Jetliner plot suspect may be killed

British citizen may be among 5 killed in U.S. missile strike

Pakistani students from Mohmand tribal region chant slogan behind a banner reading “Immediately stop the military operation in the country’s tribal areas,” during a rally Saturday in Peshawar, Pakistan. A suspected U.S. missile strike killed five militants, including several foreigners, in a stronghold of the Taliban and al-Qaida in northwestern Pakistan on Saturday, officials said.

? A British citizen linked to a plot to blow up jetliners flying across the Atlantic was believed killed Saturday by an apparent U.S. missile attack on an al-Qaida redoubt near the Afghan border, Pakistani officials said.

If confirmed, the death of Rashid Rauf would bolster U.S. claims that missile strikes on extremist strongholds in northwestern Pakistan are protecting the West against another Sept. 11-style terrorist attack.

Pakistan’s government confirmed that Rauf and a Saudi militant called Abu Zubair al-Masri were the apparent targets of the missile in North Waziristan in the restive tribal region that lies next to Afghanistan.

But Information Minister Sherry Rehman also reiterated the government’s complaint that missile attacks, apparently launched from unmanned aircraft, are fanning anti-Americanism and Islamic extremism tearing at both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

“It would have been better if our authorities had been alerted for local action,” Rehman told The Associated Press. “Drone incursions create a strong backlash.”

North Waziristan is one of the tribal areas where Taliban fighters operate out of bases to stage attacks across the border into Afghanistan and lies in the rugged frontier region where al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden may be hiding.

A Taliban spokesman insisted only civilians were killed in the pre-dawn missile attack in the village of Ali Khel, which lies in an area long reputed as a militant stronghold.

“None was a foreigner,” Ahmedullah Ahmedi said in a statement delivered to reporters in Miran Shah, the region’s main town.

However, three Pakistani intelligence officials, citing reports from field agents as well as intercepted militant communications, said they believed Rauf and al-Masri were among five killed.

Militants quickly cordoned off the area and one of the intelligence officials cautioned that government spies in the area had not seen any of the bodies. The intelligence officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the matter to news media.

Rauf, who is of Pakistani origin, has been on the run since last December, when he escaped from police escorting him back to jail after an extradition hearing in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad.

Britain was seeking his extradition ostensibly as a suspect in the 2002 killing of his uncle there, but Rauf had allegedly been in contact with a group in Britain planning to smuggle liquid explosives onto trans-Atlantic flights and also with a suspected al-Qaida mastermind of the plot in Afghanistan.

The plot’s revelation in August 2006 prompted a major security alert at airports worldwide and increased restrictions on carryon items.

A London jury convicted three men in the case in September, though several others were acquitted.