Pakistan attacks Taliban stronghold

Pakistani security forces launched an offensive against Taliban fighters near the northwestern city of Peshawar today, prompting…

Pakistani security forces launched an offensive against Taliban fighters near the northwestern city of Peshawar today, prompting a militant commander to suspend peace talks and threaten retaliation.

The crackdown in the Khyber tribal region followed a series of sorties by Taliban fighters into Peshawar to push people to observe their puritanical interpretation of Islamic law.

"There has not been any resistance from any group or miscreants," according to a government statement in Peshawar.

Major-General Alam Khattack, who is leading the offensive, said it was focused on Bara town, around 5 km (3 miles) west of Peshawar, and could be extended to other parts of Khyber.

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"It was initially planned for four or five days but it may be extended further," he told a news conference in Peshawar.

A senior security official said the troops fired mortar rounds into militants' bases and destroyed eight of them, including the house of local militant commander Mangal Bagh. He said one militant was killed in an exchange of fire.

Roads in and out of Bara were closed, and a curfew ordered.

"People are in a state of fear. They are moving to safer places. All shops are shut," Murad Safi, a resident of Bara, said.

The offensive in the Khyber tribal region marked the first major military action Pakistan's newly elected government has taken against the militants operating in the tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan.

The government had said it preferred to try to defuse tension with the groups through negotiations, but with threats by Islamic militants to the city of Peshawar growing in recent weeks, the military decided to take action. Khyber also is a key route for moving US military supplies into neighboring Afghanistan.