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Official: U.S. missiles kill Germans in Pakistan

Suspected militants were in rugged border area where a cell of Europeans is believed to be hiding

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Video: Drone strike kills German militants in Pakistan

  1. Closed captioning of: Drone strike kills German militants in Pakistan

    >>> a u.s. missile strike in pakistan has reportedly killed five german militants. this came amid a terror plot in western europe .

    >> reporter: u.s. officials say "today" that the terror alert was issued for americans traveling in europe because of a stream of threats, many rooted in pakistan, including european mi militants being trained there. but officials do not want to panic u.s. tourists traveling abroad. the advice is simply to be careful in public places. and this note today homeland security officials say there's no known connection to plots aimed at the u.s. but they should not be alarmed as they see extra security on am track. they do this every two months, most recently on september 10 and during holiday weekends. contrary to some reports it was long planned and has nothing to do with the threats in europe. and there are no known threats against the united states .

NBC News and news services NBC News and news services
updated 10/5/2010 7:59:51 AM ET

Eight people were killed in a U.S. drone attack near the Afghanistan border on Monday night, sources told NBC News.

The unpiloted aircraft fired three missiles and struck a home at Mir Ali bazaar, the second largest town in North Waziristan.

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Speaking on condition of anonymity, a security official said that several German nationals, who were associated with militants, had been living in the house.

"Five of them were confirmed to be German nationals, having lived there for some time," the official said.

However, the official did not provide further information about identity of the German nationals.

Video: Drone strike kills German militants in Pakistan (on this page)

He said local tribesman Sher Maula Khan owned the house and had rented it to the Germans.

NBC News reported that Khan was caught by Pakistani security agencies in July this year along with his younger daughter for allegedly helping German national Rami Mackenzie, 27, cross into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province from North Waziristan.

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He remains in the custody of the security agencies.

'Concrete evidence'
The German nationals were in the rugged Pakistan border area where a cell of Germans and Britons at the heart of the U.S. terror alert for Europe — a plot U.S. officials link to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden — were believed to be hiding, the Associated Press reported.

The attack, part of a recent spike in American drone strikes on Pakistan, came  as Germany said it has "concrete evidence" that at least 70 Germans have undergone paramilitary training in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and about a third have returned to Germany.

However, tribespeople and political officials in North Waziristan denied that German nationals has been killed in the missile strikes.

A local political official, who requested anonymity, told NBC News that all the eight men killed were local tribal militants who were having their dinner at the time of the attack.

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Authorities across Europe have heightened security at airports and other travel hubs as well as at main tourist attractions following the U.S. warning of an al-Qaida-linked terror plot targeting London, Paris, Berlin and other European capitals.

The terror cell said to be behind the Europe plot — eight Germans and a Briton — were believed to have been in hiding in the region, the Associated Press reported. A second Briton was killed in a U.S. strike last month.

Germany's ARD public television cited unnamed sources Tuesday as saying that four of the Germans killed in the missile attack were of Turkish descent.

The country's Foreign Ministry said late Monday it was investigating the reports, but did not return calls seeking comment Tuesday on the militants' identities.

However, the German police agency responsible for terrorism investigations, the Federal Criminal Police Office, said as many as 220 people have traveled from Germany to Pakistan and Afghanistan for paramilitary training, and at least 70 have received it. A Pakistani intelligence official last week said there are believed to be around 60 Germans in North Waziristan now.

Despite the growing evidence of a terror plot, France, Britain and Germany — the nations believed to be the targets of the scheme — have not changed their terror threat levels. On Monday, the German government played down the fears by declaring there is "no reason to be alarmist."

Video: Taking terror alert in stride, travelers commit to tours (on this page)

The threat is being viewed differently by Washington and European capitals, and some analysts said it was a matter of approach. Such differences have played out repeatedly in the years since the 9/11 attacks on the United States, they said.

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British intelligence prefers to keep targets under surveillance as they plan attacks, often waiting until the final stages to intervene — hoping to gather evidence and to gain information about contacts in Britain and overseas.

"That cuts significantly too close to the bone for the United States. They are not happy to let plots run for too long," said Tobias Feakin, director of national security and resilience at London's Royal United Services Institute, a military think tank.

In Germany, the homeland security spokesman for the main opposition Social Democratic party said there is a different security culture in Europe and the United States.

"After 9/11 there were almost daily warnings of new threats in the U.S. which — thank God! — never became a reality" in Germany, Dieter Wiefelspuetz said.

