Suspected suicide bomber kills two Pakistan military officers

By Mehreen Zahra-Malik ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - A suspected suicide bomber attacked a Pakistani security forces vehicle in Rawalpindi, home to army headquarters, on Wednesday, killing five people including two officers, a military source said. The attack in Rawalpindi, next to the capital, Islamabad, came days after the Pakistani Taliban split into two groups, limiting the government's chances of finding a negotiated settlement to end the insurgency. "A security forces vehicle was targeted, likely by a suicide bomber near Ternol, Rawalpindi," the source said. "Two officers were martyred and three civilians were killed." The source identified the officers as lieutenant colonels. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack but officials said the Taliban, seeking to set up an Islamic state, were responsible. Taliban insurgents have in the past carried out similar attacks against the army across the country. In the last few months, the army has intermittently used aircraft to target militant hideouts but in May, Pakistani forces launched their first major offensive in years against Taliban militants near the Afghan border after several rounds of government-led talks aimed at ending an insurgency in the remote region failed. Disagreements over how to handle the insurgency have marred relations between Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and the army, which has been pushing for a major military offensive. Speculation that the army might launch an offensive in the frontier tribal areas has been building amid a surge in attacks on military outposts. (Writing by Mehreen Zahra-Malik; Editing by Nick Macfie)