Suspected US drone strikes kill at least 13 in Pakistan, Afghanistan
Published December 07, 2014
At least two suspected U.S. drone strikes on both sides of the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan have killed at least 13 alleged Pakistani Taliban fighters, according to local officials.
On Saturday afternoon, one strike hit the Afghan village of Shiltan in Kunar province's Shigal District, killing a senior commander of the insurgent group and also wounding a fighter, provincial police chief Gen. Abdul Habib Sayedkhili said. Sayedkhili said there were no civilian casualties from the strike.
There was no confirmation from NATO forces about the strike, nor was there immediate comment from the Taliban. The Taliban had no immediate comment about the strike. On Saturday, officials said two other suspected U.S. drone strikes killed four alleged Taliban fighters in Laghman province.
In a separate attack, a Taliban insurgent threw a grenade into a wedding party Saturday night in Balkh province, killing four people and wounding 13, police spokesman Shirjan Duran said. The motive for the attack wasn't immediately clear.
Early Sunday, two missiles fired from a drone hit a compound in the village of Khara Tanga in the Datta Khel area, two Pakistani intelligence officials told the Associated Press. The strike also wounded two militants, they said.
The officials said Pakistani Taliban linked to commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur used the compound, but it wasn't immediately known whether Bahadur was there at the time of the strike.
"There is (suspicion) that an important commander was within the compound when missiles struck but this is yet to be verified," one of the intelligence officials said.
Both the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak to journalists.
North Waziristan is home to both local and Al Qaeda-linked militants. Pakistani army is presently carrying out operations in both part of Waziristan.
On Saturday, Pakistani soldiers killed top Al Qaeda operative Adnan Shukrijumah who was indicted in the U.S. for his alleged involvement in a plot to bomb New York's subway system. A military official said that Shukrijumah had escaped the military operation in North Waziristan and was hiding in South Waziristan, where he was killed along with two other suspected militants.
Taliban fighters, Al Qaeda militants and other insurgents frequently cross the border to launch attacks on local troops and NATO forces. Insurgent attacks are on the rise across Afghanistan as NATO forces plan to wind down their combat mission in the country at the end of this month.
Washington long has used drone strikes to kill militants in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan and U.S. officials rarely comment on the covert drone program run by the CIA. U.S. drone strikes are widely unpopular in Pakistan over civilian casualties and concerns about the country's national sovereignty being violated.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Suspected US drone strikes kill at least 13 in Pakistan, Afghanistan | Fox News
Al Qaeda commander reported killed in drone strike in Pakistan
By BILL ROGGIO, December 8, 2014
A senior al Qaeda commander is reported to have been killed in a US drone strike in Pakistan's tribal areas yesterday. If his death is confirmed, it would mean that two al Qaeda leaders have been killed by US and Pakistani forces over the weekend.
The CIA-operated, remotely piloted Predators or Reapers fired a pair of missiles at a compound in the village of Khar Tangi in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan during the early morning of Dec. 7, killing upwards of six jihadists, according to reports from Pakistan. Several fighters from the Hafiz Gul Bahadar Group, a Taliban faction that is supported by the Pakistani state, are said to be among those killed.
There is some confusion over the identity of the al Qaeda leader who is reported to have been killed. Both
Reuters and
Dawn identified him as Omar Farooq ("alias Omar Ustad and Ustad Farooq," according to
Dawn), who is described as al Qaeda's spokesman and emir for Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The Express Tribune also named the slain al Qaeda leader as Omar Farooq, but described him as al Qaeda's "coordinator for the Arab region and Pakistan." The name of al Qaeda's spokesman for Pakistan is Ustad Ahmad Farooq, rather than Omar Farooq. [See
LWJ reports,
Al Qaeda eulogizes senior commander killed in recent drone strike and
Al Qaeda weighs in on the Malala shooting.]
US intelligence officials contacted by
The Long War Journal said they are aware of reports of the death of a senior al Qaeda leader in Sunday's drone strike, but would not comment on the identity of who was targeted. One intelligence official noted that Omar Farooq is a common nom de guerre for Pakistani jihadists.
Al Qaeda and its official branch in the region, al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), have not released an official statement confirming or denying the death of a senior leader, nor are al Qaeda-linked jihadists discussing reports of the death on social media sites.
If Farooq's death is confirmed, he would be the second al Qaeda leader killed in Waziristan last weekend. On Dec. 6, the Pakistani military
claimed it killed Adnan Shukrijumah, al Qaeda's operations chief for North America, in a raid in Spin Warzak, South Waziristan.
Read more:
http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2014/12/al_qaeda_commander_r_2.php#ixzz3LKU8rHPk