May 24, 2013

Karzai urges Taliban to fight Afghan enemies after Pakistan clash

25004acd7a5bd01df54cb0f3a79e1464 Karzai urges Taliban to fight Afghan enemies after Pakistan clash

(Reuters) – Afghan President Hamid Karzai called on the on Saturday to fight Afghanistan’s enemies in what was widely seen as a swipe against Pakistan days after the neighbors’ clashed on their border.

Karzai’s remarks are likely to unsettle already shaky ties with Pakistan and come as the United States wants Pakistan to help Afghanistan persuade the Taliban to engage in ahead of the withdrawal of most foreign troops by the end of next year.

“Instead of destroying their own country, they should turn their weapons against places where plots are made against Afghan prosperity,” Karzai told reporters in the capital, , saying this was “a reminder for the Taliban”.

“They should stand with this young man who was martyred and defend their soil,” he said, referring to a border who was killed in the Wednesday night clash on ’s border with Pakistan. Two Pakistani soldiers were wounded.

Hundreds of men took to the streets of the eastern Afghan town of Asadabad on Saturday, near where the clash took place, to protest against both Pakistan and the United States.

A day earlier, thousands of men in Kabul rallied in support of the Afghan security forces.

Afghanistan and Pakistan have had testy relations since Pakistan was formed in 1947, at the end of over India. Afghanistan has never officially accepted the border between them.

Pakistan helped the Taliban take power in Afghanistan in the 1990s. Many Afghan leaders say Pakistan is still helping the militants, seeing them as a tool to counter the influence of its old rival, India, in Afghanistan.

Pakistan denies helping the militants and says it wants in its western neighbor.

Karzai also revealed that he had spoken earlier on Saturday to the CIA’s Kabul , asking that the continue to provide payments to his country.

He was report in the late last month that said his office has been receiving so-called ghost money from the CIA for more than a decade.

“Just this morning I met with the station chief of the CIA in Kabul and I thanked him for the support given to us in the past 10 years and I asked him to continue the support,” he said, adding that the money was “flowing to” Afghanistan’s intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security.

“In the situation of Afghanistan where there is so much need … it proves extremely helpful.”

The New York Times said the money was meant to buy influence for the CIA but instead fuelled corruption and empowered warlords, undermining Washington’s exit strategy from Afghanistan.

(Reporting by Hamid Shalizi and Mirwais Harooni; Writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman and Dylan Welch; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Senate approves Brennan’s nomination to lead the CIA

102dd8eeec76c9eaef7cf2e974b2f14d Senate approves Brennans nomination to lead the CIA

Story Highlights

Sen. Rand Paul’s filibuster ended early Thursday morning
Filibuster delayed vote on Brennan nomination
Vote to confirm to follow ending of debate

(PhatzNewsRoom / )
— WASHINGTON — The Senate voted 63-34 to approve President ’s nomination of to lead the CIA Thursday afternoon, ending a week of debate that featured one of the longest filibusters in Senate history.

Brennan, Obama’s counterterrorism adviser and a 25-year , takes over an agency supervising a series of controversial strikes against terrorism suspects in Afghanistan, Pakistan and around the world.

Those , which have exacted a toll on and the , were the subject of the 13-hour filibuster Wednesday by Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who questioned the constitutionality of drone strikes without legal due process.

Brennan’s confirmation immediately followed an 81-16 vote to end debate on the nomination, which had been delayed by Paul’s filibuster and other requests for more documents about the airstrikes from the White House and Justice Department.

On Thursday morning, , D-Nev., said the Brennan votes were scheduled for Saturday unless lawmakers agreed to vote earlier. The final votes were moved up to Thursday afternoon after Attorney General Eric Holder wrote Paul to tell him that Obama would not authorize drone strikes in the United States without court approval.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Holder’s letter to Paul answered the senator’s question about whether drones could be used against U.S. citizens on American soil. Carney, quoting from the letter, said: “Does the president have the authority to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil? The answer is no.”

Carney said White House officials have also been in touch with Paul’s office.

Obama praised Brennan in a statement after the vote, saying the confirmation showed the Senate has “recognized in John the qualities I value so much—his determination to keep America safe, his commitment to working with Congress, his ability to build relationships with foreign partners, and his fidelity to the values that define us as a nation.”

Before debate was ended, two of the Senate’s Republican leaders on national security policy assailed Paul and his filibuster allies, calling their rhetoric alarmist and politically motivated.

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the 2008 Republican nominee for president, said Paul and other Republicans who participated in the filibuster did a disservice by making Americans “think that somehow they’re in danger from their government. They’re not.”

