Pakistani Security Says Suspected U.S. Air Strike Killed Two

Tribesmen gather at the site of an earlier missile attack in North Waziristan in October

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistani security officials say a suspected U.S. drone aircraft fired a missile at a house in the North Waziristan region on the Afghan border, killing two people.

U.S. forces in Afghanistan have carried out at least 27 air strikes by unmanned aircraft on militant targets in northwest Pakistan this year, according to a Reuters tally, more than half of them since the beginning of September.

"A missile was fired at a house owned by one Taj Mohammad, and we have reports of two men killed," said an intelligence agency official.

Another security agent and a Taliban militant confirmed the strike and the death toll at the house in the village of Chashma, 2 kilometers north of the region's main town of Miranshah.

There was no immediate information about the identity of those killed.

Security has deteriorated sharply in both Pakistan and Afghanistan recently, seven years after U.S. soldiers and their Afghan allies drove the Taliban from power in Afghanistan in the weeks following the September 11 attacks on the United States.

Apparently frustrated by Pakistan's inability to tackle the militants, and alarmed by the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, the United States has ramped up its attacks using missile-firing pilotless drones against militants in Pakistan.

Pakistan has complained to the United States over the strikes, saying they undermine its efforts to combat militants, but Washington has shrugged off the protests.