In Washington, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said Monday that the travel advisory was issued because of extensive evidence of a plot.

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"We felt, having tracked intelligence over a lengthy period of time, it was appropriate to issue this alert at this moment," he said.

"We specifically have said continue with your travel plans, but just be cautious because we are aware of active plots against the United States, American citizens and other allies around the world."

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German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere insisted his nation had no concrete evidence of an imminent attack. "There is no reason to be alarmist at this time," de Maiziere said.

He said he had spoken with U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano about the travel advisory and that it is not "in keeping with our assessment of the situation."

In a rare public speech last month, MI5 director general Jonathan Evans warned that the risk of attacks can never be completely eradicated.

"We appear increasingly to have imported from the American media the assumption that terrorism is 100 percent preventable and any incident that is not prevented is seen as a culpable government failure. This is a nonsensical way to consider terrorist risk," Evans said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Photos: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil - Recent images

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  1. Blind-folded suspected terrorists arrested by Pakistani paramilitary troops are presented to media representatives in the town of Bara, in the Khyber tribal district on Sept. 15. Pakistani paramilitary soldiers carried out a cordon and search operation and arrested 25 suspected terrorists and recovered suicide vests and explosive materials. (A. Majeed / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  2. A father places his hand on his 7 year old son, Abrar, who is suffering from typhoid, at a camp for flood victims in Nowshera, on Sept. 15. The floods are Pakistan's worst-ever natural disaster in terms of damage, with at least 6 million people forced from their homes and 20 million people affected. The disaster has killed more than 1,750 people, and aid agencies have warned that millions are at risk of death if emergency food and shelter are not quickly provided. (Fayaz Aziz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  3. Stranded flood victims scramble for food rations, dropped by Pakistan Army soldiers from a helicopter on Sept. 13, near the village of Goza in Dadu district in Sindh province. Since the flooding began over six weeks prior, new devastation continues across the Sindh province as flood waters continue to rise and overcome new villages. The country's agricultural heartland has been devastated, with rice, corn and wheat crops destroyed. The army and aid organizations are struggling to cope with the scope and scale of the disaster that has left over a third of the country under water. (Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  4. People rush for cover soon after an explosion during a Shiite procession in Quetta on Sept. 3. A blast at a Shiite procession killed at least 43 people in southwestern Pakistan in the third deadly attack in a week on the country's religious minorities. (Arshad Butt / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  5. Shi'ite Muslims carry coffins of victims killed in a bomb blast during a Shi'ite Muslim procession on Sept. 1, for burial in Lahore the day after the bombing. Pakistan tightened security in the eastern city of Lahore after three bomb attacks killed dozens and wounded over 170. (Mohsin Raza / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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  6. A young child rests in a hammock at an overhead bridge next to a flood relief camp in Sukkur, in Sindh province on Aug. 28. Flood waters threatened to engulf two towns in southern Pakistan, a month after the disaster began. (Athar Hussain / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  7. Pakistani villagers affected by the floods line up for food at a releif camp in Sukkar on Aug. 27. (Pedro Ugarte / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  8. A Pakistan army rescue helicopter attempts to distribute water to flood-affected residents in Ghouspur on Aug. 9. (Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  9. Marooned flood victims looking to escape grab the side bars of a hovering Army helicopter which arrived to distribute food supplies in the Muzaffargarh district of Punjab province, Aug. 7. Pakistanis desperate to get out of flooded villages threw themselves at helicopters on as more heavy rain was expected. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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  10. Paramilitary troops gather near a vehicle set on fire by an angry mob following the killing of a local leader of the Muttahida Quami Movement in Karachi on Aug. 3. Gunmen killed dozens of people as security forces struggled to gain control of the city. (Shakil Adil / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  11. Soldiers carry the body of a dead man amongst residents being evacuated by boat from Nowshera, located in Pakistan's northwest Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province, on July 31. Heavy monsoon rains have triggered the worst floods in decades in Pakistan's northwest, killing more than 400 people and forcing thousands from their homes as authorities struggle to reach stranded villagers. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  12. A helicopter picks up dead bodies from the site of a plane crash in Islamabad on July 28. A government official said all 152 people on board the plane that crashed in the hills surrounding Pakistan's capital were killed. (Mohammad Sajjad / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  13. Residents carry the draped body of a bomb victim to his grave in Pabbi, east of Peshawar on July 26. A suicide bomber killed at least eight people and wounded 20 in a blast near the house of a provincial minister who had repeatedly spoken out against the Taliban, police said. (Fayaz Aziz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  14. Christians gather outside of the damaged United Presbyterian Church on July 23 in the Christian neighborhood of Daoodnagar, Faisalabad.

