U.S. drone reportedly kills No. 2 Taliban in Pakistan - Latina News U.S. drone reportedly kills No. 2 Taliban in Pakistan - Latina News

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    Wednesday, May 29, 2013
     

    U.S. drone reportedly kills No. 2 Taliban in Pakistan

    Pakistani officials say Waliur Rehman, the No. 2 commander of the Pakistani Taliban, was killed by a U.S. drone as were three other militants.



    PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A pair of suspected U.S. missiles fired from an unmanned aircraft killed four alleged militants early Wednesday near the Afghan border in Pakistan, intelligence officials said, the first drone strike since Pakistan's nationwide elections earlier this month.

    Pakistani intelligence officials say the has killed the No. 2 commander of the Pakistani Taliban. The militant group denies he is dead.

    Three Pakistani officials say Waliur Rehman was among four people killed in a drone strike Wednesday morning in the North Waziristan tribal region near the border with Afghanistan.

    Two of the officials say their informants in the field have seen the body. The third official says there are intercepted communications between militants saying Rehman was killed. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

    A Taliban spokesman called the reports "false news."

    The strike was also the first since President Barack Obama's speech last week on the controversial U.S. drone program and more restrictive rules he was implementing on their use in places such as Pakistan and Yemen.

    Wednesday's strike came in the North Waziristan tribal region, a stronghold for militants in the mountainous stretch of land bordering Afghanistan to the west. Pakistani intelligence officials said the missiles hit a house in the town of Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan.

    The tribal region is home to a variety of local and Afghan militant outfits, including al-Qaida-linked fighters. The U.S. has often criticized Pakistan, saying it does not vigorously target militants in these areas. Using their safe havens in Pakistan, militants are then targeting American troops in neighboring Afghanistan.
    Washington's drone program is extremely unpopular in Pakistan, although the number of strikes has dropped significantly since the height of the program in 2010.

    The country's incoming prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, has repeatedly said he is against the use of American drones on Pakistani soil, and Pakistani officials have demanded publicly that the program be stopped.

    Senior civilian and military officials are known to have supported at least some of the attacks in the past, but that is no longer the case.

    Pakistan has been hit by 355 such attacks since 2004, according to the New America Foundation, a U.S.-based think tank. The figure does not include Wednesday's strike. Up to 3,336 people have died in the strikes, said the think tank.

    Obama's speech last Thursday was his most extensive comments to date about the secretive drone program, which has come under increased criticism for its lack of accountability.

    The president cast drone strikes against Islamic militants as crucial to U.S. counterterrorism efforts but acknowledged that they are not a "cure-all." The president also said he is deeply troubled by civilians unintentionally killed in the strikes and announced more restrictive rules governing the attacks — measures that his advisers said would effectively limit drone use in the future.

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