Pakistani fighter jets targeted militant bases in the lawless North Waziristan tribal region, including the home of Taliban commander Adnan Rashid, and killed 40 terrorists in retaliation for a string of deadly attacks on security forces.
Military sources today said 40 terrorists were killed overnight in the air strikes in North Waziristan, a key haven for Taliban and Al Qaeda elements.
The house of Rashid, a former air force technician sentenced to death for a 2003 attempt on the life of former dictator Pervez Musharraf, was targeted in the attacks.
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Rashid escaped with scores of hardened militants during a daring jailbreak engineered by the Pakistani Taliban in the northwestern city of Bannu in April 2012.
"On the basis of confirmed intelligence reports about the presence of militants, their hideouts were targeted by air strikes last night in North Waziristan Agency," a military source said.
The source claimed those killed included terrorists linked to attacks on a church and Qissa Khwani Bazar in Peshawar as well as a bombing within Bannu cantonment on Sunday that killed 26 troops.
"Scores of militants were injured in these strikes," the source said.
Unconfirmed reports said civilians too were killed in the air strikes. The casualties could not be independently verified as journalists are barred from the tribal belt.
Army chief Gen Raheel Sharif today visited Bannu and met victims of the bomb attack at a military hospital.
The operation by air force jets took many by surprise. This was the first time the air force resorted to air strikes in North Waziristan since a ceasefire was finalised with local Taliban chiefs in 2007.