Pakistan says Mehsud killing is US bid

Pakistan says Mehsud killing is US bid
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Pakistan Says Mehsud Killing Is US Bid To Scuttle Talks, Taliban Vows Revenge. Pakistani Taliban fighters secretly buried their leader on Saturday after he was killed by a US drone aircraft and quickly moved to replace him while vowing a wave of revenge suicide bombings.

Pakistan says Mehsud killing is US bid to scuttle talks, Taliban vows revenge

Pakistani Taliban fighters secretly buried their leader on Saturday after he was killed by a US drone aircraft and quickly moved to replace him while vowing a wave of revenge suicide bombings. The Pakistani government denounced the killing of Hakimullah Mehsud as a US bid to derail planned peace talks and summoned the US ambassador to protest.

Some lawmakers demanded the blocking of US supply lines into Afghanistan in retaliation. "The murder of Hakimullah is the murder of all efforts at peace," said interior minister Chaudhry Nisar. "Americans said they support our efforts at peace. Is this support?" The Pakistani foreign office said in a statement on Saturday Mehsuds death was "

counter-productive to Pakistans efforts to bring peace and stability to Pakistan and the region". Mehsud, who had a $5 million US bounty on his head, and three others were killed on Friday in the militant stronghold of Miranshah in northwest Pakistan. Mehsuds vehicle was hit after he attended a meeting of Taliban leaders, a Pakistani Taliban fighter said, adding that Mehsuds body was "damaged but recognisable".
His bodyguard and driver were also killed. He was secretly buried under cover of darkness in the early hours by a few companions amid fears that his funeral might be attacked by US drones, militants and security sources said. "Every drop of Hakimullahs blood will turn into a suicide bomber," said Azam Tariq, a Pakistani Taliban spokesman. "America and their friends shouldnt be happy because we will take revenge for our martyrs blood."
Mehsud took over as leader of the al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban in 2009. The groups two previous leaders were killed in attacks by US missile-firing drones. Taliban commanders said they wanted to replace him with the movements number two, Khan Said, who is also known as Sajna. Said is believed to have masterminded an attack on a jail in northwest Pakistan that freed nearly 400 prisoners in 2012 and a big attack on a Pakistani naval base.
But some commanders were unhappy with the choice and wanted more talks, several militants said, indicating divisions within the Pakistani Taliban, an umbrella group of factions allied with the Afghan Taliban and battling the Pakistani state in the hope of imposing Islamist rule.
The Pakistani Taliban killed an army general in September, has beheaded Pakistani soldiers and killed thousands of civilians in suicide bombings. The group also directed a failed attempt to bomb Times Square in New York. In 2010, Mehsud appeared in a farewell video with a Jordanian suicide bomber who killed seven CIA employees at a base in Afghanistan.
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