“Senator Paul has a lot of passion,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. “That’s a great thing. This is an important issue. … But to my Republican colleagues, I don’t remember any of you coming down here suggesting that President Bush was going to kill anybody with a drone, do you?”

Paul’s 13-hour filibuster drew a cadre of Republican senators and one Democrat, Ron Wyden of Oregon, to speak about the constitutionality of allowing lethal drone strikes on U.S. citizens at home and abroad without legal due process. Paul and Republican fundraisers tried to raise money off the publicity powered by the filibuster.

Despite the excitement generated in some conservative circles by Paul, McCain and Graham called it a cynical maneuver.

“I saw colleagues who know better come to the floor and voice some of this same concern, which is totally unfounded,” McCain said. “I must say the use of Jane Fonda’s name does evoke certain memories with me, and I must say that she is not my favorite American. But I also believe that, as odious as it was, Ms. Fonda acted within her constitutional rights. …

“To somehow allege or infer that the president of the United States is going to kill somebody like Jane Fonda or somebody who disagrees with the policies is a stretch of imagination, which is, frankly, ridiculous,” McCain said.

McCain, a former Navy pilot, was a prisoner of war in North Vietnam in 1972 when Fonda, an Academy Award-winning actress, appeared in Hanoi and criticized U.S. military policies in Vietnam.

Paul, who started speaking about 11:45 a.m. Wednesday, ended his filibuster shortly after midnight Thursday.

While Paul ended his filibuster, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, also a Kentucky Republican, said he would continue to oppose Brennan’s nomination and attempts to end debate on it. McConnell voted against ending debate.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., announced at a gun hearing Wednesday that the committee was planning a March 20 hearing to examine the domestic use of drones.

Paul, a critic of Obama’s unmanned drone policy, started his filibuster by demanding the president or the attorney general issue a statement assuring that unmanned aircraft would not be used in the United States to kill terrorism suspects who are U.S. citizens.

Paul said his focus was on constitutional issues. “We really just want (Obama) to say he won’t” attack non-combatants on U.S. soil.

During his filibuster, which repeatedly mentioned the chaos of post-World War I Germany and the rise of Adolf Hitler, Paul said earlier Justice Department letters raised the possibility that the president could target citizens who merely disagreed with him.

“You can’t be judge, jury and executioner all in one,” Paul said.

The Senate Intelligence Committee voted 12-3 Tuesday to approve Brennan’s nomination.

Although Paul’s filibuster gathered favorable attention throughout the day and into the night Wednesday, not all conservatives were impressed. The conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal said: “The country needs more senators who care about liberty, but if Mr. Paul wants to be taken seriously he needs to do more than pull political stunts that fire up impressionable libertarian kids in their college dorms. He needs to know what he’s talking about.”

Brennan has been closely linked to the drone program. The administration has used the unmanned aircraft to regularly target terror suspects in the Middle East and Africa.

In 2011, U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a drone strike in Yemen, raising questions about the use of the armed drones on American citizens.

Contributing: Paul Singer in Washington; Alia E. Dastagir in McLean, Va.; the Associated Press

Suspected U.S. drone strike kills 16 in Pakistan

3abf2a11882f319148529d0d5de17eb3 Suspected U.S. drone strike kills 16 in Pakistan

Pakistani politician Imran Khan addresses a peace rally against strikes in , Pakistan, on Sunday.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

The attack targeted a militant’s compound, officials say
The officials say the militant is affiliated with the Haqqani network
The U.S. carries out drone strikes in Pakistan but generally does not comment

Islamabad, Pakistan () — A suspected U.S. drone strike killed 16 people and wounded six Thursday in one of Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal regions, two officials said.

The attack, which included four , targeted a compound on the border of Orakzai Agency and , a local government official and a said.

The compound belonged to Maulvi Shakirullah, a militant affiliated with the Haqqani network, the officials said.

The network is widely viewed to be fueling the in Afghanistan

Pakistan’s , a CNN affiliate, also reported that the drone “fired four missiles at a madrasa,” or seminary, run by Shakirullah.

A previous drone strike in the Orakzai agency in 2009 killed 11 suspected militants from a of the Pakistani .

The United States carries out drone strikes in Pakistan aimed at dismantling terror operations, but generally does not comment on them.

Long road ahead in U.S.-Pakistan ties after NATO deal

11d1ed302b53d5369265edfee3a815cf Long road ahead in U.S. Pakistan ties after NATO deal

() – Pakistan and the United States are set to resume broader talks on , militant threats, aid and other issues in the wake of an agreement to reopen supply routes into Afghanistan, Pakistan’s envoy to Washington said on Thursday.

