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Militants shoot suspected US spies in Pakistan
THE bullet-riddled bodies of two alleged United States spies were found yesterday in a Taliban stronghold in northwest Pakistan, the latest victims of an intelligence war that a top American general indicated is tilting in Washington and Islamabad's favor.
The men's bodies were found together in Mir Ali town in North Waziristan tribal region. Each had a note attached accusing the victim of spying for the Americans and warning other informants they faced the same fate, area resident Akram Ullah said. Another witness, Sana Ullah, said one man was a local tribal elder and the other was Afghan.
Militants in recent years have killed scores of people they suspected of aiding the US and Pakistani governments. The fear of informants has been heightened by the success of US missile strikes against militant targets in the tribal areas, and could be rising again in the wake of Pakistan's arrest of at least three Afghan Taliban leaders in recent weeks.
Those arrests were the result of intelligence breakthroughs, US General David Petraeus, who oversees the war in Afghanistan, told reporters in Islamabad on Tuesday night. Among the detained was Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the No. 2 Taliban commander.
Petraeus dismissed the idea that Pakistan acted against Baradar and the others because they may have been involved in talks with the Afghan government and it wanted to get a seat at the table by arresting them.
"I wouldn't share your characterizations that, in a sense, (the Pakistanis) have always had this intelligence," he said. "What has happened is that there has been some important breakthroughs."
Over the past 18 months, Pakistan has undertaken several army offensives in the northwest region bordering Afghanistan against Islamic militants who have enjoyed relative safety there. Those operations have mostly targeted militants attacking Pakistan, not militants crossing the border and fighting US and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
The men's bodies were found together in Mir Ali town in North Waziristan tribal region. Each had a note attached accusing the victim of spying for the Americans and warning other informants they faced the same fate, area resident Akram Ullah said. Another witness, Sana Ullah, said one man was a local tribal elder and the other was Afghan.
Militants in recent years have killed scores of people they suspected of aiding the US and Pakistani governments. The fear of informants has been heightened by the success of US missile strikes against militant targets in the tribal areas, and could be rising again in the wake of Pakistan's arrest of at least three Afghan Taliban leaders in recent weeks.
Those arrests were the result of intelligence breakthroughs, US General David Petraeus, who oversees the war in Afghanistan, told reporters in Islamabad on Tuesday night. Among the detained was Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the No. 2 Taliban commander.
Petraeus dismissed the idea that Pakistan acted against Baradar and the others because they may have been involved in talks with the Afghan government and it wanted to get a seat at the table by arresting them.
"I wouldn't share your characterizations that, in a sense, (the Pakistanis) have always had this intelligence," he said. "What has happened is that there has been some important breakthroughs."
Over the past 18 months, Pakistan has undertaken several army offensives in the northwest region bordering Afghanistan against Islamic militants who have enjoyed relative safety there. Those operations have mostly targeted militants attacking Pakistan, not militants crossing the border and fighting US and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
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