THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Suspected US missile strike kills six

Pakistan raid first outside tribal belt

Residents sat amid the rubble of a house hit by a suspected US missile strike in Indi Khel, in the Bannu district about 30 miles from the Afghan border and beyond the tribal region. Residents sat amid the rubble of a house hit by a suspected US missile strike in Indi Khel, in the Bannu district about 30 miles from the Afghan border and beyond the tribal region. (Ijaz Muhammad/Associated Press)
By Stephen Graham
Associated Press / November 20, 2008
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The US military apparently struck at Islamic militants outside Pakistan's lawless tribal belt for the first time yesterday, firing a missile that killed six suspected insurgents taking refuge away from the conflict zone along the Afghan border.

The Pakistani government denounced the attack as yet another "grave provocation" amid a series of US military operations in the country that have fanned widespread anger among ordinary Pakistanis.

The harsh words were a sharp contrast to comments Tuesday by US and NATO officials, who reported increased cooperation from Pakistan in the fight against militant groups. Tens of thousands of US and NATO troops are stationed in neighboring Afghanistan.

"It looks like the Americans are not listening, but this is such a great provocation that it will bring a strong response from the government of Pakistan that will dissuade them," presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar said of the latest missile strike.

He declined to say what the response would be.

The government, which relies heavily on US financial aid, has not gone beyond criticizing raids. Some specialists question whether the leadership secretly condones the attacks while speaking out publicly against them, but the government denies that.

Although many militants have died in the US strikes, Pakistani leaders have repeatedly called for a halt, saying the raids also often kill civilians and undercut public support for the government's own war against the extremists.

The United States has staged some 20 missile strikes and at least one commando assault inside Pakistan since August, a barrage seen as a sign of Washington's frustration with the inability of its nuclear-armed ally to curb militants, who are blamed for the rising number of attacks in Afghanistan.

All the previous attacks had come in North and South Waziristan, semiautonomous tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. But yesterday's attack blew up a house in Indi Khel, a village in the Bannu district about 30 miles from the Afghan border and beyond the tribal region.

The identities of those killed were still being investigated, but a senior military officer said "the Americans are very confident" an Al Qaeda member identified as Abdullah Azam al-Saudi was among the victims.

Earlier, two Pakistani intelligence officials said their agents reported that militants from Central Asia were believed to be among the six dead. They also insisted on anonymity. All the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release information.

Villagers denied any militants were among the dead, but they declined to discuss the identity of the victims. "Go!" one man shouted at a cameraman who pressed for details while shooting footage obtained by AP Television News. Adnan Khan Wazir, a Bannu lawmaker, also insisted that only civilians died.

While Bannu is inland from the frontier tribal areas, it is still a dangerous place, and it falls under the control of the regional government, making the attack specially sensitive.

A large Islamist political party threatened to block two major Pakistani roads used to truck supplies to US and NATO troops in Afghanistan unless the cross-border attacks stop.

"If these missile attacks continue, then we will ask the people to create hurdles in the way of supplies for NATO," said Qazi Hussain Ahmed, chief of Jamaat-e-Islami, which has shown it can mobilize thousands of supporters at short notice.

The supply lines have never been blocked by protests, but militants and criminals often attack trucks traveling them.

The United States rarely confirms or denies involvement in strikes inside Pakistan, which are believed to be carried out mainly by unmanned CIA drones.

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