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Pakistani troops with heavy artillery at their post on the outskirts of Timargarh. Photo Courtesy: AP
Pak warplanes strike Taliban bases
Sat-Jun 27, 2009
Islamabad / Press Trust of India
At least 22 Taliban militants were killed and scores wounded as Pakistani war planes kept up their relentless strikes on the bases of Tehrik-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in restive Waziristan, while police shot dead five other radicals in the port city of Karachi.
"Two Pakistani jets straffed bases run by commanders closely linked to Baitullah Mehsud in Makeen and Ladha, killing 12 to 15 militants and wounding another 17," an army statement said.
Pakistan Air Force fighters have been carrying out heavy air raids on major towns and on Taliban concentrations in South Waziristan as a softening of tactics before unleashing a major ground offensive targetted to get Mehsud and other high-value militants of Taliban and al Qaida, dead or alive.
Five more suspected Taliban militants were shot dead by police in a mid-night raid on the outskirts of southern port city of Karachi.
"Police surrounded the house where the militants were hiding and asked them to surrender," a spokesman of the city police said.
"The militants opened fire which was retaliated by the police in which five militants with suspected links to Baitullah were killed. But six others managed to escape," he said.
Police recovered huge quantities of arms and ammunitions, suicide jackets and explosives from the house. Later, the spokesman said, the militants were apparently plotting large scale suicide bombings in the city.
In other incidents, militants fired six rockets at a para-military fort in Wanna, the main town of South Waziristan, an official said. The security forces in turn shelled Taliban positions near the town killing two militants and injuring three others.
The running skirmishes between Taliban and military came as army continued to move troops, tanks and heavy artillery in preparation for a confrontation, which experts say would be one of the biggest test for Pakistani security forces in decades.
Ranged against heavily armed troops would be an estimated 12,000-15,000 Taliban and al Qaida militants equally well armed but masters of hit-and-run tactics, learned from years of bloody experience in Afghanistan.
Though the army has been moving reinforcements for weeks in-and-around Wanna, there is yet no clue when the D-day would come.
"We cannot give you a timing. But we are moving at the right speed," Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Qureshi told reporters at Trieste in Italy, where he is attending a meeting on Afghanistan, Pakistan called on the sidelines of G8 meeting.
"Two Pakistani jets straffed bases run by commanders closely linked to Baitullah Mehsud in Makeen and Ladha, killing 12 to 15 militants and wounding another 17," an army statement said.
Pakistan Air Force fighters have been carrying out heavy air raids on major towns and on Taliban concentrations in South Waziristan as a softening of tactics before unleashing a major ground offensive targetted to get Mehsud and other high-value militants of Taliban and al Qaida, dead or alive.
Five more suspected Taliban militants were shot dead by police in a mid-night raid on the outskirts of southern port city of Karachi.
"Police surrounded the house where the militants were hiding and asked them to surrender," a spokesman of the city police said.
"The militants opened fire which was retaliated by the police in which five militants with suspected links to Baitullah were killed. But six others managed to escape," he said.
Police recovered huge quantities of arms and ammunitions, suicide jackets and explosives from the house. Later, the spokesman said, the militants were apparently plotting large scale suicide bombings in the city.
In other incidents, militants fired six rockets at a para-military fort in Wanna, the main town of South Waziristan, an official said. The security forces in turn shelled Taliban positions near the town killing two militants and injuring three others.
The running skirmishes between Taliban and military came as army continued to move troops, tanks and heavy artillery in preparation for a confrontation, which experts say would be one of the biggest test for Pakistani security forces in decades.
Ranged against heavily armed troops would be an estimated 12,000-15,000 Taliban and al Qaida militants equally well armed but masters of hit-and-run tactics, learned from years of bloody experience in Afghanistan.
Though the army has been moving reinforcements for weeks in-and-around Wanna, there is yet no clue when the D-day would come.
"We cannot give you a timing. But we are moving at the right speed," Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Qureshi told reporters at Trieste in Italy, where he is attending a meeting on Afghanistan, Pakistan called on the sidelines of G8 meeting.
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