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The Washington Times Online Edition

Suspected U.S. missile attacks rock northwest Pakistan

A Pakistani schoolchild walks past a building damaged in Tuesday night's car bombing in Kohat, 36 miles south of Peshawar, Pakistan. The bomb, which ripped through a police compound, killed 18 people, including 14 women and children and four officers, in the latest in a string of attacks proving that Islamist militants remain a potent force in the country. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)A Pakistani schoolchild walks past a building damaged in Tuesday night’s car bombing in Kohat, 36 miles south of Peshawar, Pakistan. The bomb, which ripped through a police compound, killed 18 people, including 14 women and children and four officers, in the latest in a string of attacks proving that Islamist militants remain a potent force in the country. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan (AP) — Three suspected U.S. missile strikes in less than 12 hours hit militant targets in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said, an unusually intense barrage that followed four other such attacks in the last week. At least 14 suspected militants were killed.

The strikes were in North Waziristan, a lawless region home to insurgents battling foreign troops just across the border in Afghanistan, al Qaeda leaders plotting attacks in the West and extremists behind bombings in Pakistan.

The militants have stepped up their own attacks in Pakistan in recent days, just as the army focuses on helping millions of victims from the worst floods in the country’s history. Four big bombs have killed at least 135 people in less than a week.

The United States has fired hundreds of missiles into northwest Pakistan over the past 2½ years. American officials do not acknowledge such strikes publicly but have said privately that they have killed several senior Taliban and al Qaeda militants and scores of foot soldiers.

Critics say innocents also are killed, fueling support for the insurgency.

The first attack was on a house in the village of Dande Darpa Khel near Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, two Pakistani intelligence officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

The house was owned by Maulvi Azizullah, a member of the Haqqani network, a militant group based in North Waziristan that U.S. military officials have called the most dangerous threat to NATO troops in Afghanistan. Six militants were killed, they said.

The second missile hit a car traveling a few miles from the border, killing four people associated with the Haqqani network, officials said. Zameedullah Wazir, a resident of Ambar Shaga, said he and others tried to get close to the vehicle but were told to leave by Taliban fighters who arrived soon after in three vehicles.

After nightfall, four other militants were killed, again in a Haqqani-dominated area close to Miran Shah, in an attack on a house, officials said.

Pakistan’s army has launched several offensives in the northwest over the past two years but has resisted moving into North Waziristan despite U.S. pressure. The Haqqani network has refrained from launching attacks inside Pakistan, and analysts believe the army views them as an important tool to secure its interests in Afghanistan once foreign troops withdraw.

Without a Pakistani military offensive, the United States has had to rely on drone strikes to battle the group.

The Pakistani government publicly has criticized the missiles strikes as violations of its sovereignty but is believed to help the CIA carry out the attacks, especially when they target militants at war with Pakistan.

 

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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