US  drone strikes are one of the most contentious issues between uneasy  allies Pakistan and the United States, whose ties have been strained  after bin Laden’s discovery in a garrison town. -
PESHAWAR:  US missiles killed 18 militants in Pakistan’s tribal district of South  Waziristan on Monday, destroying compounds and a vehicle in the  deadliest drone strikes for months, officials said.
Three  strikes were reported just days after Pakistani officials said they  believed senior al Qaeda commander Ilyas Kashmiri had died in a similar  attack late Friday, also in South Waziristan which borders Afghanistan.
Washington  has called Pakistan’s semi-autonomous northwest tribal region the most  dangerous place on Earth and the global headquarters of al Qaeda.
The  first strike killed seven militants in the early hours in Shalam  Raghzai, 10 kilometres northwest of Wana, the district’s main town.
A  second slammed two missiles into a compound in Wacha Dana, 12  kilometres northwest of Wana, killing eight militants, Pakistani  officials said.
The third struck the Bray Nishtar area, which lies  on the border with North Waziristan at 10:45 am, about 30 kilometres  from the site of the other two raids and about eight hours later.
“A  US drone fired two missiles on a militant vehicle killing three  rebels,” a senior Pakistani security official told AFP of the third  attack.
Another official warned the death toll could rise further.  The combined toll of 18 made Monday’s drone strikes the deadliest  reported in Pakistan since a salvo of US missiles killed at least 35  people on March 17.
Initial reports suggested that some foreign  militants may have been killed and that Pakistani Taliban were also  targeted on Monday.
One of the demolished compounds was near a  madrassa and just south of the Ghwakhwa area, where Kashmiri, one of al  Qaeda’s most feared operational leaders, was reportedly killed days  earlier.
Monday’s attacks bring to 12 the number of strikes  reported in Pakistan’s tribal areas since US commandos killed al Qaeda  founder Osama bin Laden in a raid in the garrison city of Abbottabad on  May 2.





