1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Air raids on Taliban in Pakistan

February 20, 2014

Pakistani air force jets have bombed locations in the country's volatile northwest, killing 15 people inside what security sources described as Taliban hideouts. Peace talks stalled earlier this week.

https://p.dw.com/p/1BBs6
Members of Pakistan's Taliban.
Image: dapd

Pakistan's military launched airstrikes on suspected Taliban hideouts in North Waziristan early on Thursday after the breakdown of efforts to forge a peace deal.

Senior Pakistani security officials told several news agencies on the basis of anonymity that those killed included 13 "foreign fighters."

A "huge" cache of arms and ammunition had been destroyed during the air raids, officials said.

Talks between Pakistani Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) mediators and Pakistan's federal government began in late January.

On Sunday, a Taliban faction claimed to have killed 23 kidnapped soldiers in revenge for killings by army forces. Last week, a bombing claimed by the Pakistan Taliban killed 12 police officers in the port city of Karachi.

Families moved to safety

A senior security official said Thursday's air raids focused on North Waziristan's town of Mir Ali and surrounding locations.

Jet fighters had pounded targets for an hour, destroying a compound used by insurgent groups. Residents said flames remained visible before dawn. Some families moved to safer places after the air strikes.

Government sharpens rhetoric

Pervez Rashid, a spokesman for Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, said on Wednesday that Pakistan's army was ready to crush insurgents.

"The prime minister wants to resolve these issues without bloodshed but if the Taliban continue killing people then we will be left with no choice but to keep our citizens safe from terrorism through any means possible," Rashid said.

In a rare admission ahead of Thursday's air strikes, Pakistan's army said more than 100 of its soldiers had been killed by Taliban militants in the past five months.

On Wednesday, the Pakistan Taliban had countered that it would agree to a ceasefire only if government negotiators gave an assurance that there would be no more killings of its members.

ipj/ph (AFP, Reuters, AP)