ORAKZAI AGENCY: Security forces killed six militants during an operation in the Orakzai Agency on Saturday, DawnNews reported.
According to sources, fighter jets and helicopter gunships also bombed several militant hideouts in the Kharzai area.
Separately, an electricity pylon was blown up by militants in the Shabqader area of Mohmand Agency due to which residents are suffering a total blackout.
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military has broken the back of militants linked to al Qaeda and Taliban, the country’s powerful head of the army said in a speech on Saturday that followed criticism from the United States that it wasn’t doing enough to fight militancy.
Washington, struggling to put down a 10-year insurgency in Afghanistan, said this month that Pakistan lacked a robust plan to defeat militants, and its intelligence agents were maintaining links with Afghan Taliban militants.
Without making any reference to Washington’s concerns, Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Kayani said Pakistan army was fully aware of the internal and external threats faced by the country.
“In the war against terrorism, our officers and soldiers have made great sacrifices and have achieved tremendous success,” he said in a speech to army cadets at Kakul military academy, north of Islamabad, broadcast by state television.
“The terrorists’ backbone has been broken and Inshallah we will soon prevail.”
Pakistan is crucial for US efforts to stabilise Afghanistan but relations between the two allies have been strained since the fatal shooting of two Pakistanis by Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor, in the city of Lahore in January.
Pakistani and US officials have traded barbs publicly, reflecting deepening mistrust between the two countries.
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Pakistani media during a visit this week that continuing ties between agents of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Haqqani faction, one of the most brutal Afghan Taliban groups, was “at the core” of problems between the two countries.
Hours after Mullen’s criticism, Pakistan army rejected suggestion that it was not doing enough to combat militants as “negative propaganda”.
However, despite the rising level of rhetoric, both sides have sought to mend their ties because both need each other for their own reasons.