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Today's Paper | March 07, 2026

Updated 01 Dec, 2025 10:32am

‘One eye on the barrel, the other on the sky’: How police in Bannu are dealing with evolving militant tactics

For nearly five months since June, police in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s southern Bannu district have battled not just militants on the ground, but have also had to fend off enemy attacks from the sky.

“One eye on the barrel of the gun and another on the sky,” a senior police officer in Bannu remarked.

For months, militants from the adjoining tribal areas launched multiple armed quadcopter sorties to try to attack police posts and police stations.

“Fifty attempts in one week,” Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Inspector General of Police (IG) Zulfiqar Hameed recalled.

Police in Bannu said they faced more than two hundred attacks, which employed commercially available, low-cost drones weaponised by militants to target them since June.

Changing tactics

Militants usually employ improvised munitions during quadcopter attacks. Weapons of choice are grenades used in Russian-origin under-barrel grenade launchers, such as the GP-25, and small calibre mortar rounds.

Unprepared for the deployment of quadcopters modified to drop improvised munitions on targets, the police started to deploy nets over their installations or simply installed a canopy overhead to obstruct the munitions ahead of impact.

“We had to position snipers on rooftops to shoot down any approaching object,” Bannu Additional Inspector General of Police (AIG) Sajjad Khan said.

In one instance, a drone chased a vehicle evacuating 11 policemen, one of them wounded, following an ambush in the city’s outskirts.

“It was hovering and chasing,” Ebaad Wazir, the second-in-command in the Bannu police, who was driving the vehicle, recalled. Militants filmed a video of the chase, and it went viral on social media.

The introduction of drone warfare by militants — the first time they have been employed against Pakistani forces — manifested a new phase and perhaps the most deadly transformation of the decades-long war that has claimed thousands of lives, both civilian and uniformed, and uprooted hundreds of thousands of others.

The quadcopters, equipped with thermal imaging, are used for surveillance and dropping munitions. Militants are also adapting to changing battlefield conditions and now routinely change the frequencies on which their drones operate to try and stay one step ahead of jammers employed by security forces.

Intelligence and police officials said such tactics and knowledge require training and can only come with expertise shared by seasoned terrorists.

“Tactics deployed in complex suicide bombings carry telltale signs of this as well.”

Officials also did not discount the presence of foreign terrorists in the region, and said they could have been a likely source of such expertise.

Losing ‘the edge’

For nearly two decades until August 2021, Islamabad and its forces had the edge in terms of weaponry and tactics, although for the police, it still was an almost equal fight; close-quarters combat while armed with AK-47 rifles.

All of that changed when the United States, exhausted by the seemingly unending war in Afghanistan after spending trillions of dollars, withdrew from the country and left behind $7.1 billion worth of military equipment and defence articles.

According to a November 2022 report by the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, among the abandoned weapons were more than 300,000 small arms — including M-4s, M-16s, M-24s and M-249s — and 48,000 pieces of specialised equipment such as night vision goggles, thermal imaging scopes, and radio surveillance equipment.

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