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Injured women and children were loaded into pickup trucks and driven toward nearby Miran Shah, the region's main town, Rahim said. The U.S. has pushed Pakistan to crack down on insurgents, warning that they are using pockets of the northwest as safe havens from which to plan attacks on American and NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan. A U.S.-led ground assault last week in the South Waziristan region prompted sharp protests from Islamabad and heightened speculation that Washington has given a green light for more aggressive cross-border strikes. Several recent missile attacks in the tribal belt have been attributed to U.S. forces. Asif Ali Zardari, who won Pakistan's presidential election on Saturday, has vowed to be tough on militancy. However, many Pakistanis blame their country's close alliance with Washington for fanning the violence. A suicide car bomber killed 35 people near the northwestern city of Peshawar during Saturday's voting. On Monday, officials said they had arrested a youth wearing a suicide jacket in Nowshera, 30 miles east of Peshawar. The army said two soldiers seized the bomber before he could attack a security forces convoy. Taliban militants have claimed responsibility for a string of suicide blasts and said they were revenge for ongoing Pakistani military operations in the northwest. The army said Monday that it killed 10 militants in an overnight operation in the restive Swat valley. It said the clash began when militants attacked soldiers with hand grenades, wounding two. Troops responded with firing mortars, rockets and artillery at militant positions.
[Associated
Press;
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