U.S. Drone Takes Out Jihadi Bigwigs In Pakistan - Taliban Parade Soldiers
Debka:
US missile strikes Taliban or al Qaeda hideout, killing 10 people, in Miran Shah, capital of Pakistan’s North Waziristan
Later, armed men surrounded the scene, 20 km from the Afghan border, and carried away the dead and wounded. DEBKAfile reports that al Qaeda makes it a rule to evacuate the dead and wounded so as not to disclose their identities, especially when a prominent operative is hit.
Witnesses reported seeing a drone flying in from the West before a big explosion.
Two foreigners, usually associated with al Qaeda in the tribal regions, were among the dead, according to locals. They said the house targeted was a training base for insurgents loyal to Baitullah Mehsud, leader of Pakistan-based Taliban terrorists who are blamed for suicide attacks which have killed 400 people since July.
The attack, denied by a US military spokesman, took place as U.S. Central Command chief Adm. William Fallon was in Pakistan to meet President Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
Suspected US missiles have struck extremist hideouts in Pakistan’s tribal regions in the past but were never acknowledged.
Muslim extremists have spread out of Pakistan’s tribal belt to the Swat Valley, beyond the North-West Frontier Province, where pro-Taliban cleric Maulana Fazlullah is trying to impose strict Sharia law on formerly Buddhist villages. Friday, masked men paraded 48 men claimed to be Pakistan paramilitary troops who had surrendered in clashes after 2,500 troops were moved into the valley.
AFP:
esidents said drones flew over the village of Danday Darpakhel before two missiles hit, one of which destroyed a house formerly owned by Mullah Dadullah, the late Taliban military commander killed in Afghanistan in May 2007.
It was not clear who fired the missiles. Pakistan’s army said it was not involved while the US-led coalition in Afghanistan, the only force known to operate drones in the area, said it was not aware of any activity in the area.
“There was a roar in the sky, we feared it was an air raid but we saw no jets. Then there was a huge blast,” Noor Mohammad, a student at a religious school in the region’s nearby main town of Miranshah, told AFP.
Missile attacks have claimed the lives of several militants in Pakistan’s volatile tribal belt. A US Predator drone targeted Al-Qaeda’s deputy leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in January 2006, killing several rebels but missing him.
Local sources said at least nine militants were killed and 11 others wounded in Friday’s blast. Two foreigners — usually associated with Al-Qaeda in the tribal regions — were among the dead, they said, quoting injured rebels.
They said the house was used as a training camp by insurgents loyal to Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of Pakistan-based Taliban militants who have been blamed for a string of suicide attacks that have killed 400 people since July.
In the latest attack a bomber struck an air force bus on Thursday, killing eight people, while a twin suicide attack on former premier Benazir Bhutto’s homecoming on October 18 killed 139 people.
The violence in the lawless tribal belt has been spreading into “mainland” Pakistan, with security forces clashing with followers of a pro-Taliban cleric calling for Islamic law in the northwestern tourist spot of Swat this week.
Masked rebels in Swat on Friday paraded 48 men who said they were paramilitary troops who had surrendered after their hilltop position was surrounded.
The Islamist fighters freed the men later Friday and gave each of them 500 rupees (eight dollars). Pakistani military and government spokesmen had earlier denied that any troops were captured.
“We had exhausted our rations and ammunition. We had no option but to surrender,” one of the captured men, who did not give his name and like the others was not wearing his uniform, told reporters in the town of Charbagh.
Pakistan moved 2,500 troops into Swat last week to counter cleric Maulana Fazlullah, who is also known as “Mullah Radio” for his speeches on his private radio station, in which he calls for a holy war on the authorities.
Fazlullah, who runs a banned group that sent thousands of fighters into Afghanistan after the US-led invasion to topple the Taliban in late 2001, is demanding the imposition of strict Islamic Sharia law in Swat.
The militants have taken control of several villages in the scenic Swat Valley, which was once best known for its ancient Buddhist heritage and relics, and set up checkpoints.
The violence has fuelled fears that military ruler Musharraf, who seized power in a coup in 1999, may impose an emergency or even martial law in the face of mounting political opposition and a hostile Supreme Court.
The court is due to rule in the coming two weeks on appeals against Musharraf’s contested victory in an October 6 presidential vote.
Ya know, it could’ve been a CIA drone, those guys do good dirty work.
November 2nd, 2007 at 9:19 pmThe only good Taliban is one who is in jail or dead. Good job CIA…or whoever…
November 2nd, 2007 at 10:03 pmIts a plane.
November 2nd, 2007 at 10:25 pmNo, its a bird.
No, its ah….OH SHIT!!!
Personally, I prefer dead Taliban, all you have to do is leave them to the buzzards.
November 3rd, 2007 at 4:29 amLet’s say you aren’t to happy with your new neighbors in the Village. So you plant an IED in the floor of the meeting house and have a few local dupes claim they saw a Predator designed to fly at what, say 40,000 ft., doing a pop-up rollahead low level attack.
If you’re one of the illiterate unwashed it probably sounds pretty plausible to you.
Anyway, it matters not to me who got ‘em.
AMF……..hope your virgins aren’t so ugly no one wanted ‘em. LOL
K
November 3rd, 2007 at 6:53 amHave to wonder if this is connected to today’s ‘emergency’.
November 3rd, 2007 at 12:44 pm