foster Klug in Washington and Hussain Afzal in Parachinar contributed to this report.
Related News
Pakistan jets attack militants ahead of expected offensive close to Afghan borderOctober 13th, 2009 Pakistan bombs militants close to Afghan borderISLAMABAD — An intelligence official says Pakistani jets have bombed militant targets in an insurgent stronghold close to the Afghan border. The military has been attacking militants in South Waziristan for several months ahead of an expected ground offensive there.
Pakistan yet to decide on Waziristan offensive: MalikSeptember 28th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan's Interior Minister Rehman Malik has said that Islamabad is yet to decide whether it should launch a full-scale military operation in Waziristan to clear Taliban militants from the tribal areas. He, however, said that Pakistan would take necessary action to flush out the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), "the front face of al Qaeda."
"Let's not forget, it's not only the TTP which is operating there.
Pakistan says troops kill 22 militants in Khyber tribal regionSeptember 12th, 2009 Pakistani troops kill 22 militants in northwestISLAMABAD — Hundreds of tribal police in the northwestern Khyber region have quit their jobs because of militant threats, even as Pakistani forces reported killing 22 insurgents in an ongoing military operation there, officials said Saturday. Pakistan is under intense U.S.
Thousands of civilians flee to safety from renewed military operation in northwest PakistanSeptember 6th, 2009 Thousands of civilians flee battles in NW PakistanPESHAWAR, Pakistan — Thousands of civilians have fled Pakistan's northwest Khyber tribal region where the latest military offensive killed 33 more suspected militants Sunday. Pakistan is under intense U.S.
Military: Clashes in restive northwest Pakistan kill 21 militants, 1 soldierJuly 24th, 2009 Military: Clashes kill 21 militants in NW PakistanISLAMABAD — Clashes in northwestern Pakistan, where the army has been winding down an offensive against the Taliban, have left 21 militants and one soldier dead, security forces said Friday. The bloodiest clash occurred in the Lower Dir district, an area near the Afghan border where the paramilitary Frontier Corps said security forces killed 16 militants.
Military: Clashes in restive northwest Pakistan kill 5 militants, 1 soldierJuly 24th, 2009 Military: Clashes kill 5 militants in NW PakistanISLAMABAD — Security forces say clashes in the troubled Swat Valley and nearby areas in Pakistan's northwest have left five militants and a soldier dead. The military issued a statement Friday saying the deaths occurred during search and clearance operations over the previous 24 hours in various parts of Swat.
Intel officials say Pakistani jets kill 6 militants in attack on Taliban hide-out in northwestJuly 18th, 2009 Pakistani jets kill 6 militants in northwestDERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — Pakistani fighter jets destroyed two suspected militant hide-outs near the Afghan border, killing six men believed to be associates of top local Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, intelligence officials said Wednesday. The strikes in South Waziristan flattened the hide-outs of Mehsud's associates in two villages late Tuesday, two intelligence officials said.
Suspected US drone attack kills 12 in PakistanJuly 7th, 2009 Suspected US drone attack kills 12 in PakistanISLAMABAD — Suspected U.S. missiles slammed into a training camp run by Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud on Tuesday, killing at least 12 militants in the latest in a flurry of strikes against him and his followers, intelligence officials said.
Suspected US missile attack kills 12 Taliban militants in northwest PakistanJuly 7th, 2009 Suspected US missiles, Pakistan jets hit militantsISLAMABAD — Suspected U.S. missiles and Pakistani fighter jets attacked followers of a notorious militant leader close to the Afghan border Tuesday, but the army complained the American strikes were hurting its campaign against the country's public enemy No.
Official says suspected US missile strikes hit Taliban targets in Pakistan, at least 5 deadJune 18th, 2009 Suspected US missile strikes in Pakistan kill 5ISLAMABAD — Government officials say five people are dead after suspected U.S. missile strikes hit the hide-outs of a Taliban commander in northwestern Pakistan.
Police say suspected US missile strikes hit Taliban targets in Pakistan, at least 8 deadJune 18th, 2009 Suspected US missile strikes in Pakistan kill 8ISLAMABAD — Suspected U.S. missiles pounded militant hideouts Thursday in the tribal belt near Afghanistan where Pakistani troops are building up for a major offensive against the country's top Taliban leader.
Suicide car bomber kills 5 in Pakistan as residents are urged to flee Taliban strongholdMay 5th, 2009 Suicide bomber kills 5 in northwest PakistanPESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suicide car bomber killed five people near northwestern Pakistan's main city Tuesday, and authorities urged residents to flee a Taliban stronghold where a much-criticized peace deal appears to be unraveling. Violence is building in Pakistan just as President Asif Ali Zardari prepares for talks in Washington this week expected to center on the Obama administration's demands for tough action against militants threatening both nuclear-armed Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan.
Pakistani forces kill 22 militants in tribal areaApril 20th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Twenty-two Taliban militants and two civilians were killed as Pakistani security forces carried out aerial and artillery strikes in two districts of the country's lawless tribal region, officials and residents said Monday. Pakistani jets and helicopters started targeting locations of Islamist insurgents in Orakzai tribal district Sunday, and continued the strikes by Monday noon.
Pakistani forces kill 22 militants in tribal areaApril 20th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Twenty-two Taliban militants and two civilians were killed as Pakistani security forces carried out aerial and artillery strikes in two districts of the country's lawless tribal region, officials and residents said Monday. Pakistani jets and helicopters started targeting locations of Islamist insurgents in Orakzai tribal district Sunday, and continued the strikes by Monday noon.
There is no agreement with US for drone attacks: PakistanJanuary 27th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan has no agreement with the US that allowed drone attacks inside its territory, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Wednesday. 'There is no understanding between Pakistan and the United States on predator attacks,' said Muhammad Sadiq in response to the statement by US Defence Secretary Robert Gates that US would continue such attacks against militants and that Pakistan was aware of this.