Chenagai airstrike

Chenagai airstrike
Part of War on Terror
LocationChenagai, Bajaur, Pakistan
Date30 October 2006
Attack type
Airstrike
Deaths70-82[1]
PerpetratorsUnknown (Pakistan or United States)

The Chenagai airstrike took place on October 30, 2006, around 5:00 am local time in the Chenagai village of Bajaur Agency (today Bajaur District) of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA, today Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, KPK) on Pakistan's western border with Afghanistan. Both Pakistan and the United States were accused of conducting the attack, however the United States officially denied responsibility for the attack.

Security and terrorism commentator Alexis Debat reported the target of the strike was Ayman al-Zawahiri, al-Qaeda's second-in-command. Though Zawahiri was not among the dead and was killed in a July 2022 airstrike in Kabul, two to five senior al-Qaeda commanders were present or during or shortly before the attack including Matiur Rehman Ali Muhammad, mastermind of the 2006 transatlantic aircraft plot, and Faqir Mohammad, a close friend of Zawahiri and deputy leader of Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

No official count of casualties was undertaken, local sources claim between 70 and 82 were killed in the attack.[2][3]

  1. ^ "The emerging age of drone wars". CBS News. Retrieved 10 October 2011. And more than once the United States has gotten it wrong -- perhaps most tragically on Oct. 30, 2006, when an errant drone strike obliterated an Islamic boarding school in Chenagai, Pakistan, killing 82 people.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ "The day 69 children died".

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