US strike in Pakistan kills wanted British militant
PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Rashid Rauf, a British
militant with al Qaeda links, was killed along with an Egyptian by a
suspected U.S. missile strike in a Pakistani tribal region on Saturday,
Pakistan television and intelligence officers said.
Rauf, the suspected ringleader of a 2006 plot to blow up trans-atlantic
airliners using liquid explosives, was among five victims of an attack
believed to have been launched by a U.S. pilotless drone aircraft in the
North Waziristan tribal region.
The plot, which was uncovered with the help of Pakistani
intelligence, had the potential to kill on the scale of the Sept. 11,
2001 al Qaeda attacks and resulted in tighter controls on cabin luggage
hand-carried on board by air passengers worldwide.
Intelligence officers in northwest Pakistan, speaking on condition of
anonymity, told Reuters that Rauf, who escaped from custody after
appearing in an Islamabad court last December, had been killed, though
there was no official confirmation.
They named the dead Egyptian as Abu Zubair al-Masri. Arab casualties
are usually taken as a sign of an al Qaeda presence.
Several Pakistani news channels also reported the death of the
27-year-old Rauf and his Egyptian cohort.
EMBARRASSING FUGITIVE
Arrested in Pakistan in August 2006, Rauf, who is of Pakistani
origin, had travelled to Pakistan in 2002 after the murder of an uncle
in Britain.
His extradition was originally sought by Britain in connection with
the murder.
During his time in Pakistan, Rauf married a relative of one of
Pakistan’s most notorious militant leaders, Azhar Masood Azhar, the head
of Jaish-e-Mohammad.
While Jaish has been principally focused on fighting in Indian
Kashmir, some splinter groups joined al Qaeda’s cause.
Pakistani authorities were embarrassed by Rauf’s escape last year,
and there was considerable speculation over the ease with which he made
his getaway.
The missile strike said to have killed him targeted a house near the
North Waziristan town of Mir Ali, and came just two days after Pakistan
lodged a protest with the U.S. ambassador over missile attacks on its
territory. Villages around Mir Ali have been targeted before. The area
has been a hive of Taliban and al Qaeda activity in the past.
“According to our information two missiles were fired by the drone on
a house,” an intelligence officer in the region said.
“We have confirmed reports of five people killed and six injured,”
another intelligence official said.
Missile-armed drones are primarily used by U.S. forces in the region.
The United States seldom confirms drone attacks. Pakistan does not have
any combat drones.
DIPLOMATIC SQUALL
There have been at least 20 strikes in the last three months,
reflecting U.S. impatience over militants from Pakistan fuelling the
Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and fears that al Qaeda fighters in
northwest Pakistan could plan attacks in the West.
Pakistan says the attacks violate its sovereignty, undermine efforts
to win public support for the fight against militancy, and make it
harder to justify the U.S. alliance.
An earlier diplomatic storm blew up after a U.S. commando raid in
early September, and there has been no incursion by ground troops since.
The attack on Wednesday that sparked the diplomatic protest was
unusual in that it took place deeper in Pakistani territory, in Bannu
district, an area outside the semi-autonomous tribal lands bordering
Afghanistan where most attacks have taken place.
An Arab killed in the attack in Bannu was identified by a Pakistani
intelligence officer as a known al Qaeda operative, Abdullah Azam
al-Saudi, but there was no other corroboration.
A rocket attack by militants killed three policemen at a checkpost in
Bannu overnight, officials said.
A truck convoy carrying supplies to Western forces in Afghanistan was
hit by a roadside bomb in the Khyber region. Witnesses said two people
were seriously wounded.
Pakistani fighter jets bombed militant positions in the Bajaur tribal
region, killing 13 militants. The military says more than 1,500
militants have been killed while 73 soldiers have also died in fighting
in Bajaur since August, though no independent verification of casualties
is available.
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