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India-Pakistan
Senior Taliban leader reported killed in New Year's Eve strike
2010-01-02
Hat tip to the Long War Journal:
The US killed a senior Taliban leader in an airstrike in the Mir Ali region in North Waziristan, Pakistan, on New Year's Eve, 2009.

Haji Omar Khan, a senior Taliban leader in South Waziristan who strong ties to Mullah Omar, was killed in the Dec. 31, 2009 airstrike on a safe house in the town of Machi Khel, according to his family. The body is being repatriated to his home town in South Waziristan.

The New Year's Ever strike is also said to have killed the son of Karim Khan, the tribal leader who ran the safe house, and two other people, according to The Frontier Post.

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India-Pakistan
Suspected US missile strike kills 20 in Pakistan
2008-11-01
A mid-level al-Qaeda leader, identified as an Iraqi, was among up to 20 people killed on Friday in a suspected missile strike by U.S. spy drones in northwest Pakistan, a Pakistani intelligence official said.

The intelligence official identified the al-Qaeda leader as Abu Akash and said he was believed to have been Iraqi. "He is a mid-level al-Qaeda man who was leading a high-profile life in Mir Wali," said the official, who declined to be identified, referring to the second biggest town in the North Waziristan region on the Afghan border. Local residents said the strike hit the house of a Pakistani tribesman named Amanullah Dawar.

Two missiles were involved in the strike, which destroyed a vehicle and a house in North Waziristan tribal region that is a known hub of al-Qaeda and Taliban militants on the area bordering Afghanistan.

The attack came just two days after Pakistan, a key ally in the U.S.-led "war on terrorism", summoned Washington's ambassador to Islamabad to receive a strong protest over a number of similar strikes.

Sunday's strike killed senior Taliban commander Haji Omar Khan, a lieutenant of veteran Afghan Taliban chieftain and former anti-Soviet fighter Jalaluddin Haqqani. It was the 17th such strike in the past 10 weeks, according to an AFP tally. All of them have been blamed on U.S.-led coalition forces or CIA drones based in neighboring Afghanistan.

The attacks have sharply raised tensions between Washington and nuclear-armed Pakistan. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has promised zero tolerance against violations of his country's sovereignty. The attacks have also become an election issue in the U.S. presidential campaign.
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India-Pakistan
Haji Omar Khan is no more
2008-10-28
A Pakistani Taliban commander accused of launching cross-border attacks in Afghanistan was among 20 people killed in a suspected U.S. missile strike, a senior official said Monday. The commander, Haji Omar Khan, died when at least two missiles slammed into a training camp in the South Waziristan tribal region near the Afghan border on Sunday night, local administration official Mawaz Khan told AFP.

"The death toll has gone up to 16 as six more bodies have been recovered from the site. Senior Taliban commander Haji Omar died in the strike," Khan said.

Another government official quoting local sources said up to 20 people were killed, mostly Pakistani Taliban fighters, adding that a team was on its way to the area to investigate.

The slain commander was a senior member of the group of veteran Taliban chieftain Jalaluddin Haqqani, residents added. Many of the recent U.S. missile strikes in Pakistan have targeted Haqqani and his followers.
Khan was active in attacks against the border, local residents said. The slain commander was a senior member of the group of veteran Taliban chieftain Jalaluddin Haqqani, residents added. Many of the recent U.S. missile strikes in Pakistan have targeted Haqqani and his followers.

Suspected U.S. drones have carried out more than a dozen such missile attacks on militant targets on the Pakistani side of its border with Afghanistan since the beginning of September, killing dozens of people.

"Two missiles were fired, they hit two houses in Shakai and up to 20 militants were killed," said one of the Pakistani intelligence agency officials, referring to an area in the South Waziristan region that is a stronghold of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud.

Mehsud is Pakistan's most notorious militant commander, blamed for a string of suicide bomb attacks in Pakistan including the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in December last year. He also supports Taliban militants battling U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan.

A bit more detail, from Pak Daily Times
Muhammad Omar, a commander of Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani, was among the 20 men killed in Sunday's suspected US missile strike in South Waziristan, officials said. Two lower-level commanders -- Waheedullah and Nasrullah -- and five Taliban from North Waziristan who had come to meet Omar also died.

Omar was active in attacks on US-led and NATO troops in Afghanistan's Khost, Paktia and Paktika provinces. He was a cousin of Taliban commander Nek Muhammad who was killed in 2004 in the first such US missile strike. A Taliban leader told Reuters by telephone the strikes were 'very accurate'. "The missiles struck rooms where the guests were having dinner. None survived."
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