Pakistan troops, Taliban fight street battle: army

Wed Nov 4, 2009 7:36am EST
 
[-] Text [+]

By Zeeshan Haider

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani soldiers were fighting intense street battles on Wednesday as they pushed into a major Taliban base in the militants' South Waziristan stronghold, the military said.

The army launched an offensive on October 17 aimed at rooting out and defeating Pakistani Taliban militants in the lawless ethnic Pashtun region on the Afghan border.

Fighting has intensified in recent days after security forces zeroed in on three main militant bases -- Sararogha, Makeen and Ladha -- in their three-pronged offensive.

Soldiers had captured a "major part" of Sararogha and had also stormed into Ladha, the military said.

"Security forces entered into the important stronghold of terrorists, the town of Ladha. Intense fighting is taking place in the streets," the military said in a statement.

South Waziristan' rugged landscape of barren mountains and hidden ravines has become a global center of Islamist militancy and many foreign al Qaeda fighters are believed to be based there, along with thousands of Pakistani insurgents.

The militants are being squeezed out of their strongholds but have retaliated by stepping up bomb attacks on urban targets.

Security officials say the militants' "command and control structure" is in the three bases and they expect stiff resistance from Taliban defenders.

The army said at the weekend that government forces had converged on Makeen from three directions.

BOMB ATTACKS

The fall of the bases would be a major setback for the Taliban but security analysts say the militants could step up attacks in towns and cities to put pressure on the government and try to sap its resolve.

More than 100 people, most of them women, were killed in a car-bomb attack in a market in the northwestern city of Peshawar last week, the deadliest attack in the country in two years.

Thirty-five people were killed in a suicide attack bomb outside a bank in the city of Rawalpindi on Monday.

The military said on Wednesday afternoon 30 militants had been killed in South Waziristan in the previous 24 hours, taking their death toll to 394 in the 19 days of fighting.

Thirty-nine soldiers have been killed in the offensive, according to military figures, though there has been no independent verification of casualties as reporters and other investigators are not allowed into the war zone.  Continued...

 
A Taliban fighter poses with weapons in an undisclosed location in Afghanistan October 30, 2009. REUTERS/Stringer
Taliban may wait out Washington's "endgame"

Washington's hint of an Afghanistan endgame in saying U.S. troops won't still be there in 2017 might help win over a war-weary public, but there is no guarantee a notoriously patient Taliban won't just wait the Americans out.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

Photo

More News

Pakistani forces say enter a main Taliban base
Tuesday, 3 Nov 2009 11:32am EST 
Most Pakistanis back war against militants: poll
Tuesday, 3 Nov 2009 07:36am EST 
Bomb blast in Pakistan's Rawalpindi kills 35
Monday, 2 Nov 2009 04:11pm EST 
Pakistan zeroes in on major Taliban bases
Sunday, 1 Nov 2009 09:12am EST 
Roadside blast kills 7 Pakistan soldiers
Saturday, 31 Oct 2009 03:15pm EDT 

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video
Men transport a pig on a horse cart along a highway on the outskirts of Havana November 26, 2009.  REUTERS/Desmond Boylan
Cubans fear hard times ahead, impatient for change

Cubans are bracing for hard times in 2010 as President Raul Castro slashes imports and cuts government spending to get Cuba out of crisis -- and they are growing impatient with the slow pace of economic reform.  Full Article