At least 45 militants were killed in
Pakistan's restive northwest in one of the deadliest strikes by US
drones, signalling Washington's resolve to step up assault on terror
groups in this country despite growing strains in ties with its key
ally. Theunusually heavy barrage of three missile strikes in a span of
12 hours, targeting militant hideouts in north and south Waziristan took
one of the largest death toll in the controversial unacknowledged air
campaign.
The drone attacks
commenced on Monday night when unmanned air craft unleashed nine
missiles into a suspected militant compound and a vehicle in north
Waziristan, killing 25 militants, local officials were quoted by TV
channels as saying. Few hours later, the drone struck again in nearby
South Waziristan firing missiles and killing five militants.
The drones
reappeared early this morning over the area firing two missiles at
another compound in North Waziristan killing 15 militants.
It was the second largest death toll
in drone campaign. In 2009 a missile attack killed 70 militants in south
Waziristan.
The stepped up drone
campaign follows on the heels of Obama Administration's announcement
that it was suspending more than one-third of the massive USD 2 billion
military assistance to Pakistan.
The three attacks in
quick succession indicates that White House has no intention of
stopping the drone campaign that has contributed to tensions between
Washington and Islamabad.
Washington has
called Pakistan's semi-autonomous North West Tribal Region as the most
dangerous place on earth and the global headquarters of dreaded Al Qaeda
and is pressing Islamabad to launch a full scale military operation in
North Waziristan region to strike at Haqqani network faction of the
Taliban. But the Pakistan military claims that its troops are too over
stretched by operations against Taliban in other areas to undertake such
an offensive, but analysts believe that Islamabad is hesitant to cross
militants with whom it has historical links and who could be useful
allies in Afghanistan after foreign forces withdraw.
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