A US drone strike has killed three people in the tribal area of Pakistan near the Afghanistan border.
"Two missiles were dropped on the home of Maulvi Mohib and three people have been killed," said Baseer Khan Wazir on Friday. Wazir is the political agent and the most senior administrator in the Kurram Agency region in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan.
Afghan Taliban sources said the attack targeted Pakistan-based Haqqani militants who are allied to the Taliban militants in Afghanistan.
Two sources said Mohib was affiliated with Haqqani. "He remained associated with the Haqqani network but wasnt a prominent figure," said one senior Taliban member.
Another Taliban member, whose name was not mentioned in the report either, said Mohib was part of the Afghan Taliban. "We dont differentiate the Haqqani network and Taliban. This is just a propaganda of the Western media."
The US-led international forces in Afghanistan had no immediate information on the strike.
The United States carries out internationally-condemned extrajudicial drone strikes in several Islamic countries including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, and Libya.
If confirmed, it would be the first US drone strike inside Pakistan since President Donald Trump outlined his new Afghanistan strategy.
The US president unveiled his administrations new strategy in Afghanistan last month. He said he would prolong US military intervention in Afghanistan, ordering added forces in the region.
US officials have urged the neighboring Pakistani government to crack down on Haqqani militants operating in Pakistan. Islamabad, however, denies there are any militants on its side.
Observers predicted an increase in US drone attacks inside Pakistan when Trump came into power, but since January there have only been a few.
Another option being weighed by Washington, according to US officials, is targeted sanctions against Pakistani officials with links to extremist groups such as Haqqani.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, however, told Reuters on Monday that such a move would be counterproductive.
Trump, who had initially called for the withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan, argued that his "original instinct was to pull out," but that he was convinced by his national security team to take on the militants there.
The United States, under the presidency of Republican George W. Bush, and its allies invaded Afghanistan on October 7, 2001 as part of Washingtons so-called war on terror. Insecurity remains in the country despite the presence of foreign troops.
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