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Pakistan to discuss drone attacks with US envoy: spokesman

Air strike kills 20 militants in Afghanistan
A military air strike killed 20 militants in Afghanistan's southern Helmand province following ground clashes between rebels and troops, a spokesman for the US-led force said Thursday. The military said dozens of militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms ambushed foreign and Afghan troops conducting a foot patrol in Helmand, a hotbed of Taliban activity, on Wednesday. Troops returned fire and the enemy pulled back to regroup. "Once the combined elements ensured there were no non-combatants in the area, a precision strike was called to neutralize the enemy," the military said in a statement.

"The information we have says that all 20 of the militants were killed in the precision strike," a US military spokesman told AFP in an email. The militants died in the Kajaki district, the military said, stressing that there were no Afghan or coalition military casualties. On Monday, 30 Taliban-linked militants were killed in a police operation in Afghanistan's southern province of Uruzgan, the interior ministry said. Taliban fighters have led a bloody insurgency against the Western-backed Afghan government and foreign troops since the 2001 US-led invasion ousted the hardline movement from government in Kabul. The insurgency last year reached its deadliest proportions since the invasion and the United States has unveiled a sweeping new strategy designed to defeat the extremists and stabilise the fragile country.

by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) April 2, 2009
Pakistan will take up the issue of missile attacks on militants in its northwest tribal belt during a visit by US special envoy Richard Holbrooke next week, the foreign ministry said Thursday.

Pakistan says the strikes, the most recent of which killed up to 12 militants in the Orakzai tribal district on Wednesday, violate its territorial sovereignty and deepen resentment among its 160 million people.

"Mr Holbrooke is scheduled to visit Pakistan next week. And this issue would come up for our discussions," foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit told a weekly press briefing.

It will be Holbrooke's first visit since US President Barack Obama put Pakistan at the centre of the fight against Al-Qaeda, unveiling a new strategy to commit thousands more troops and billions of dollars to the Afghan war.

A spokesman for the US embassy in Islamabad was not immediately reachable to comment on Holbrooke's schedule.

Asked if Pakistan had lodged a protest with the United States against Wednesday's missile attack from a pilotless aircraft, Basit said: "This is part of our ongoing discussions with the US."

In response to another question on whether Pakistan had made a diplomatic protest to the United States, Basit replied: "Not yet, not in my knowledge."

"They are violations of our sovereignty and secondly they are counterproductive. They are not helpful in our efforts to win hearts and minds. So we cannot accept drone attacks," he said.

He added that Pakistan would work closely with the United States to work out the issue of drone attacks as well as other matters, saying: "We are looking forward to our engagement with the United States in order to formulate fresh approaches."

More than 35 missile strikes have killed over 350 people since August 2008, fanning hostility against the United States and the government in Pakistan, where nearly 1,700 people have been killed in extremist bombings in two years.

Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, has said that Pakistan's border regions pose the toughest challenge in the new US plan to root out extremism, warning the area cast a shadow over efforts in Afghanistan.

"We have to deal with the western Pakistan problem," Holbrooke told reporters on Friday after Obama unveiled his new plan to root out extremism.

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NKorea threatens US spy planes monitoring rocket
Seoul (AFP) April 1, 2009
North Korea threatened Wednesday to shoot down any US spy planes violating its airspace to monitor an imminent rocket launch, depicting itself as the victim -- not the cause -- of missile threats.







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