A covert US drone campaign in Pakistan has stepped up strikes in the tribal belt, as intelligence claims emerged last month of a Mumbai-style terror plot to launch commando attacks on European cities. – AP Photo

PESHAWAR: A pair of American drone strikes killed 14 suspected militants in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, local intelligence officials said, in the latest attacks against al Qaeda and Taliban militants seeking sanctuary in the region.

The missiles struck an hour apart in North Waziristan – the area that has seen the overwhelming majority of drone strikes over the last two months. The rugged region is allegedly home to hundreds of Pakistani and foreign militants, many belonging to or allied with al Qaeda and the Taliban.

In the first strike, one American missile slammed into a house and another hit a vehicle in the town of Ghulam Khan just north of Miramshah, the main town in North Waziristan, the two officials said. Nine insurgents were killed.

An hour later, another pair of missiles struck a vehicle in the nearby town of Dattakhel, killing five suspected militants, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk to the media. They said all five killed were foreigners.

Further details were not immediately available. The intelligence officials said agents on the ground were collecting more details.

North Waziristan, which is part of the Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal belt, is allegedly home to the Haqqani network, a powerful insurgent group that US officials say is behind many of the attacks on US and Nato forces just across the border in Afghanistan. The group is believed to be controlling the town hit by the first strike Sunday.

The region is too dangerous for outsiders to visit and independently confirm the attacks, and US officials do not acknowledge firing the missiles, much less discuss who they are targeting.

It is widely believed, however, that Pakistan’s army has given tacit approval to the strikes and the recent spike in attacks has not attracted a greater level of criticism.

Washington wants Islamabad to launch a military offensive in the region, but so far has had to rely on missile strikes to hamper militant operations. The pace of the attacks has picked up recently, with roughly 20 apiece in the past two months, double the preceding monthly tally.

Some locals allege that the US drone strikes regularly kill innocents, while others say the missiles are accurate and most of the dead are militants or villagers knowingly harbouring them.

The strikes are carried out by unmanned drones that fly over the region for hours and equipped with extremely high-powered video cameras. — AP

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