    Two Christian brothers, Rahid Emmanuel and Sajjid Emmanuel, who were accused of writing a blasphemous pamphlet critical of the Prophet Mohammed, were shot dead on July 19 outside a courthouse in Faisalabad.
    According to locals, announcements were made from mosques in Daoodnagar asking people to come out to fight rampaging Christians, resulting in approximately 400 to 600 Muslims attacking churches and shops in the Christian neighborhood. (Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  15. A family laughs while watching acrobats perform at the Jan Baz circus in Islamabad on July 21. The circus, along with a summer festival, goes until July 25 at the Pothohair Village in the nation's capital. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  16. Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, right, looks toward U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, left, as commerce ministers Makhdoom Amin Fahim, right, of Pakistan and Anwar Ul Haq Ahady of Afghanistan sign agreements in Islamabad on July 18. Walking in the center background is Special Representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  17. Muhammad Munawar prays at the grave of his slain son, 17-year-old medical student Waleed, on July 14 in Chenab Nagar. Waleed was murdered in the May Lahore attacks on the Ahmadi mosques while talking to his parents on his cellphone during the attack. Waleed had lost both his grandfathers in the 1980s in killings that were deemed to be religiously motivated against Ahmadis. The Pakistani Ahmadis, who define themselves as Muslim but could face years in prison if they openly declare or practice their faith, have suffered persecution and discrimination for decades. In May 2010, 93 people were killed and over 100 injured in attacks on two Ahmadi mosques in Lahore. (Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  18. Residents watch a polo match from hilltops at the start of the annual Shandur polo festival, about 124 miles northwest of Chitral on July 7. The polo festival, played at an estimated altitude of 12,139 feet, has been running annually since 1936. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  19. Pakistani security officials examine the site of suicide bomb attacks at the Saint Syed Ali bin Osman Al-Hajvery shrine, popularly known as Data Ganj Bakhsh in Lahore on July 2. At least 41 people were killed in three suicide attacks at the tomb of an Islamic saint in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, police said. (Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  20. Dozens of vehicles carrying supplies to NATO forces in Afghanistan, were attacked and burned by suspected Taliban gunmen in a field in Sangjani, located on the outskirts of Islamabad early morning June 9. The ensuing fire destroyed about 50 tankers and containers, killing at least six. (Faisal Mahmood / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  21. A demonstrator in Peshawar shouts slogans during a protest against Israel, after its military moved against a relief aid flotilla on its way to the Gaza Strip. Pakistan condemned the Israeli commando attack on the aid ships, describing the killings of the activists as "brutal and inhuman." (A Majeed / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  22. Members of the Ahmadi Muslim community hold the names of victims of a double mosque bombing by militants in Lahore as they stand over their graves in Chenab Nagar, Punjab's Chiniot District Saturday. Chenab Nagar, also known as Rabwah, is the headquarters for the Ahmadiyya community in Pakistan. (Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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    Volunteers carry a man injured in an attack outside the Garhi Shahu neighborhood mosque in Lahore, Friday. Gunmen attacked worshippers from a minority Muslim sect in two mosques, taking hostages and killing at least 70 people, officials said. (K.M. Chaudary / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  24. Activists of Islami Jamiat-e-Tulaba, the student wing of the hardline party Jamaat-i-Islami, shout slogans during a protest in Lahore against the published caricatures of Prophet Mohammed on Facebook on May 20. (Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  25. Security officials survey the site of a suicide bomb attack in Dera Ismail Khan on May 18. A police van was attacked, killing 12 people, including three policemen. (Mustansar Baloch / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  26. A man works behind a textile machine at a factory in Faisalabad on May 17. Power outages of up to 18 hours a day are threatening the government's credibility at a time when the U.S. is pressing it to step up the fight against the Taliban and al-Qaida. (Vincent Thian / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
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    Army soldiers escort Major General Sajjad Ghani, not pictured, as he arrives to inaugurate a water supply plan in the Khawazakhela area of the Swat valley on April 22. Although large parts of Swat, a former tourist destination, have been cleared of militants, most of the Taliban leaders are believed to have gone into hiding in its remote mountain areas and nearby districts. (Rashid Iqbal / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  28. Traders at Karachi's Stock Exchange stand outside their booths while observing the market on computer screens, on April 21. Pakistan's short-term money rates fell on Wednesday, but dealers said they were waiting for the result of a treasury bill auction later in the day in which cut-off yields are expected to rise by 5 to 10 basis points. (Athar Hussain / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  29. People carry the coffin of a bombing victim for funeral in Peshawar on April 20. An Islamist politician, whose party lost several members in a suicide attack on April 19, blamed Pakistan's alliance with the U.S. for the violence and urged Islamabad to break ranks in the war on terror. (Mohammad Sajjad / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  30. An official examines a damaged police vehicle after a bomb blast in Peshawar on April 19. At least 24 people, including a child and police officials, were killed in bombings hours apart at a high school and a crowded market. The blast struck soon after protesters rallying against soaring inflation and crippling power shortages had left the market area. (A Majeed / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
