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November 24, 2009

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Pakistan intensifies Taliban offensive

PAKISTANI security forces, backed by tanks and artillery, attacked Taliban positions in the northwest of the country, killing 22 militants, a senior police official said yesterday.

The attack was part of a broader campaign against militants in Pakistan, a regional ally which Washington sees as key to defeating the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Fighting erupted on Sunday night after an assault on militants in the village of Shahukhel, which borders the Taliban stronghold of the Orakzai ethnic Pashtun tribal region.

"There has been fierce fighting throughout the night. Militants fired rocket propelled grenades while troops responded with artillery and tank fire," local police official Fareed Khattak said.

"We have a figure of 22 militants dead and 14 arrested."

The army went on the offensive in the South Waziristan region on the Afghan border on October 17, aiming to root out militants who stepped up their war against the security forces in 2007. The campaign could backfire if Taliban fighters gain an edge by sucking Pakistani troops deep into rugged mountains.

The United States, weighing options for how to stem an intensifying insurgency in Afghanistan, has welcomed the Waziristan offensive, hoping it will help root out fighters from the region, described as a global hub for militants.

But it is keen to see Pakistan also tackle Afghan Taliban factions based in lawless enclaves along the border.

The army said yesterday that soldiers had killed nine militants in South Waziristan over the previous 24 hours.

According to the military, nearly 600 militants have been killed in the South Waziristan assault, while 70 soldiers have been killed.

Separately, militants fired several mortar bombs into a market in Landi Kotal, the main town in the Khyber region, also on the Afghan border, killing five people and wounding eight, administration and security officials said.

Khattak said forces had entered the lawless Orakzai region where many Taliban insurgents had fled. "Now helicopter gunships are striking Taliban hideouts," he said.

A Taliban spokesman in Orakzai, Zia-ur-Rehman, said both sides suffered heavy casualties in the clashes.



 

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