14 May 2010

Another one

Xinhua has the story of the latest drone attack in Pakistan:
U.S. drone aircraft Tuesday morning fired missiles on houses and a car and killed at least fourteen people and injured several others in northwest Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region, local sources said. Locals said drones fired a barrage of eighteen missiles in different locations at Datta Khel, an area near Afghan border and destroyed the hideouts and a vehicle. The nationalities of the dead were not immediately clear, nor was there any information on any possible high-value targets.
Datta Khel, some fifteen kilometers west of Miranshah, the center of North Waziristan, is considered to be the stronghold of Taliban militants and had been under U.S attacks in recent months. Witnesses said they saw a blaze in the Datta Khel mountainous area after the strike, but people could not immediately rush to the site, fearing more strikes. Tribesmen said spy planes were hovering over the region and making low flights before the attack. It is the second U.S strike in the same region in two days and third this month.
On Sunday, U.S. drone aircraft fired missiles at a house and killed at least ten people. Also on 3 May, a U.S unmanned Predator aircraft killed six people. It was not clear who was targeted in the Tuesday's attack, one of the major strikes in months.
U.S authorities claim drone aircraft target militants on intelligence passed on by their agents in the area. Militants allege that Pakistani authorities also provide information for drone attacks. The drone attacks routinely target Taliban and al-Qaeda commanders in Pakistan's lawless tribal regions along the Afghanistan border. Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-Americanism among the population, it is believed that it was sharing intelligence with the U.S. about the insurgents and their hideouts.
More than 900 people have been killed in more than 90 U.S. strikes in Pakistan since August 2008, with a surge in the past year as U.S. President Barack Obama has put Pakistan at the heart of his fight against al-Qaeda.
The U.S. has stepped up strikes in North Waziristan after Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud appeared in a video with Hammam Khalil Al-Balawi, the Jordanian suicide bomber who killed seven CIA operatives in a forward base in Afghanistan's Khost province in December last year.

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