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    Journalists mourn the death of their colleague in Quetta, on April 16. A suicide bomber attacked a hospital emergency room where Shiites were mourning a slain bank manager, killing eight people including a journalist and two policemen. (Arshad Butt / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  32. A darkened street in Lahore during a power outage on April 14. Pakistan is currently facing a power shortage of almost 5,000 megawatts because it has failed to build new power plants to keep up with the demand for electricity, resulting in prolonged outages every day. (Rahat Dar / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  33. Pakistani chefs prepare traditional dishes at a roadside restaurant in Karachi in the evening on April 11. (Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
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    Security forces at the site of a bomb attack near the U.S. consulate in Peshawar on April 5. Militants using a car bomb and firing weapons attacked hours after a suicide bomber killed forty-one people in the northwest town of Timargarah, officials said. Pakistani Taliban militants claimed responsibility for the attack on the consulate, in which eight people including three militants were killed but no one in the mission was hurt. (Fayaz Aziz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  35. Editor's note:
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    Pakistani policemen and supporters of Awami National Party (ANP) walk among bodies of people killed by a suicide bomb attack in Timargarah, the main town in the district of Lower Dir on April 5, where Pakistan waged a major offensive against local Taliban insurgents last year. Police said the bomber tried to get into the ground where the ANP was holding a meeting, but he was stopped and blew himself up, killing 41 people. (Ihsan Ullah / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  36. Sahil Saeed, a five-year old British boy who was kidnapped on March 3 from his grandparents home in Jhelum, is reunited with his father, Raja Naqqash, and grandmother Tasnim Bashir at the British High Commission in Islamabad following his release on March 18. (EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  37. Sunny Hanif is seen working on a car while Shazad Kaleem is reflected in a mirror at the car garage where they work in Islamabad, on March 17. (Muhammed Muheisen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
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    An injured child cries as he sits next to other victims at the site of suicide bombing in Saidu Sharif, a town in the Swat Valley, March 13. A suicide attacker struck a security checkpoint in northwest Pakistan, killing scores of people and injuring dozens. (Sherin Zada / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  39. Pakistani officials and soldiers visit the site of bombing in Lahore, on March 12. A pair of suicide bombers targeting army vehicles detonated explosives within seconds of each other, killing scores of people, police said. (K.M. Chaudary / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  40. Police and rescue workers inspect a crater after a suicide bomb blast targeted the Federal Investigation Agency in Lahore on March 8. The attack on the police intelligence unit killed at least eleven people and wounded about sixty during the morning rush hour. (Mohsin Raza / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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    Local residents install a welcome message that reads in Urdu, "Welcome, Long Live Pak Army," after security forces claimed to have taken control of a former stronghold of Taliban militants in the Tangi area of the Bajaur tribal region on March 6. (EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  42. Soldiers inspect a cave that the Pakistan Army said was built and used by the Pakistani Taliban in Damadola on March 2. (Adrees Latif / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  43. Pakistani soldier Ismail Mirzam, 25, stands guard in a village in the Bajur tribal region on the border with Afghanistan on March 2. (Muhammed Muheisen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  44. Pakistani protesters riot after gunmen opened fire on a religious procession marking Mulid an-Nabi, the anniversary of the birth of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. in Faisalabad on Feb. 27. (Khalil Ur Rehman / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  45. A scene of devastation after a suicide bombing in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley, on Feb. 22. The blast, aimed at Pakistani security forces, ripped through a busy market killing at least eight people and wounding dozens. (Sherin Zada / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  46. Supporters of a Pakistani religious party Jamaat-e-Islami hold a rally demanding the release of accused al-Qaida associate Aafia Siddiqui, Feb. 21, in Islamabad. Siddiqui, 37, was convicted of two counts of attempted murder. (Anjum Naveed / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  47. Alleged Taliban commander Abdullah, who goes by the alias Abu Waqas, gestures while flanked by security officials as he appears at a court in Karachi on Feb. 18. According to police officials, Abdullah was involved in recruiting female suicide bombers. (Fareed Khan / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  48. Pakistani Army soldiers survey a hideout used by Taliban militants, during a military operation in the lawless Bajaur tribal agency near the Afghanistan border, on Tuesday, Feb. 9. (EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
