US-led forces kill 24 militants on Pakistan border
MIRANSHAH, Pakistan (Reuters) – U.S.-led forces killed 24
suspected Islamist militants on the Pakistan side of the Afghan
border, Pakistan’s military spokesman said on Friday.
The fighters, believed to belong to pro-Taliban and al
Qaeda forces, were killed crossing into Pakistan late on
Thursday near Lowara Mandi, a border village in the North
Waziristan tribal region, Major-General Shaukat Sultan said.
“Apparently these people were trying to escape into
Pakistani territory when they were hit by coalition forces.
Their bodies are, of course, with the Pakistani authorities,”
Sultan told Reuters.
“They are foreigners and suspected Taliban. They could be
Afghans and people of central Asian origin,” he added.
Paramilitary sources in North Waziristan said the militants
had fired missiles at a base for U.S.-led and Afghan forces
some three km (two miles) across the border.
“The coalition forces returned fire using rockets and heavy
weapons,” a paramilitary official told Reuters.
A witness said he saw U.S. helicopters engaged in the
attack, while Geo television said the fighters were killed by a
missile.
Sultan said the U.S. side had informed their Pakistani
counterparts before opening fire on the fleeing militants, but
there would still be a check to see whether there had been any
violation of Pakistani territory or airspace.
Pakistan has bridled in the past at U.S. forces’ sorties
across the border in the area around Lowara Mandi.
A U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan said he had no
information about the incident.
Tension has been building for months in North Waziristan
since the Pakistan Army completed a series of offensives to
dislodge al Qaeda bases in neighboring South Waziristan.
On Thursday, a Pakistani general warned tribes in North
Waziristan of an imminent offensive to flush out foreign
militants, including al Qaeda fighters.
At a meeting with tribal elders, Major-General Akram Sahi,
commander of Pakistani troops in North Waziristan, gave the
tribesmen 24 hours to hand over suspected militants.
Lieutenant General David Barno, head of the U.S.-led forces
in Afghanistan, said last April that Pakistan was planning a
big offensive in North Waziristan. His comments prompted
irritated retorts from Pakistan’s military.
Pakistan risked the wrath of the volatile Pashtun tribes
when it first sent the army into their homelands in late 2003
to hunt suspected al Qaeda and Taliban militants.
