KABUL, Afghanistan - The intelligence chief of Afghanistan's deposed Taliban militia died in American bombardment in the eastern part of the country last week, a government official confirmed Wednesday. <br>
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Qari Ahmadullah was among 25 people killed in Naka, in the eastern Afghan province of Paktika, on Dec. 27 when U.S. planes attacked a house where he was staying with his associates, the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press agency reported. <br>
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In Kabul, Abdullah Tawheedi, a deputy intelligence minister for the interim government, confirmed the death to The Associated Press. <br>
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Witnesses at the Pakistani border town of Miran Shah told Afghan Islamic Press that Ahmadullah's brother and two close associates were also among those killed. It said the strike hit a house belonging to Maulvi Taahaa, a former Taliban commander in Paktika province. Taahaa's fate was unclear. <br>
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The U.S.-led coalition had identified Ahmadullah as one of the Taliban leaders it was trying to capture. <br>
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Ahmadullah, 40, was also an influential Taliban commander in the northern Afghan province of Takhar. <br>
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