But bridging underlying differences that strained U.S.-Pakistani ties close to the will be daunting as the allies remain at odds over how to handle the twin threats of the Taliban in Afghanistan and in Pakistani tribal areas.

The agreement reached this week prompting Pakistan to reopen NATO supply routes into Afghanistan, clinched when U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration ceded to months of Pakistani demands to apologize for the U.S. air attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers last November, was a relief for both countries.

“I certainly think it opened the door to many other issues,” Ambassador Sherry Rehman told Reuters in an interview.

“There’s a long road ahead, but both sides can use this opportunity to build a path to durable ties,” she added.

After U.S. Secretary of State apologized in a phone call to Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan permitted trucks carrying NATO supplies to cross into Afghanistan for the first time in more than seven months.

This was a boon for that had been paying 2-1/2 times as much to bring supplies in through an alternate route.

While NATO will not pay any new fees for shipping supplies into Afghanistan, Washington will give Pakistan at least $1.2 billion owed it for costs incurred while fighting militants.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said no specific commitments were made to increase military or counter-terrorism activities for Pakistan, but there was a ‘ agreement’ to continue talks on those issues.

ALL ABOUT THE APOLOGY

“A number of other things became stuck with all this,” the official said.

“It was never a money haggle or a transactional deal,” Rehman said, speaking during a visit to Islamabad where she helped usher in the arrangement ending the months-long deadlock.

The death of the 24 soldiers inflamed public opinion among already angered by U.S. drone strikes, the presence of CIA personnel in Pakistan and other issues.

“We’re a very hospitable people but we don’t like being taken for granted – that was the public sentiment,” she said, stressing why the apology was so vital.

“You had 24 boys draped in flags … that’s not something that was going away from the public domain. At every level this percolated up and down” Pakistani society.

While the breakthrough is welcome news for both sides, a harmonious road ahead is unlikely.

Issues that have inflamed bilateral ties persist, including U.S. accusations that Pakistan harbors militants and meddles in Afghanistan, Pakistani chafing at U.S. drone strikes and fears on both sides that Pakistan’s western neighbor will revert to chaos after most NATO troops leave by the end of 2014.

Pakistan has long complained that the United States has overlooked its contribution to the fight against militants – scores of al Qaeda fighters were apprehended in Pakistan with American help – and the threat Pakistanis themselves face.

Late last month, more than 100 fighters loyal to Pakistani Taliban leader Fazlullah snuck across the Afghan border and staged an ambush inside Pakistan.

Several days later, the fighters released a video of what they said were the heads of 17 ambushed soldiers, along with their identification cards.

It was a chilling reminder of the threat militants based in Afghanistan pose to Pakistan – the mirror image of the situation that fuels U.S. complaints about Pakistan, and a threat that would be sure to become more serious if Afghanistan were to slip back into civil war.

The United States repeatedly has pressed Pakistan to pursue the Taliban and its allies, especially the Haqqani network, which it blames for a series of high-profile attacks in Afghanistan.

Last month, U.S. Leon Panetta said the United States was reaching the limits of its with Pakistan over what it deems as foot-dragging on militants.

Rehman said that most of al Qaeda has been decimated with Pakistani cooperation, and that Islamabad would go after foreign fighters linked to other militants according to “Pakistan’s priorities” and time frame.

The immediate military priority was combating insurgents who target Pakistani security forces and civilians, she said.

“We are going after our own right now – foreign fighters and militants who are on our soil, who are attacking us. If there is someone beheading me I am going to go after him first.”

Rehman said Pakistan stood to pay a high price if the NATO project in Afghanistan does not produce a stable country, in part because instability is likely to spill over the two countries’ porous border.

“For Pakistan, the stakes in Afghan stability are very high,” Rehman said.

(Writing By Missy Ryan; Editing by Michael Roddy)

“Important” al Qaeda leader captured in Pakistan: officials

e06f05143505e7ef508d2a380ddf5e85 Important al Qaeda leader captured in Pakistan: officials

() – Pakistan has captured an “important” al in an operation near the Pakistan-Iran border, officials said on Wednesday, amid criticism from the United States the country was not doing enough to fight .

U.S. Defense Secretary said during a trip to Kabul that stabilization efforts in Afghanistan would remain difficult as long as militants had safe havens in neighboring Pakistan, and that Washington was “reaching the limits” of its patience with Islamabad.

