At least 12 suspected militants were killed in Khyber air strikes on Saturday.
“Twelve militants were killed in aerial bombardment in Kach Kul and Kunda Gharibai area,” a security official said.
The official added two militant hideouts were destroyed during the strikes carried out late last night.
On April 30, five months into the military operation in the troubled spots of the Khyber tribal region, the military claimed a ‘huge success’ after ‘intense fighting’ that left 27 terrorists dead.
Read: Operation Khyber-II: 27 militants killed in fresh Tirah fighting
The Khyber-II operation was launched in mid-October last year following reports that some militants had fled the ongoing military offensive in North Waziristan Agency, codenamed Zarb-e-Azb, to seek shelter in the strategic Tirah Valley of Khyber Agency.
Read: Military claims huge success in Khyber operation
The valley, which shares borders with the tribal agencies of Khurram and Orakzai and also with the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar, had become a stronghold of the banned extremist outfit Lashkar-e-Islam, led by its elusive chief Mangal Bagh Afridi. Bagh later announced the merger of his group with the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.