You guys are ignoring one fact, that three talibs were killed in this strike. Yes, innocents may also have died, but frankly you should be angry at the talibs for hiding in a seminary or school where children are present. The US can only do so much while killing them - the missile targeted precisely the room they were in, leaving other parts of the seminary untouched.
The taliban have themselves confirmed the death of at least one of their operatives.
You guys do realize that you are at war with them, right? And if pak army launched an offensive there to kill these people, do you think not a single innocent would die, especially given how these talibs live and work in civilian centers like schools and mosques?
I'm afraid you will have to accept the civilian deaths as part of the price for a war in your country, the one against the TTP. Sounds harsh, but unless pakistan devises a way to kill them with no civilian casualties...
But yes, condolences to the innocents. It's not their fault that taliban aides were living or meeting in their school. For which you ought to be angry at the talibs.
Drone strike in KP kills five - DAWN.COM
PESHAWAR: A US drone strike in the Tal area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Hangu district killed at least five people, including a senior member of the Taliban-linked Haqqani network, and injured another early on Thursday.
The drone fired three missiles targeting a seminary near Tandharo village, a few yards from Tehsil Tal's main Tal bazaar, which lies within the settled areas of the province. The room targetted by the drone was destroyed in the strike leaving the remaining space of the seminary undamaged.
Those killed in the attack included three teachers of the seminary. The teachers were identified as Abdul Rehman, Maulvi Ahmed Jan and Mufti Hamidullah Haqqani.
Sources told Dawn.com that the clerics of the seminary were believed to be associated with the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network.
Meanwhile, Reuters reported that a source with Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security intelligence agency in Kabul said that Jan was an adviser to Sirajuddin Haqqani, the chief of the Haqqani network.
Separately, a Pakistani intelligence source told Reuters that Sirajuddin was spotted at the targeted seminary two days earlier.
Taliban sources also confirmed Jan’s death but the Haqqani network itself was not immediately available for comment.
District Police Officer (DPO) Iftikhar Ahmed said the strike had left five people dead, and another person injured. Other sources said the death toll had reached eight but the claims could not be verified.
Drones continued to hover above the area after the incident, locals reported.
Pakistan condemns strike
Pakistan strongly condemned the drone strike reiterating its stance that the strikes violate the country’s “sovereignty and territorial integrity”.
Foreign Office Spokesman Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhry in a statement said “there is an across the board consensus in Pakistan that these drone strikes must end”.
The spokesman said the government had been raising its concern over drone strikes with the US administration and at the United Nations.
He said the prime minister during his recent visit to the US had raised the issue with President Barack Obama and other senior US leaders.
The spokesman said it has been consistently maintained that drone strikes are counter-productive, entail loss of innocent civilian lives and have human rights and humanitarian implications. Such strikes also set dangerous precedents in the inter-state relations.
He said these strikes have a negative impact on the government’s efforts to bring peace and stability in Pakistan and in the region.
The last drone strike in the country was conducted on Nov 1 killing chief of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Hakimullah Mehsud, in the North Waziristan tribal region.
Today’s drone strike was the first by the US to occur outside Pakistan's remote tribal region, after the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf (PTI) came to power in the province. The latest attack could increase tensions between Islamabad and Washington.
The only other drone attack in the settled areas of KP was carried out in Bannu district in Nov 2008.
Thursday’s attack comes a day after Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's Adviser on Foreign Affairs and National Security Sartaj Aziz said the US had assured Pakistan of not conducting drone strikes targeting the leaders of TTP if dialogue began between them and the Pakistani government.