Wednesday, June 15, 2011
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The attacks happened near Wana, the main town in Pakistan's South Waziristan tribal area, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.(DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan and MAIDAN SHAR, Afghanistan) — U.S. unmanned aircraft fired missiles at a suspected militant compound and a vehicle Wednesday in northwest Pakistan, killing at least 10 alleged insurgents, intelligence officials said.
The attacks happened near Wana, the main town in Pakistan's South Waziristan tribal area, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.(DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan and MAIDAN SHAR, Afghanistan) — U.S. unmanned aircraft fired missiles at a suspected militant compound and a vehicle Wednesday in northwest Pakistan, killing at least 10 alleged insurgents, intelligence officials said.
The 10 suspected militants who were killed were in the targeted compound and were believed to be allied with Maulvi Nazir, a prominent militant commander in the area, according to the officials. It wasn't immediately clear if there were casualties in the vehicle strike.
South Waziristan was the main sanctuary for the Pakistani Taliban until the army launched a large ground offensive in 2009. But militants continue to inhabit the area and often carry out attacks against Pakistani soldiers.
The U.S. does not publicly discuss drone strikes in Pakistan, but officials have said privately that they have killed several senior al-Qaida and Taliban commanders.
A suicide bomber killed eight people and wounded four in a strike Wednesday on the governor's office in a northeastern province, while a mortar targeted a building where NATO and Afghan officials were attending the inauguration of the country's largest police training center in central Afghanistan.
The two attacks, which occurred at about the same time, were a stark reminder that insurgents can strike anywhere in this volatile country.
Provincial spokesman Halim Ayar said the bomber blew himself up about 220 yards (200 meters) from the office of Governor Azizul Rahman Tawab in Kapisa province. He said four of the dead were police officers and four were civilians. All the wounded were civilians, he added.
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that seven people were killed, including two police officers and five civilians. It added that seven others were wounded, including a police officer. The discrepancy in the casualty numbers, which is common in the aftermath of such attacks, could not immediately be resolved.
"The leadership of Ministry of Interior of Afghanistan condemns this inhumane and cowardly suicide attack. Such attacks will never weaken the determination of the Afghan National Police, the ministry said in a statement issued after the Kapisa attack.
Meanwhile, in central Wardak province, a mortar landed next to a large building where Afghanistan's second vice president, Mohammed Karim Khalili and Interior Minister Bismullah Khan Mohammadi, along with NATO officials, were cutting the ribbon on the flagship center of a multibillion dollar NATO program to train Afghan national security forces ahead of a planned withdrawal of U.S.-led coalition forces at the end of 2014.
The deafening blast shook the building and more than 300 police recruits ducked for cover. Gunshots rang out after the attack. Bodyguards rushed Afghan and NATO officials into a hardened shelter before evacuating them on helicopters.
The area has seen increasing attacks by insurgents as the Taliban press a spring campaign against Afghan and NATO forces.
It was unclear if Khalili was the intended target of the attack, but the mortar seemed to be targeting the building where he had just finished delivering an address.
The $106 million facility currently houses 725 recruits but will expand to 3,000, making it the largest facility of its kind in the country. A mostly U.S. funded program has been spending about $10 billion a year in 2010 and 2011 alone to train, equip and build infrastructure for a range of Afghan forces, including police, soldiers and an air force. That program calls for increasing the number of Afghan police to 134,000 by October from the 81,509 of two years ago.
Also Wednesday, in southern Kandahar city, a bomb explosion wounded four civilians in the Aymo Mina district, said provincial police chief Gen. Abdul Raziq. The target of the bomb was unclear.
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