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  49. Pakistani Shiite Muslims take part in a rally to condemn Friday's bombing, Sunday, Feb. 7, in Lahore. Dozens of people died and many others were wounded in Karachi on Friday when suspected Sunni militants targeted a bus carrying Shiite worshippers and then attacked the major hospital treating victims of the first bombing. (K.M. Chaudary / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  50. Hundreds gather around the bodies of bomb victims who were killed in an attack on a bus. Shiite Muslims travelling to a religious procession were bombed during their funeral prayer in Karachi, on Feb. 6. (Athar Hussain / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  51. Men grieve for relatives who were victims of a suicide bombing, outside Jinnah hospital in Karachi, Friday, Feb. 5. A suspected suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed 12 Shiites on Friday, officials said, in another blow to government efforts to defeat al Qaeda-backed Taliban insurgents. Hours later, the hospital where the wounded, were being treated was hit by a huge explosion from a similar device. (Athar Hussain / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  52. Pakistani paramilitary soldiers inspect a damaged bus at the scene of a bomb blast in the southern port city of Karachi, Friday, Feb. 5. At least twelve Shiite Muslim devotees were killed and dozens injured, including women and children, when their bus was hit by a bomb explosion planted on a motercycle. (Rehan Khan / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
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    A resident helps rescue students from the rubble of a bombing near a girls school in Timergara, Pakistan, that also killed at least three students, three U.S. soldiers and one Pakistani soldier on Wednesday, Feb. 3. (Ali Shah / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  54. A hospital worker carries a boy hurt in a suicide car bombing in Bajaur, Pakistan, on Jan. 30. The blast near a security checkpost on Saturday killed 14 people. (Fayaz Aziz / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  55. Pakistanis in Karachi on Jan. 23 protest against U.S. drone attacks targeting suspected Taliban and Al-Qaida extremists along the border with Afghanistan. (Rehan Khan / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  56. A Pakistani girl plays with her brother outside their makeshift tent in a slum on the outskirts of Islamabad on Jan. 28. (Muhammed Muheisen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  57. A man follows his shot through the fog while playing cricket in a park in Lahore, Pakistan, on Jan. 24. (Mohsin Raza / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  58. Onlookers watch firefighters extinguish a burning NATO supply truck outside Peshawar, Pakistan, on Jan. 23. Militants launch frequent attacks on supplies for U.S. and NATO-led forces fighting against Taliban insurgents across the border. (Hasham Ahmed / AFP - Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
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    U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, center, attends a wreath laying ceremony with Pakistani Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani in Rawalpindi on Jan. 21. Gates praised the efforts of the Pakistani army, while pressing for further action against militants carrying out cross-border attacks into Afghanistan. (Master Sgt. Jerry Morrison / U.S. Air Force via AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  60. A boy is held as he weeps for a family member, who was injured in a bomb blast, as he waits at the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, on Jan. 20. A Pakistani politician was among four people wounded by a bomb that exploded in the key city of Peshawar, the gateway to the Khyber pass and Afghanistan, police said. (K.Parvez / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  61. Pakistani religious students take their first term examination at Karachi's biggest Islamic seminary, Jamia Binoria, on Jan. 17. Binoria is one of the country's model seminaries which modified its curriculum and added contemporary subjects like computer, mathematics and science. (Fareed Khan / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  62. Pakistani villagers examine the rubble of a state-run dispensary building wrecked by militants in Sultan Khel, an area of the Pakistani Khyber tribal region along the Afghan border, on Jan. 16. Pakistani security forces are battling Taliban fighters and other militant groups in the rugged northwest regions bordering Afghanistan. (Qazi Tariq / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  63. Pakistani acid attack survivor, Nusrat Aflal, 25, watches television at the Acid Survivors Foundation (ASF) in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Jan. 