Pakistani officials said the captured al Qaeda leader was Naamen Meziche, a of Algerian origin, who is believed to have links with militant groups based in Europe. Media reports say he may have played a role in the 9/11 attacks.

Meziche worked closely with another al Qaeda leader, Younis al-, who was responsible for , Pakistani officials said.

Mauritani was captured by in September last year.

Pakistan officials did not specify the time or location of the capture of Meziche, who they said was the of a group of 11 people who left Germany in 2009 to fight U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan.

U.S. officials often describe Pakistan as an unreliable partner in the war on militancy and demand tougher action against militant groups, especially those based in Pakistan’s volatile tribal regions near the border with Afghanistan.

Pakistan says it will not allow any militant safe havens inside its territory, and that it will pursue its own strategy against militant groups.

(Reporting by Qasim Nauman; Editing by Nick )

Pakistan: Suspected U.S. missile strike kills four

e471dd6483d5b8727f15078a403f62b3 Pakistan: Suspected U.S. missile strike kills four

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) – A suspected U.S. drone fired two missiles at a house in northwest Pakistan early Friday morning, killing four militants in an attack that comes as have stepped up their calls for the strikes to end, said.

The attack could complicate U.S. efforts to get Pakistan to reopen its to supplies meant for NATO troops in Afghanistan. Pakistan shut the border in for American airstrikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

Pakistan’s parliament is debating a revised framework for its relationship with the U.S. that Washington hopes will result in NATO supply routes reopening. But a key demand is that the U.S. stop drone attacks, which are very unpopular in Pakistan because many people believe they mostly kill civilians — a claim denied by the U.S. and contradicted by independent research.

Friday’s strike targeted a house in Miran Shah, the main town in the , a key sanctuary for Taliban and al-Qaeda militants, Pakistani intelligence officials said, speaking on condition of because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

The four militants killed in the strike and three wounded were from Uzbekistan, said the officials. Their precise identities were unclear. The attack occurred while the group was sleeping, the officials said.

The U.S. rarely talks publicly about the covert CIA-run drone program in Pakistan, but officials have said privately that the strikes are a key component of America’s war against Islamist militants and have killed senior Taliban and al-Qaeda commanders.

President Obama stepped up the drone campaign in Pakistan when he took office in 2009, and most of the attacks have targeted North Waziristan. But the strikes have dropped off significantly in recent months as the relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan has deteriorated.

Pakistani officials have regularly criticized the attacks as a violation of the country’s . But the military was widely believed to help with at least some of the strikes and allowed the drones to take off from bases inside Pakistan.

That cooperation has come under serious strain as ties have worsened, especially following the deaths of the Pakistani soldiers at two posts along the Afghan border. In addition to cutting off NATO supplies, Pakistan kicked the U.S. out of a base used by American drones in the country’s southwest.

The move was not expected to significantly impact the drone program since the base was only used to repair aircraft that took off from Afghanistan. But it did signal the government’s growing opposition to the drones, culminating in the parliamentary debate currently taking place.

One of the reasons the U.S. has relied so heavily on drone strikes in Pakistan, and is reluctant to give them up, is that Islamabad has rejected calls to target militants in North Waziristan who are using the area as a base to attack American troops in Afghanistan.

The most important group is the Haqqani network, considered the most dangerous militant fighting the U.S. in Afghanistan.

Pakistan has argued that it can’t conduct an offensive in North Waziristan because its troops are stretched too thin by operations against militants within the country who threaten its own government.

But many analysts believe Pakistan is reluctant to target the Haqqani network and its allies in the Afghan Taliban because they are seen as important allies in Afghanistan after foreign forces withdraw.

Pakistan has close historical ties with both groups, and U.S. officials have accused the country’s shadowy spy agency, the ISI, of continuing to provide them with support — an allegation denied by Islamabad.

Analysts argue that Pakistan’s calculus has not changed despite billions of dollars in U.S. military and civilian aid over the last decade meant to enlist greater support in the fight against Islamist militants.

Pakistan’s prime minister issues a warning to U.S.

316938777dbff9fbcb898e05665d5a4b Pakistans prime minister issues a warning to U.S.

No ‘business as usual’ with U.S.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: A top Afghan official warns of possible conflict with Pakistan
Pakistan denies firing first at NATO aircraft that killed two dozen
The Pakistani Taliban say Pakistan must respond in kind to the attack
Pakistan’s prime minister warns about violations including the Osama bin Laden raid

Islamabad, Pakistan () — Tensions among Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United States jumped a notch Monday, with Pakistan’s prime minister warning there would be “no more business as usual” with Washington after NATO aircraft killed two dozen Pakistan troops.

