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http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-889589.php

Army Times
May 3, 2002

May 01, 2002
Rocket fired at building housing U.S. forces in
Pakistan, but misses 


By Riaz Khan
Associated Press 

PESHAWAR, Pakistan �A rocket was fired early Wednesday
at the building where U.S. forces searching for
al-Qaida members in Pakistan were sleeping, a local
Pakistani official said. The rocket missed and no one
was hurt.
The rocket was fired about 3 a.m. at a vocational
training institute in Miranshah, about 9 miles from
the Afghanistan border in rugged northwestern
Pakistan, an official in Miranshah said on condition
of anonymity.

It was apparently fired from a hilly area to the north
� on the Afghan side of the border, he said.

Local people said the rocket missed the institute and
hit the wall outside another college about 300 yards
away, damaging a wall and windows. No one was hurt
because the building was empty, the official said.

At Central Command in Florida, Air Force Lt. Col.
Martin Compton said officials were unaware of the
incident and that he had no information that American
military were in the building.

It was not known who fired the rocket, but area
residents found pamphlets from a previously unknown
group called Mujahedeen of North Waziristan � the
tribal region of which Miranshah is the center.

The pamphlet warned area Muslims to �wake up because
the hypocrite rulers have challenged the faith and
Islamic honor ... by bringing American commandos to
Miranshah.�

It warned Muslims faced �disgrace and trouble� unless
they �stand up against the army of Jews and
Christians,� and said the murder of Pakistani troops
and officials assisting the Americans was also
�justified.�

The pamphlet was dropped around town overnight, said
Haji Mujbaba said by telephone from Miransha. �This
morning people found it in different places in the
market areas,� he said.

The number of U.S. soldiers staying in the building
was unknown.

Both U.S. and Pakistani officials have confirmed that
a small U.S. force is operating with Pakistani troops
in the wild tribal region, which borders Afghanistan.
The area is the traditional stronghold for Osama bin
Laden, the Saudi-born fugitive who heads al-Qaida.

The Pakistani army treads lightly in the tribal
regions, whose deeply conservative and fiercely
independent inhabitants swear little allegiance to
anyone but their tribal elders and laws laid out by
tradition and strict adherence to the tenets of Islam.

A raid last weekend on a religious school resulted in
no arrests, but enraged local religious leaders, who
condemned the presence of Americans as an insult to
their sacred sites.

�We will not let American forces operate in our
areas,� Maulvi Abdul Hafeez, a prominent cleric in Mir
Ali, about 200 miles southwest of Peshawar, told The
Associated Press by phone on Saturday.

Until recently, the U.S. military presence in Pakistan
was mainly confined to air bases and other such
facilities. Clashes have been rare despite a vocal
minority of hardline Islamic groups that still support
Afghanistan�s Taliban.

Last October, the Pentagon said a U.S. helicopter that
had picked up an Army Black Hawk helicopter that had
crashed hours earlier in Pakistan came under hostile
fire while refueling at a Pakistani airfield. No
details were released, but a Pentagon spokeswoman said
there were no U.S. casualties.

In the first two months of the war on terror there
were at least two attacks on U.S. military stationed
at the air force base in Jacobabad, in southern Sindh
province. It is one of three airbases being used by
the U.S. military in Pakistan.

Across the border from the tribal regions in eastern
Afghanistan, where U.S.-led special forces have been
running down remnants of al-Qaida and Taliban forces,
such attacks are more frequent.

Just Monday, Australian military officials said their
special forces opened fire after coming under mortar
and rocket-propelled grenade fire, killing or wounding
two of the attackers.

Last Thursday, attackers fired a rocket near a small
U.S. outpost in the Afghan city of Khost, about 30
miles northwest of Miranshah. No injuries were
reported. 




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