14. The foundation provides medical, psychosocial and legal support to victims of acid attacks to reintegrate them into mainstream society. Acid attacks are rising, with ASF recording 48 cases in 2009, according to the legal coordinator with Pakistan's ASF who says countless more probably go unreported because of social stigma. (Muhammed Muheisen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  64. Members of a local peace committee take part in a rally to condemn the recent wave of violence, on Jan. 11, in Karachi. Dozens of people have been killed in Pakistan's largest city including three found decapitated over the weekend in a wave of targeted attacks among rival political groups that some say is aimed at destabilizing the country's ruling coalition. (Shakil Adil / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  65. A Pakistani Army soldier passes by a war-ravaged building in Malam Jabba, a region of the Swat valley where the Pakistani Army has been engaged in ongoing operations against Taliban militants, on Jan. 10. Although large parts of Swat, a former tourist destination, have been cleared of the militants, most of the Taliban leaders are believed to have gone into hiding in its remote mountain areas and nearby districts. (Rashid Iqbal / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  66. A traffic jam is seen on Kojak pass, the only route that connects Chaman, which sits on the Pakistani side of the border with Afghanistan, with Quetta, on Jan. 10. Landlocked Afghanistan receives most of its imports via the Pakistani sea port of Karachi. (Matiullah Achakzai / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  67. Security officials recover ammunition, explosives and Islamic literature amid the rubble of a house that collapsed after a huge explosion allegedly caused by explosives stored in the house, in the southern port city of Karachi, on Jan. 8. "It seems to be a premature explosion that killed six people," Karachi police chief Waseem Ahmad said. Police suspected that those killed were members of a militant group planning terrorist attacks in the country's financial capital. (Rehan Khan / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  68. Nawaz Sharif, left, Pakistan's former Prime Minister and leader of the main opposition party, Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), visits the scene of the Dec. 28 bomb attack on a Shiite Muslim mourning procession, in Karachi, on Jan. 6. (Rehan Khan / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  69. An officer of the Airport Security Forces searches a passenger at the international departure lounge of Benazir Bhutto Airport in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Jan. 4. Airline passengers in Pakistan heading to the United States met increased security screening following U.S. requests for stricter checks after a Nigerian man allegedly tried to ignite explosives on a flight to Detroit. (Anjum Naveed / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  70. Pakistani boys play table football in Lahore, Pakistan, on Jan. 4. (Muhammed Muheisen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
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    A Pakistani policeman escorts hand-cuffed men identified as Aman Hassan Yemer, left, Ahmed Abdulah Minni, second left, Waqar Hussain Khan, right, Ramy Zamzam, left rear, and Umar Farooq, right rear, as they leave a police station after their court appearance in Sargodha, Punjab province, on Jan. 4. Police say the five Americans contacted the Taliban over the Internet and plotted attacks inside Pakistan. They arrived under heavy security, with armed policemen and elite forces on rooftops and guarding roads in Sargodha, the town where they were detained a month earlier. (Faisal Mahmood / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  72. A laborer clears rubble at the site of destroyed shops in Karachi, on Jan. 3. The shops were set ablaze by an angry mob in reaction to the previous week's suicide bomb attack during a procession of Shiite Muslims commemorating Ashoura. (Akhtar Soomro / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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    People recover bodies from the debris of collapsed houses at the scene of a massive suicide attack in Lakki Marwat, a town in the militancy-hit North-West Frontier (NWFP) of Pakistan. The bomber detonated his explosives-filled vehicle at the venue of a volleyball match where hundreds of men were gathered, on Jan. 1, killing at least 93 people and injuring more than 100. (Saood Rehman / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  74. Policemen escort two men suspected of looting and burning markets to a district court in Karachi, on Friday, Jan. 1, after a suicide bomb attack during an Ashoura procession on Monday. Pakistan's commercial capital nearly shut down on Friday as religious and political leaders called for a strike to protest against violence after a suicide bomber killed 43 people at the religious procession on Monday. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack on the huge crowd of Shiite Muslims, and threatened more bloodshed. (Akhtar Soomro / Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
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  1. Image: Pakistani Ahmadi Community Lives In Fear
    Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images
    Above: Slideshow (74) Pakistan: A nation in turmoil - Recent images
  2. Image: Activists of Pakistani Islamist organisa
    Tariq Mahmood / AFP - Getty Images
    Slideshow (56) Pakistan: A nation in turmoil - 2009: A turbulent year

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