A project tracking drone
deaths in Pakistan

tbij logo

Drone strikes

More than 400 drone strikes have hit the tribal regions of north west Pakistan since 2004. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism has been recording these strikes using credible media reports, field investigations, legal documents and academic and NGO research.

Here is a list of all known drone strikes in Pakistan. The data can be searched by year and by month. Each entry records the area the strike hit and the date. To find out who died in each attack click on the relevant strike. This will take you to a full page recording everything understood about the people that were killed. In many strikes there is nothing reported about anybody killed. Over time we aim to build on the little information known about those dying. For more information please see our methodology.

Drone strikes in Pakistan

  • South Waziristan

    CIA drones attacked two cars trying to cross a bridge, killing up to eight people, many of them Arabs or Uzbeks.... More

  • Bannu Frontier

    This was the third time that CIA drones hit targets outside Pakistan’s tribal area, the FATA.... More

  • Kurram Agency

    For the second time in a month, the CIA’s drones struck Kurram Agency.... More

  • South Waziristan

    An alleged Pakistan Taliban house was targeted by US drones, killing at least three people.... More

  • Kurram Agency

    CIA drones attacked a target in Kurram Agency for the first time.... More

About the project

CIA drone strikes have killed over 2,500 people in Pakistan; many are described as militants, but some are civilians. This is a record of those who have died in these attacks.

Read more

Covert drone war

A project by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism tracking drone strikes and other covert US actions in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.

Go to the project

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

The Bureau is a not-for-profit research organisation based in London. It pursues in-depth journalism that is of public benefit.

Visit our website

Support our work

The Naming the Dead project relies on donations from foundations and individuals to keep it running. Please consider supporting our work.

Donate