Fifteen hours after brazenly storming into Pakistan navy’s key Mehran airbase in the heart of the port city of Karachi, heavily-armed Taliban militants were still holding onto parts of the base after destroying two US-made surveillance aircraft and killing 13 security personnel.
Pakistan army’s elite Special Service Group and naval commandos backed by helicopters were hunting down a group of 15-20 militants, who stormed into the sprawling naval complex last night in the worst assault on a military base since the Army Headquarters was besieged in October 2009 in Rawalpindi.
The terrorists in a well coordinated attack sneaked into the complex, reportedly housing US-acquired P-3C Orions, long-range maritime reconnaissance planes and Harpoon anti-ship missiles and were locked in continuing gun battle with the security forces.
Eleven naval personnel, including a lieutenant, and two paramilitary troopers were killed till noon today, naval spokesman Mr Irfan-ul-Haq told the media.
Fourteen security personnel — including 11 from the navy — were injured in the skirmishes with the terrorists, he said.
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was part of revenge for the May 2 American raid that killed al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and that their men had orders to fight till death.
“They do not want to come out alive. They have gone there to embrace martyrdom,” Taliban spokesman Mr Ehsanullah Ehsan told foreign agencies from an undisclosed location in northwest Pakistan.
There were unconfirmed reports that four terrorists were killed or had blown themselves up while another four were captured by security forces.
Spokesman Mr Haq did not give details of casualties among the attackers, saying the operation to flush them out was still underway. Some of the arrested terrorists had identity the cards of security agencies, Geo News channel reported.
Local television news networks aired the images of an aircraft caught in flames and thick smoke billowing out of the naval base as staccato of gunfire echoed from the background.
New York Times reported that Mehran, while an important base, is far from the most vital military installation in the teeming port city. About 15 miles away is the Masroor airbase of the PAF which is believed to be a large depot for nuclear weapons that can be delivered from the air.
Over 20 loud explosions were heard from the base, the headquarters of Pakistan’s naval air arm, following the attack and intermittent firing was reported till this morning.