The Pakistani Taliban urged Pakistan to respond in kind to the airstrike, which NATO called a “tragic unintended” event.

The Pakistani military insisted Monday it had not fired first in the incident, and it said it had told NATO its aircraft were firing on friendly troops.

Meanwhile, a top adviser to Karzai warned that Afghanistan and Pakistan could be on a path to conflict.
Anger in Islamabad
U.S.-Pakistan relations strained
NATO admits fault in Pakistan attack

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Raza Gilani said in an exclusive interview with CNN Monday that Pakistan was re-evaluating its relationship with the United States.

He said the South Asian nation wanted to maintain its relationship with the United States as long as there was mutual respect and respect for Pakistani .

But Gilani highlighted incidents such as the killing of the Pakistani troops and a U.S. raid into Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden as violations of his country’s sovereignty.

The prime minister also said Pakistan had not yet decided whether to boycott next month’s on the future of Afghanistan.

Pakistan turned back 300 trucks carrying NATO supplies and fuel into Afghanistan Monday, Syed Ahmed Jan and Mutahir Zeb told CNN.

Pakistan is a vital land supply route into Afghanistan for the United States and its allies.

Separately, Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas denied the reports that Pakistani troops opened fire first on the NATO helicopters.

Speaking by phone to Pakistan’s News, Abbas said NATO helicopters opened fired first on the Pakistani military checkpoints.

Abbas said the soldiers notified Pakistan military headquarters, which informed the NATO authorities immediately.

The spokesman said Pakistani soldiers fired at the NATO aircraft in retaliation.

NATO’s secretary-general earlier said it was a “tragic unintended” incident, and pledged to ensure such attacks don’t reoccur.

“NATO remains strongly committed to work with Pakistan to improve cooperation to avoid such tragedies in the future,” Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in a statement.

The Pakistani Taliban appeared Monday to try to widen the rift between Pakistan and the United States.

Pakistan Taliban spokesman Ihsanullah Ihsan said in a phone call to CNN that America will infringe on Pakistan’s sovereignty and continue operations on Pakistani soil in the coming days.

Ihsan said Pakistan must respond in kind to the NATO attacks, and he warned that the Pakistani Taliban will continue their jihad as long as Pakistan remains an ally of the United States.

In Kabul, meanwhile, a senior adviser to Afghan president Hamid Karzai said Afghanistan and Pakistan may be on a course toward military conflict.

Ashraf Ghani said the link between Pakistan and the assassination of a former Afghan president had united his country “against interference.”

Ghani accused Pakistan of harboring and assisting the in Afghanistan, and said his country’s neighbor probably helped the suicide bomber who killed Burhanudin Rabbani in September.

“You need to talk to Pakistan and Pakistan needs to choose,” Ghani said. “Does it want to slide down a path of three generations of conflict with Afghans?”

“The assassination of President Rabbani has gelled the nation together against interference. And one or two more actions could put us in an irreversible course [towards] conflict. And we’ve shown through our history that we are a match for any invader,” he said.

The two nations have been trading accusations in the border regions in the past few months, with Pakistan accusing the Afghans of harboring militants and Afghanistan claiming Pakistani shells have hit their territory.

Pakistan says Obama pressure on militants hurts Afghanistan

c6863dc9e208aece998ed26179d8f35d Pakistan says Obama pressure on militants hurts Afghanistan

() – President Barack ’s warning to Islamabad over suspected ties to will only fuel anti-Americanism and make it harder for Pakistan to support U.S. efforts to stabilize Afghanistan, a senior senator said Friday.

Pakistan is seen as critical to bringing peace to neighboring Afghanistan, but the United States has failed to persuade it to go after it says cross the border to attack Western forces in Afghanistan.

“This is not helping either the United States, Afghanistan or Pakistan,” Salim Saifullah, chairman of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, told Reuters.

“There will be pressure on the (Pakistan) government to get out of this war,” he said, referring to the U.S. war on militancy.

Obama warned Pakistan Thursday that its ties with “unsavory characters” had put relations with the United States at risk, as he ratcheted up pressure on Islamabad to cut links with militants mounting attacks in Afghanistan.

His comments are likely to deepen a crisis in the strategic alliance between the United States and Pakistan.

Obama accused Pakistan’s leaders of “hedging their bets” on Afghanistan’s future, but stopped short of threatening to cut off U.S. aid, despite calls from lawmakers for a tougher line over accusations that Pakistani intelligence supported strikes on U.S. targets in Afghanistan.

Pakistan says it has sacrificed more than any other nation that joined America’s global “war on terror” after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, losing 10,000 soldiers and security forces, and 30,000 civilians.

