7 Die In Taliban Attack On Tribal Leaders
Ensuing Gun Battle, Explosion In Pakistan As NATO Fires On Suspected Militant Position
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Soldiers of Pakistan army patrol in troubled city of Swat, Pakistan, Nov. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Sherin Zada)
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Pakistani oil tanker carrying supplies for U.S. and NATO forces, wait for security clearance to travel to Afghanistan at Pakistani border post in Chaman, Nov. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Shah Khalid)
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Injured Pakistani journalist Sami Yousafzai in a local hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan on Friday, Nov 14, 2008. Yousafzai, accompanied with Japanese journalist Motoki Yotsukura, unseen, was wounded in an apparent kidnapped attempt while traveling to Peshawar. (AP Photo)
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Injured Japanese journalist Motoki Yotsukura arrives at a local hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan on Friday, Nov 14, 2008. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)
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People look at a destroyed video shop following a blast in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, Nov. 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Naveed Sultan)
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Pakistan
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Meanwhile, NATO troops in eastern Afghanistan fired 20 artillery rounds at insurgents inside Pakistan after coordinating with Islamabad, officials said Tuesday, and five Afghan troops were killed in a clash with insurgents in the west.
The clash between the militants and the elders happened late Monday in Bajur, a lawless region in Pakistan's northwest where troops and tribal militias have been battling Taliban guerrillas for more than three months.
Israr Khan, a government representative in the semi-autonomous region, said Taliban gunmen surrounded a group of elders from the Mamund tribe in a fortress-like compound in the village of Inayat Kili.
An hourslong gun battle between the two sides killed a commander of the Taliban fighters as well as two guards in the compound, Khan said. Four elders also died when an explosion hit the compound, he said. It was unclear what caused the blast.
Taliban spokesman Maulvi Umar confirmed the death of a militant commander in Monday's clash.
Pakistani and U.S. officials have applauded efforts by some tribal leaders to establish militias to fight Taliban and al Qaeda militants blamed for attacks on foreign troops in Afghanistan as well as targets in Pakistan.
NATO said it fired the rounds into Pakistan after insurgents attacked its troops in Afghanistan's eastern Paktika province with rockets from across the border on Sunday.
"The artillery fire caused a secondary explosion at the rocket launch site, which indicates additional munitions in the location," the NATO statement said.
Pakistani officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Officials say relations between NATO-led troops in Afghanistan and Pakistan's military are improving.
However, Pakistan has been complaining about unilateral missile strikes conducted by U.S. forces into its tribal areas. Pakistani officials say the U.S. strikes violate their country's sovereignty.
Separately, insurgents in the western Farah province ambushed an Afghan army supply convoy, killing five troops and wounding five others, said Gen. Fazludin Sayar, the army commander for the western region.
Sayar said five insurgents also died in the clash in Farah's Bala Buluk region on Monday.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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- Al Qada deals narcotics and smut from Pakistan. The crime syndicate trafficks drugs and illegal pornography to Junkies all over the world. They cater to addictions like substances and lust. Bin Laden made a substantial profit supplying Europe and America with euphoric chemicals and illicit magazines/DVDs. Anything is available on the Internet. Al Qada''s potent hashish and magazines depicting the forcible rape of small children are the top selling items. Al Qada''s business is indeed lucrative.
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- The tribes in Pakistan can''t win. Accept Taliban and Al qaeda in their villages and face drone attacks or fight these terrorists in their ranks and lose their lives. Trouble from both sides, life sucks.
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- As a proud member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO), I am not surprised about the hard times in Afghanistan. Many experts say we can never win that war, nor the war in Iraq if you put things in the enemy''s time frame. I was also surprised by today''s headlines about the Israeli mafia. I''m not naive and know they''re everywhere, but didn''t realize it was so intense in Israel. I enjoy discussing the intelligence community. Feel free to visit my Blog DECLASSIFIED SECRETS at and please take the POLL ON TERRORISM: www.declassifiedsecrets.blogspot.com/
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