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Suspected US strike kills seven in Pakistan: officials

Fresh attacks on Indian army in Kashmir
A Pakistan-based Islamist militant group warned Wednesday of fresh attacks against Indian troops, as the army said a "large number" of guerrillas were poised to infiltrate Kashmir. Eight soldiers and 17 rebels died in protracted gun battles that started Saturday in Kashmir's Kupwara district, close to the Line of Control (LOC) that divides the Indian and Pakistani zones of the Muslim-majority Himalayan region, the Indian army said. Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) said its members were involved in the clashes, some of the fiercest in recent years. "The gun battles should serve as a message to India that the struggle for Kashmir's freedom is on with full vigour," Lashkar spokesman Abdullah Ghaznavi told AFP by telephone in Srinagar, in Indian Kashmir, from an unknown location. Ghaznavi said Lashkar militants initiated the gunfight by ambushing an army column in a forest area. He said the fighting left 25 Indian soldiers and 10 Lashkar militants dead. The Indian army said the operation was launched by the soldiers after they were tipped off. General Deepak Kapoor, chief of India's million-plus army, warned the military was bracing for more attacks in Kashmir. "The Kupwara encounter with militants is definitely an indication of stepped-up infiltration into Kashmir," Kapoor said in New Delhi. The general said cross-border militants were operating from about 50 "terrorist camps" in the Pakistan-administered zone of divided Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of arming, training and funding the rebels, a charge Islamabad denies. The army chief's warning came as Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony ordered the military to handle the situation in Kashmir with "utmost firmness." Lashkar has been blamed for the attacks in Mumbai late last year that killed 165 people. It has denied any role in the attacks. An army commander in Kashmir confirmed the slain militants were Lashkar guerrillas and added more militants were expected to cross into Indian territory. "There are likely large numbers of terrorists awaiting infiltration," brigadier Gurmit Singh said in Srinagar. He said maps and global positioning systems recovered from the dead militants were "indicative that state and security forces' assistance from across (the border in Pakistan) was there, as such material is not usually in the civil domain." He also said the militants were intercepted because of "absolute, accurate and reliable human intelligence from both sides of the LOC, that is from our side and from across the LOC." "All I can tell you is that we have a very deliberate, well laid-out intelligence network to have early warnings of the infiltration attempts," he added. India has begun deploying precision US and Israel-made sensors and radar at the LOC to monitor infiltration. The anti-India insurgency has left more than 47,000 people dead in Kashmir by official counts.
by Staff Writers
Miranshah, Pakistan (AFP) March 25, 2009
A suspected US missile strike killed up to seven alleged Al-Qaeda militants on Wednesday in an extremist stronghold of northwest Pakistan on the Afghan border, security officials said.

At least one vehicle was targeted in the strike in the Makeen area of the semi-autonomous tribal district of South Waziristan, where suspected Afghan and Pakistani Taliban militants are also holed up, local officials said.

Initial reports said no high-value targets were believed to have died.

"A vehicle carrying six foreign militants was targeted in a single missile attack in Makeen area on the border between North and South Waziristan," a senior security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Pakistani officials use the word "foreigner" in reference to suspected Al-Qaeda fighters, but the precise identities of the dead was not confirmed.

"Two vehicles were hit in the strike, killing seven foreigners, including Uzbeks and Arabs," a tribal security official, Haq Nawaz, told AFP.

Other security officials in the northwest also put the death toll at seven and described the dead as "foreigners".

Taliban quickly sealed off the scene to local residents who came to retrieve the bodies from the wreckage of two vehicles, a witness said.

"I saw the bodies myself. Some of them were completely charred and some were mutilated. I saw raw and bloody pieces of human flesh scattered around the site," one resident told AFP, too frightened to give his name.

More than 35 such strikes have killed over 340 people since August 2008, shortly before key Washington ally President Asif Ali Zardari was elected, fanning hostility against the weak Pakistani government and the United States.

The US military as a rule does not confirm drone attacks but the armed forces and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operating in Afghanistan are the only forces that deploy drones in the region.

Wednesday's attack was the seventh missile strike blamed in Pakistan on unmanned US aircraft since President Barack Obama came to power, dashing Pakistani hopes that his administration would abandon the policy.

Obama has switched the focus of the "war on terror" from Iraq to Afghanistan, where US troops are fighting a Taliban-led insurgency across the border from Pakistan.

Washington is preparing a major new strategy for the region, expected to be announced at an international meeting in the Netherlands on March 31, and US officials believe extremists in Pakistan also pose a grave threat.

The Pakistani government, which Wednesday marked one year in office, has protested to Washington that drone strikes violate its territorial sovereignty and deepen resentment among the 160 million people of the nuclear-armed nation.

The lawless tribal areas in northwest Pakistan have been wracked by violence since hundreds of Taliban and Al-Qaeda rebels sought refuge in the region after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan toppled the Taliban regime in late 2001.

Mountainous and remote, Makeen is a hub of Taliban led by Baitullah Mehsud, Pakistan's most-wanted militant.

Mehsud heads the much feared Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and was accused by the previous Pakistani government of masterminding the 2007 assassination of ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto, Zardari's wife.

US and Afghan officials have accused Pakistan of not doing enough to crack down on militants, who cross the border to attack US and NATO troops.

Pakistan rejects those accusations and says more than 1,500 Pakistani troops have been killed at the hands of Islamist extremists since 2002.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Zardari are to hold talks in Ankara in early April on security issues and efforts to fight Islamist extremists in the region, a Turkish diplomat told AFP.

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Make trade part of Pakistan strategy: US business
Washington (AFP) March 24, 2009
The top US business lobby Tuesday urged a cut in US tariffs on Pakistani textiles, saying that trade would be a valuable part of the new US strategy to bring stability to the nuclear-armed nation.







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