But its performance against militants operating from its unruly tribal northwest is a frequent source of tension between Washington and Islamabad.

Pakistan is often accused of playing a , vowing to help the United States fight some militant groups while using others as proxies in Afghanistan.

Ties were heavily damaged after U.S. special forces launched a secret raid that killed in Pakistan in May, which Islamabad saw as a violation of its sovereignty.

Thursday, a Pakistani commission said a Pakistani doctor accused of running a vaccination program that helped the CIA track down bin Laden should be tried for high treason, which is punishable by death.

Relations deteriorated further after the top U.S. accused Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency of supporting a September 13 attack by the Taliban-allied Haqqani militant group on the U.S. embassy in Kabul.

Saifullah said Washington’s public criticism of Pakistan would only encourage militant groups.

“War in Afghanistan is passing through a critical phase, evolutionary phase,” he said. “At this stage, muddying water is not appropriate. This is exactly what the militants want. They are playing to their tune. This is adding strength to them.”

Some analysts agree with his assessment.

“This will create more tension and what the Americans want is not likely to happen in the near future,” said political analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi.

The United States has long called for a military offensive against the Haqqani network, which it says is based in North Waziristan, a global hub for militants on the Afghan border.

Pakistan sees the Haqqani network — perhaps the most feared insurgents in Afghanistan — as a counterweight to the growing influence of there, analysts say.

Pakistan denies links to the group, which says it no longer operates from sanctuaries in North Waziristan.

Obama made clear that future U.S.-Pakistani relations would depend heavily on whether Islamabad complies with Washington’s demands to sever connections with insurgents.

Mahmud Ali Durrani, a former Pakistani ambassador to Washington, wondered if the two sides could ever repair ties.

“There are too many issues, and too much mistrust to call this a strategic relationship,” he said.

But public demands from Washington will make Islamabad more reluctant to take action because caving in after constant pressure could be political suicide in a country where anti-American sentiment runs high, and the government is unpopular.

Many believe they have been dragged into a war against militancy that only serves American interests.

That sentiment is growing because of an escalation of U.S. drone aircraft missile strikes against militants in Pakistan under the Obama administration.

“Are we owned by the United States? If so, please make our terms of servitude clear, Mr. Obama, so we can just get on with it,” said Mishayl Naek, a bank employee in the city of Karachi, in reaction to the U.S. president’s demands of Pakistan.

For Asad Ali Bangash, 45, Obama’s comments were proof of what he has feared all along.

“America wants an excuse to invade Pakistan. There are difficult times ahead for Pakistan, because America has decided that Pakistan has to be eliminated because it is a fort of Islam,” said Bangash, who runs a medical supply business.

Obama wants to stabilize Afghanistan as U.S. forces are drawn down with the goal of ending their combat mission by 2014.

Instead of public confrontation, Obama should work more closely with Pakistan to help Afghanistan, said Saifullah.

“This is no time for this kind of (allegation) when they are pulling out,” he said. “They should be seriously working on the endgame.”

Even if Pakistan wanted to eliminate the Haqqanis, an assault could be risky. The group, which says it has more than 10,000 fighters, spent years forming alliances with various militant groups seeking to topple the U.S.-backed government.

The Haqqanis’ ties with powerful tribes are another concern. say Pakistan fears an assault would provoke a larger tribal uprising in North Waziristan.

(Additional reporting by Rebecca Conway, Qasim Nauman and Chris Allbritton in ISLAMABAD, Imtiaz Shah and Sahar Ahmed in KARACHI, and Saud Mehsud in DERA ISMAIL KHAN; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

Analysis: Pakistan’s double-game: treachery or strategy?

82df1361e028ff4d932b9b70ec9e9ae1 Analysis: Pakistans double game: treachery or strategy?

(Reuters) – Washington has just about had it with Pakistan.

“Turns out they are disloyal, deceptive and a danger to the United States,” fumed Ted Poe last week. “We pay them to hate us. Now we pay them to bomb us. Let’s not pay them at all.”

For many in America, Islamabad has been nothing short of perfidious since joining a with Washington 10 years ago: selectively cooperating in the war on and taking billions of dollars in aid to do the job, while all the time sheltering and supporting Islamist militant groups that fight .

Pakistan has angrily denied the charges, but if its critics are right, what could the explanation be for such duplicity? What strategic agendas might be hidden behind this puzzling statecraft?

The answer is that Pakistan wants to guarantee for itself a stake in Afghanistan’s political future.

