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Home » News » World

Thursday, October 2, 2008

U.S. missile strike kills 6

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Taliban leader's home near border targeted

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  • ***FILE***Troops of Pakistan army secure an area in troubled town of Kanju, Swat valley on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2008 in Pakistan. Associated Press.

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By ASSOCIATED PRESS

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan

A suspected U.S. missile strike on a Taliban commander's home in Pakistan killed six people, officials said Wednesday, a possible indication that Washington was moving ahead with cross-border raids despite protests from the new government.

The attack was the first since Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari warned that its territory cannot "be violated by our friends."

American forces recently ramped up cross-border operations against Taliban and al Qaeda militants in Pakistan's border zone with Afghanistan - a region considered a likely hiding place for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Late Tuesday, missiles fired by a U.S. drone aircraft struck the Taliban commander's home near Mir Ali, a town in North Waziristan, which borders Afghanistan, said two intelligence officials, who asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Militants in the border region are blamed for rising attacks on U.S. troops in Afghanistan and attacks within Pakistan, including the Sept. 20 truck bombing of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad that killed more than 50 people.

In Spain, a document marked confidential and bearing the official seal of Spain's Defense Ministry claimed that Pakistan's spy service helped arm Taliban insurgents in 2005 for assassination plots against Afghan government officials.

Chief Pakistani army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said the report was "baseless, unfounded and part of a malicious, well-orchestrated propaganda campaign to malign" the Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency.

"ISI is the first line of defense of Pakistan and certain quarters are attempting to weaken our national intelligence system," Gen. Abbas said, without elaborating.

The document, which surfaced just after Pakistan's military chief chose a new head of the spy agency, also claimed Pakistan may have provided training and intelligence to the Taliban in camps set up on Pakistani soil.

The report, which was obtained by Cadena Ser radio and posted on the station's Web site Wednesday, said the spy agency helped the Taliban procure explosives to use in attacks against vehicles.

Pakistan vehemently denies that members of the spy agency have aided the Taliban. In the 1990s, however, the ISI's agents helped build up the Taliban.

U.S. intelligence agencies suspect rogue elements of the spy agency may still be giving Taliban militants sensitive information to aid their insurgency in Afghanistan, even though officially Pakistan is a U.S. ally in fighting terrorism.

India and Afghanistan - and reportedly the U.S. - suspect the ISI of involvement in the July 7 bombing outside India's embassy in Kabul, which killed more than 60 people. Pakistan denies it.

In London on Wednesday, British officials announced that the children of its diplomats in Pakistan have been ordered to leave the country. The Foreign Office said the decision was the result of a security review following the Sept. 20 Marriott hotel bombing.

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