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Internally-displaced Pakistani residents fleeing military operations against Taliban insurgents in the country's North Waziristan tribal area arrive in the town of Bannu, on the edge of Pakistan's tribal belt, on February 25, 2014. Image Credit: AFP

Miransah: Pakistani fighter jets bombarded Taliban hideouts in the troubled northwest on Tuesday, killing at least 30 in the fourth airstrikes since peace talks stalled, in what analysts say is a surgical operation to reassert the military’s dominance.

The morning attacks on hideouts in the North and South Waziristan tribal districts were the latest in a series of airstrikes by the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) since February 20 that have killed more than 100 alleged militants.

Experts say the strikes are designed to give the military the upper-hand if peace talks, which were suspended last week, resume and do not believe the army is prepared to launch a full-fledged operation in the area.

Independent verification of the death tolls in the strikes has not been possible since it is difficult for journalists to enter the area and civilian administrators are reluctant to comment.

The focus of Tuesday’s attacks, which also involved helicopter gunships, was mostly the mountainous Shawwal valley and Datta Khel in North Waziristan, and Sararogha in neighbouring South Waziristan, the officials said.

Residents said hundreds of families have fled their homes.

“People are leaving the area after a deadlock in peace talks,” a resident of Miranshah told AFP by telephone requesting anonymity.

They are taking shelter with relatives in Peshawar and other cities further away from the border, residents said.

Earlier this month Pakistan had entered into talks with the Taliban aimed at ending their seven-year insurgency.

But the militant group continued carrying out attacks on a near-daily basis, with dialogue suspended after the insurgents claimed last week they had executed 23 kidnapped soldiers in a northwestern tribal region.

Since then the PAF has conducted a number of airstrikes in the volatile tribal regions.

Retired general and security analyst Talat Masoud said the military may be attempting to strengthen its position if talks eventually resume.

“The peace process if at all it continues now would be from a position of strength and not from a position of weakness. For some time it looked like [the Taliban] had the upper hand. These attacks change that,” he said.

But despite the show of force, experts say the Pakistani military is not set to expand the operation with boots on the ground.

Such a move would require much planning with help from US and Afghan forces on the other side of the border, as well as a contingency plan for the massive upheaval of refugees, Masoud said.

“In all probability they will engage in limited but forceful or targeted strikes for some time to weaken and push the militants,” he said.

Imtiaz Gul, another security analyst, said: “Targeted strikes will continue in the near future also, they will neither end nor expand.”

Negotiators for both the government and Taliban meanwhile told AFP the door for further dialogue remains open.

Professor Mohammad Ebrahim, a member of the Taliban talks team, said: “I don’t rule out the possibility of resumption of talks at any stage.”

“We will keep appealing both the government and the Taliban to stop following the path of violence and resume the stalled dialogue.”

Rahimullah Yusufzai, a member of the government team, said the process could resume if the Taliban agreed to a ceasefire without preconditions and explain the deaths of the abducted soldiers.