MINGORA, Pakistan – Pakistani forces killed 55 Taliban in the northwestern valley of Swat on Friday, the army said, and lifted a curfew to allow thousands more civilians to flee before troops assail the Taliban-held main town.
Pakistan has vowed to eliminate militants from Swat and two neighboring districts under intense American pressure for action against extremists threatening both nuclear-armed Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan.
The military claimed Friday that militants were shaving off their beards and cutting their hair — flowing locks were fashionable among the Swat Taliban — in order to mingle with the refugees pouring out of the valley and escape.
It appealed to the civilians to point out any militants among them to security forces, and even issued a mobile phone number so people could pass on anonymous tips.
But an e-mailed army statement also said militants had mounted a counterattack, and that three soldiers were killed and 11 wounded in various clashes over the previous 24 hours.
The Swat operation is a key test of Pakistan's will and ability to roll back the advance of homegrown Taliban militants, who last month seized a district just 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the capital, Islamabad, under cover of a since-abandoned peace process.
The army says it is advancing slowly in an attempt to limit civilian casualties. Public opinion appears to support the offensive. But analysts say the mood will quickly turn against the pro-Western government if the fighting drags and civilian hardship mounts.
According to the United Nations, more than 900,000 people have already abandoned the area amid escalating clashes, which the army says has left more than 800 militants and dozens of troops dead.
Some 80,000 refugees have moved into sweltering camps set up by the government and the United Nations, most of them near Mardan.
In the latest exodus, columns of cars, trucks and horse-drawn carts packed with people and laden with bundles of possessions streamed out of Mingora, according to witnesses and television reports.
Some picked their way past the carcasses of burned-out vehicles that failed to make it to safety. Others opted for rough dirt roads through the fields and mountains. More were scurrying south on foot with no more than the clothes on their backs.
"I was waiting for the opportunity to leave Mingora. I got the chance today, and now I am going to Mardan," a city just to the south, said Ismail Khan, a 66-year-old shooing his relatives onto a bus.
Khan said he had seen bodies lying in some of the fast-emptying town's streets, but he didn't know if they were militants or civilians.
The army launched its assault last month and claims to have killed more than 800 militants so far, most of them in airstrikes on remote camps and arms dumps. Dozens of troops have also died.
On Thursday army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said troops had advanced to within four miles (six kilometers) of Mingora and urged people to flee before troops "take the militants to task in street-to-street fighting."
While insisting it will win in Swat, Pakistan's army complains of a lack of equipment including night-vision technology and helicopters — shortcomings Washington has pledged to address.
U.S. forces are already training a Pakistani paramilitary force deployed across the Afghan frontier region, considered the likely hiding place of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden.
A senior U.S. defense official told The Associated Press the Pentagon is considering plans to accelerate and expand the training of the paramilitary Frontier Corps.
U.S. and Pakistani officials are discussing a program that would increase the number of U.S. special operations trainers in the country and expand the schooling to the regular army, said the senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions are preliminary and no decisions have been made.
Abbas, the Pakistani army spokesman, could not be reached immediately for comment.