It knows that, as U.S. forces gradually withdraw from Afghanistan, ethnic groups will be competing for ascendancy there and other regional powers – from India to China and Iran – will be jostling for a foot in the door.

Islamabad’s support for the movement in the 1990s gives it an outsized influence among Afghanistan’s Pashtuns, who make up about 42 percent of the total population and who maintain close ties with their Pakistani fellow tribesmen.

In particular, Pakistan’s powerful military is determined there should be no vacuum in Afghanistan that could be filled by its arch-foe, India.

INDIA FOCUS

Pakistan has fought three wars with its neighbor since the bloody partition of the subcontinent that led to the creation of the country in 1947, and mutual suspicion still hobbles relations between the two nuclear-armed powers today.

“They still think India is their primary policy,” said Talat Masood, a retired Pakistani general and prominent . “India is always in the back of their minds.”

In an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza – unprompted – complained that Washington’s failure to deal even-handedly with New Delhi and Islamabad was a source of regional instability.

Aqil Shah, a South Asia security expert at the Harvard Society of Fellows, said Islamabad’s worst-case scenario would be an Afghanistan controlled or dominated by groups with ties to India, such as the Tajik-dominated Northern Alliance, which it fears would pursue activities hostile to Pakistan.

“Ideally, the military would like Afghanistan to become a relatively stable satellite dominated by Islamist Pashtuns,” Shah wrote in a Foreign Affairs article this week.

Although Pakistan, an Islamic state, officially abandoned support for the predominantly Pashtun Taliban after the 9/11 attacks on the United States in 2001, elements of the military never made the doctrinal shift.

Few doubt that the shadowy intelligence directorate, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), has maintained links to the Taliban that emerged from its support for the Afghan mujahideen during the 1979-1989 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

Until recently, there appeared to be a grudging acceptance from Washington that this was the inevitable status quo.

That was until it emerged in May that al Osama bin Laden – who was killed in a U.S. Navy SEALs raid – had been hiding out in a Pakistani garrison town just two hours up the road from Islamabad, by some accounts for up to five years.

Relations between Pakistan and the United States have been stormy ever since, culminating in a tirade by the outgoing U.S. joint chiefs of staff, Mike Mullen, last week.

Mullen described the Haqqani network, the most feared among Taliban militants in Afghanistan, as a “veritable arm” of the ISI and accused Islamabad of providing support for the group’s September 13 attack on the U.S. embassy in Kabul.

The reaction in Islamabad has been one of stunned outrage.

Washington has not gone public with evidence to back its accusation, and say that contacts with the Haqqani group do not amount to actual support.

However, Imran Khan, a Pakistani cricketer-turned-populist-politician, said this week that it was too much to expect that old friends could have become enemies overnight.

He told Reuters that, instead of demanding that Pakistan attack the Haqqanis in the mountainous of North Waziristan, the United States should use Islamabad’s leverage with the group to bring the Afghan Taliban into negotiations.

“Haqqani could be your ticket to getting them on the negotiating table, which at the moment they are refusing,” Khan said. “So I think that is a much saner policy than to ask Pakistan to try to take them on.”

REGIONAL GAME

The big risk for the United States in berating Islamabad is that it will exacerbate anti-American sentiment, which already runs deep in Pakistan, and perhaps embolden it further.

C. Raja Mohan, senior fellow at New Delhi’s Center for Policy Research, said Pakistan was probably gambling that the United States’ economic crisis and upcoming presidential elections would distract Washington.

“The real game is unfolding on the ground with the Americans. The Pakistan army is betting that the United States does not have too many choices and more broadly that the U.S. is on the decline, he said.

It is also becoming clear that as Pakistan’s relations with Washington deteriorate, it can fall back into the arms of its “all-weather friend,” China, the energy-hungry giant that is the biggest investor in Afghanistan’s nascent resources sector.

Pakistani officials heaped praise on Beijing this week as a Chinese minister visited Islamabad. Among them was army chief General Ashfaq Kayani, arguably the country’s most powerful man, who spoke of China’s “unwavering support.”

In addition, Pakistan has extended a cordial hand to Iran, which also shares a border with Afghanistan.

Teheran has been mostly opposed to the Taliban, which is dominated by Sunni Muslims while Iran is predominantly Shi’ite. But Iran’s anti-Americanism is more deep-seated.

“My reading is the Iranians want to see the Americans go,” said Raja Mohan, the Indian analyst. “They have a problem with the Taliban, but any American retreat will suit them. Iran in the short term is looking at the Americans being humiliated.”

