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Suspected US missiles kill six in Pakistan

Residents said they heard US aircraft and pilotless Predator drones flying above the area before and after the strike, adding that there had been alarm over similar flights throughout the weekend.
by Staff Writers
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) July 28, 2008
A suspected US missile strike in Pakistan's tribal belt on Monday killed six people, including three Arab militants, as the country's premier readied to meet President George W. Bush.

Three missiles struck a house attached to a mosque in the South Waziristan tribal district, an area bordering Afghanistan that is viewed by Washington as a haven for Al-Qaeda and Taliban extremists, officials said.

"Six people are dead and three others injured after three missiles hit a house in Azam Warsak (village)," a senior security official told AFP. He said those killed were three "suspected Arab militants and three young boys."

Residents said they heard US aircraft and pilotless Predator drones flying above the area before and after the strike, adding that there had been alarm over similar flights throughout the weekend.

Pakistani officials said the missiles apparently came from US-led coalition troops deployed over the border, which lies some 20 kilometres (12 miles) west of Azam Warsak.

"This has been done by coalition forces, we did not do it," another Pakistani security official said on condition of anonymity.

The identities of those killed were not known. A group of Arabs, believed to be Egyptians, had rented a compound containing the house and the madrassa from a local tribesman, Malik Salat, residents said.

Dozens of Arab Al-Qaeda operatives are believed to be hiding in the tribal belt, including Osama bin Laden, blamed for the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

Both the US-led coalition and a separate NATO force in Afghanistan said they were not involved in the missile strike. However, the US Central Intelligence Agency is also known to operate drones in the region.

The Pakistani military was not immediately available to comment.

Pakistan has protested over a wave of missile strikes attributed to US-led forces in Afghanistan in recent months that have killed dozens of local people.

The chairman of Pakistan's joint chiefs of staff, General Tariq Majid, on Monday warned the visiting head of US Central Command, Lieutenant General Martin Dempsey, that repeated strikes were "detrimental to bilateral relations," an army statement said.

The latest killings took place hours before scheduled talks between Bush and Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani at the White House that were expected to focus on Islamabad's commitment to the "war on terror."

Bush said ahead of the talks that he was "troubled" by the movement of extremists from Pakistan to Afghanistan and would discuss the threat with Gilani, who is making his first White House visit since taking office in March.

Some see Gilani's fledgling democratic government as powerless to act against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants. The Taliban regrouped inside Pakistan after they were removed from power in Afghanistan by a US-led invasion in 2001.

The government launched talks with Taliban militants in the region shortly after defeating political allies of US-backed President Pervez Musharraf in elections in February.

Fears have mounted in recent weeks in Pakistan of a possible US invasion of the tribal region. Gilani and other Pakistani officials have warned against any such offensive, saying Pakistan will defend its territorial sovereignty.

In June, 11 Pakistani troops were killed and nine wounded in a US missile strike in the Mohmand tribal district bordering Afghanistan, provoking an angry protest from Islamabad.

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Al-Qaeda chemical expert believed killed in Pakistan: officials
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) July 28, 2008
Al-Qaeda's top expert on chemical and biological weapons is believed to have been killed Monday in a suspected US missile strike in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas, security officials said.







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