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  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    9:11am, EST

    Officials: US drone strike kills Taliban commander in Pakistan

    S.K Khan / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Mullah Nazir, center, is seen at a press conference in Wana, Pakistan, in 2007. The Associated Press reported that at least 5,000 people attended Nazir's funeral after he was killed by a U.S. drone strike.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- A U.S. drone strike killed a Taliban commander and at least seven other people in northwest Pakistan, security officials told NBC News on Thursday.

    Maulvi Nazir, who is also known as Mullah Nazir, was killed on Wednesday night when missiles struck a mud-built complex in Angoor Adda near the Afghan border, Pakistani officials said.

    His deputy, Ratta Khan, was also killed, sources told Reuters. Four other people were injured.

    Reports of Nazir's death came weeks after he was wounded in a bomb attack believed to have been launched by Taliban rivals.

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    According to The Associated Press, Nazir's death could prove to be a contentious issue between Washington and Islamabad, which is believed to have struck a nonaggression pact with Nazir ahead of the Pakistani military's 2009 operation against militants in South Waziristan.

    Nazir, 46, favored attacking American forces in Afghanistan rather than Pakistani soldiers in Pakistan, a position that put him at odds with some other Pakistan Taliban commanders but earned him a reputation as a "good" Taliban among some in the Pakistan military.

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    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

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    Pakistan's military viewed Nazir and militant chiefs like him as key to keeping the peace internally because they do not attack Pakistani targets.

    The military has a large base in Wana, where Nazir and his men were based. Residents said the main market in Wana shut down on Thursday to mark Nazir's death.

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    Nazir was wounded there in a bombing in November, widely believed to be a result of his rivalries with other Taliban commanders. Six others were killed in the same bombing.

    Residents in both Angoor Adda and Wana, the biggest town in South Waziristan, said they heard announcements on mosque loudspeakers announcing Nazir's death. One resident, Ajaz Khan, told The Associated Press by telephone that 5,000 to 10,000 people attended the funeral of Nazir and six other people held in Angoor Adda.

    “He was our hero”, local tribesman Janat Gul Wazir told NBC News. “He had expelled all the foreign militants from our villages.” 

    Nazir outraged many Pakistanis in June when he announced that he would not allow any polio vaccinations in territory under his control until the U.S. stops drone attacks in the region. Pakistan is one of three countries where polio is still endemic. Nine workers helping in anti-polio vaccination campaigns were killed last month by militant gunmen.

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    The former chief of intelligence in northwest Pakistan, retired brigadier Asad Munir, said Nazir's killing will complicate the fight against militants in the tribal region, and could prompt Nazir's group to carry out retaliatory attacks against the Pakistani army in South Waziristan.

    It will also raise questions among military commanders here who would like the U.S. to use its firepower against the Pakistani Taliban, which attacks domestic targets, and not against militants like Nazir who aren't seen as posing as much of a threat to the Pakistani state, Munir told The Associated Press.

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    Pakistan's army, an uneasy ally of the United States, has clawed back territory from the Taliban since launching a military offensive in 2009.

    But senior U.S. officials have frequently said that some elements within Pakistan's security services retain ties to some Taliban commanders.


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    Intensified U.S. drone strikes have killed many senior Taliban leaders, including Mehsud's predecessor, Baitullah Mehsud, in 2009.

    Drone strikes have dramatically increased since President Barack Obama took office. There were only five drone strikes in 2007. The number of strikes peaked at 117 in 2010 but fell to 46 last year.

    The program has killed a number of top militant commanders over the past year, including al-Qaida's then-No. 2, Abu Yahya al-Libi, who died in a drone strike in June on the Pakistani village of Khassu Khel in North Waziristan.

    Some Pakistanis say the drone strikes are an infringement of their national sovereignty and have called for them to stop.

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    Others, including some residents of the tribal areas, say they are killing Taliban commanders who have terrorized the local population.

    The continuing insecurity is likely to be a key issue in elections scheduled for this spring. The nuclear-armed nation of 180 million has a history of military coups, but these polls should mark the first time one elected civilian government gets to hand power to another.

    NBC News' Waj Khan and Mushtaq Yusafzai, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    539 comments

    Some Pakistanis say the drone strikes are an infringement of their national sovereignty and have called for them to stop. Tough sh!t. Live with them, give them cover, support them, and your sorry ass dies too.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, taliban, featured, u-s-military, drones, south-waziristan, drone-strikes
  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    1:11am, EST

    Blast in Afghan city of Khost; Taliban says US base targeted

    By Reuters

    KHOST, Afghanistan -- A suicide bomber killed three people in an attack on a U.S. base in Afghanistan on Wednesday, the same base that is believed to be used by the CIA and which a suicide bomber attacked three years ago killing seven CIA employees.

    The Afghan Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in the eastern town of Khost, saying they had sent a suicide bomber driving a van packed with explosives to the base.

    "The target was those who serve Americans at that base," said Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid.



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    Afghanistan's NATO-led force said the bomber did not get into the base nor breach its perimeter. Police said the three dead were Afghans who were outside the base, which is beside a military airport.

    The al Qaida-linked Haqqani network, widely regarded as the most dangerous U.S. foe in Afghanistan, is active in Khost province, which is on the Pakistani border.

    After more than a decade of war, Taliban insurgents are still able to strike strategic military targets, and launch high-profile attacks in the capital, Kabul, and elsewhere.

    Three years ago, an al Qaida-linked Jordanian double-agent killed seven CIA employees and a Jordanian intelligence officer in a suicide bombing at the same base in Khost, known as Forward Operating Base Chapman.

    It was the second deadliest attack in CIA history.

    Afghan police official General Abdul Qasim Baqizoy, the Khost police chief, said no CIA agents were hurt on Wednesday.

    Afghan authorities are scrambling to improve security across the country before the U.S. combat mission ends in 2014.

    Besides pressure from the Taliban, U.S.-led NATO forces also face a rising number of so-called insider attacks, in which Afghan forces turn their weapons on Western troops they are supposed to be working with.

    On Monday, an Afghan policewoman killed a U.S. police adviser at the Kabul police headquarters, raising troubling questions about the direction of the war.

    It appeared to be the first time that a woman member of Afghanistan's security forces carried out such an attack.

    On Tuesday, Afghan officials said the woman has an Iranian passport and moved to Afghanistan 10 years ago. There was no suggestion that Iran was involved in the attack on the American.

    Officials suspect she may have been recruited by al Qaida or the Taliban, and had intended to also kill Afghan police officials.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    227 comments

    I mean really...if you can't win a war in 10 years, get the HELL out. Just another Vietnam war...waste of solider's lives and billions of taxpayer money. Nobody benefits from these wars except the defense contractors at the expense of lives. Politicians are complete morons.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, taliban, al-qaida, u-s-military, khost, haqqani

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