ARMY CALLS THE SHOTS

The supremacy of the military in Pakistan means that Washington has little to gain little from wagging its finger about ties with the Taliban at the civilian government, which is regularly lashed for its incompetence and corruption.

“The state has become so soft and powerless it can’t make any difference,” said Masood, the Pakistani retired general. “Any change will have to come from the military.”

Daniel Markey, a senior fellow for South Asia at the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, said the problem lies with a security establishment that continues to believe that arming and working – actively and passively – with militant groups serves its purposes.

“Until … soul-searching takes place within the Pakistani military and the ISI, you’re not likely to see an end to these U.S. demands, and a real shift in terms of the relationship,” Markey said in an online discussion this week. “This is the most significant shift that has to take place.”

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

America’s problematic remote control wars

012cff66ec190ef5c5a367557bd4fab5 America’s problematic remote control wars

Bernd Debusmann is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

( Blog/ Reuters) – The United States is deploying missile-laden remotely piloted aircraft to kill enemies in six countries, scientists are working on ever more sophisticated military robots, and there are a host of on the future of warfare. Some of the more intriguing ones are asked abroad.

Such as: “Is the Reaper operator walking the streets of his home town after a shift a as a combatant? Would an attack (on him) by a sympathizer be an under international law or murder under the statutes of the home state? Does the person who has the right to kill as a combatant while in the control station cease to be a combatant on his way home?”

This comes from a study by Britain’s and refers to the air war waged by U.S. pilots who operate, from bases in the United States, heavily-armed drones flying over Afghanistan or Pakistan 7,500 miles away. The Reaper is the workhorse of the fleet, which has grown from around 50 a decade ago to more than 7,000 today. It is increasing at a fast clip, unaffected by defense spending cuts in other areas.

Most of the drone missions for the military are flown from Creech Air Force base near Las Vegas. The Central (CIA) has a separate, covert, program that critics see as targeted assassinations. The CIA’s drones are operated from northern Virginia. The pilots, sitting in in front of television monitors, run no physical risks whatever, a novelty for men engaged in war.

Debate over the remote-control air wars — drones are now in action over Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq, Libya and Somalia – has been largely confined to academia and think tanks, both civilian and military. But reports this week that the CIA had extended drone to Somalia have prompted calls for a closer examination of where war ends and assassinations begin.

It is not an issue, however, that strikes a chord with the public and U.S. politicians are largely in favor of drone strikes. They are seen as an inexpensive way of targeting enemies, with no risk to the lives of American personnel. The downside to the seemingly risk-free elimination of Taliban fighters, al Qaeda militants and assorted other anti-American elements is of little apparent concern in the U.S.

What downside? High technology and precision weapons notwithstanding, the “surgical strikes” drone enthusiasts like to talk about are on occasion anything but, resulting in “collateral damage”, the euphemism for dead civilians.
Collateral damage tends to create more recruits to anti-American causes. Even without civilian casualties, remote-control warfare tarnishes the image of the United States, and the few close allies who use drones, in the countries where they are fighting.

“The West … is seen as a cowardly bully that is unwilling to risk his own troops but is happy to kill remotely,” the British study noted.

SCIENCE AND WISDOM

Such sentiments are unlikely to sway public opinion in the West, nor will they stop weapons developments that bring to mind an observation by the late science fiction writer Isaac Asimov more than four decades ago: “The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than science gathers wisdom.”

Which brings us to aspects of 21st century war that go beyond the pros and cons of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), as drones are also known. While they are frequently referred to as “killer robots,” they are “human-in-the-loop” weapons, so named because a human being navigates the aircraft and pushes the button that fires the missile.

If and when to cut the human out of the loop – and open a new era of warfare – is a matter of debate between scientists. “It … would be only a small technical step to enable an unmanned aircraft to fire a weapon based solely on its own sensors, or shared information, without recourse to a higher, human authority,” according to the British study.

That would mean, in effect, outsourcing life-and-death decisions to computer programs controlling both aerial and ground-based robots. Questions yet to be answered are complex and varied: How do you get a robot to tell an insurgent from an innocent? Can you program the Laws of War and the Rules of Engagement into a robot? Can you imbue a robot with his country’s culture?

If something goes wrong, resulting in the death of civilians, who will be held responsible? The robot’s manufacturer? The designers? Software programmers? The commanding officer in whose unit the robot operates? The U.S. president who gives the green light?

A number of scientists alarmed by such unanswered questions last September formed a group, the International Committee for Robot Arms Control, that is pressing for an international debate on the regulation and control of armed military robots. The prospect of that happening looks remote.

(You can contact the author at Debusmann@Reuters)