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US drone strikes kill 11 militants in Pakistan: officials

Taliban shadow governor killed in Afghanistan: police
Kunduz, Afghanistan (AFP) Dec 31, 2010 - A top Taliban commander and his bodyguard were killed during an overnight operation by Afghan and NATO forces in northern Afghanistan, police said on Friday. Mawlawi Bahadur was killed Thursday night in Chahar Dara, a militant-plagued district of Kunduz province, provincial police spokesman Haroon Aryayenezhad told AFP. Bahadur was the Tailban's shadow governor for the northern Afghan province. One of his bodyguards was also killed and four others accompanying him injured in the operation, Aryayenezhad said. "Mullah Bahadur was appointed as Taliban Governor for Kunduz province around two months ago," he said.

"He (Bahadur) was directly responsible for organising military operations against Afghan and Coalition troops in Kunduz province," Aryayenezhad added. ISAF confirmed that an operation "targeting people who worked closely with the Taliban shadow governor in the province" took place in Chahar Dara district on Thursday night. The alliance said one man had been killed in the operation but would not confirm his identity. The Taliban have been waging a nine-year insurgency which 140,000 US-led NATO troops are battling in order to hand security control to the Afghan government by 2014. The militia operates "shadow" administrations in all 34 provinces.

Taliban spokesmen were not immediately available to comment. The security situation in the northern provinces of Kunduz and Baghlan has deteriorated over the past two years. Hundreds of NATO and Afghan troops launched an offensive on Tuesday around the city of Kunduz as part of efforts to eliminate the Taliban from their stronghold in northern Afghanistan, Aryayenezhad said. On December 19, two militants wearing suicide vests stormed and took control of an Afghan army recruitment centre in Kunduz city, the provincial capital. They were shot by Afghan and NATO troops, after a day-long siege. Four Afghan policemen and four Afghan soldiers were killed in the gun battle.
by Staff Writers
Miranshah, Pakistan (AFP) Jan 1, 2011
Two US missile attacks in Pakistan's lawless tribal belt on Saturday killed at least 11 militants and destroyed a Taliban compound, local officials said.

The attacks took place in Mandi Khel, 25 kilometres (15 miles) north of Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan tribal agency along the Afghan border and a known hub of the al-Qaeda-linked Haqqani network.

The organisation, created by Afghan warlord Jalaluddin Haqqani, fights foreign troops in Afghanistan from bases in North Waziristan.

Seven militants were killed in the first attack when US drones fired four missiles and destroyed a car and a militant compound, officials said.

"Two US drones fired four missiles. At least seven militants have been killed," one security official in Miranshah told AFP.

"Three militants were killed in the car while four were killed in the house," a security official in Peshawar told AFP.

In the second attack, a US drone fired two missiles and killed four militants, officials said.

A security official in Peshawar said militants had gathered to rescue the injured and remove the dead from the first attack when they were hit by the US drone.

The 11 men who died were thought to be attached to Taliban commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur, security officials in Miranshah and Peshawar told AFP.

One security official at Miranshah said they are seeking more information as informants in the area suspect there were foreigners among the dead.

"We have received such reports that four foreigners were also killed in these fresh attacks but their identity are still not known and we are collecting more information," the official said.

The US does not confirm drone attacks but its military and the CIA operating in Afghanistan are the only forces that deploy the unmanned aircraft in the region.

The covert campaign last year doubled missile attacks in the tribal area, where more than 100 drone strikes killed over 670 people in 2010, compared with 45 strikes that killed 420 in 2009, according to an AFP tally.

Pakistan tacitly cooperates with the bombing campaign, which US officials say has severely weakened Al-Qaeda's leadership.

But it has stalled on launching a ground offensive in North Waziristan, saying its troops are overstretched.

The US strikes are deeply unpopular among the Pakistani public, who see military action on Pakistani soil as a breach of national sovereignty and say some attacks have killed innocent civilians.

Washington says the strikes have killed a number of high-value targets, including the former Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud.



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As the United States pressed ahead with a grinding campaign in Afghanistan in 2010, President Barack Obama dramatically escalated another war across the border in Pakistan, using robotic planes to pound Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants. The effect of the expanding covert war remains unclear and some skeptics have warned civilian casualties from the strikes could ultimately feed extremism in Pa ... read more







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