June 19, 2013

Pakistan: Officials say U.S. drones kill 8 militants

 Pakistan: Officials say U.S. drones kill 8 militants

, Pakistan (AP) — Several missiles fired from American drones slammed into a compound near the Afghan border in Pakistan early Tuesday, killing eight suspected militants, Pakistan officials said.

The two intelligence officials said the compound was located near the town of Mir Ali in the North Waziristan .

One of the officials said an al- was believed to have been killed in the strike.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

North Waziristan, the area where the strike occurred, is considered a stronghold for insurgent groups operating in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. It is one of the few parts of the that border Afghanistan in which the Pakistani military has not conducted a to root out militants, despite repeated pushes to do so from the American government.

Tuesday’s strike was the fourth since the new year began.

On Sunday nine Pakistani fighters were killed when American missiles fired from several drones flying overhead slammed into three militant in another tribal area, South Waziristan.

The militant in charge of training suicide bombers for the Pakistani Taliban was believed by Pakistan intelligence officials to have died in Sunday’s strike.

On Jan. 2, a drone strike killed a top Pakistani militant commander, Maulvi . He was accused of carrying out deadly attacks against American and other targets across the border in Afghanistan. But unlike most members of the Taliban in Pakistan, he negotiated a truce with the Pakistani military in 2009 and did not attack Pakistani troops or domestic targets.

The U.S.’s covert drone program is extremely controversial in Pakistan where many in the country look at it as an infringement on their . Many complain that innocent civilians have also been killed, something the U.S. rejects.

Islamabad officially opposes the use of U.S. drones on its territory, but is believed to have tacitly approved some strikes in past.

Bus bomb kills 19 in northwest Pakistan: police

1ab7bb04f75f1afc9db6f30d4e63d26e Bus bomb kills 19 in northwest Pakistan: police

() – A bomb exploded on a bus on the outskirts of the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar on Friday, killing 19 people and wounding several, police officials said.

There have been numerous bombings in Peshawar, capital of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, since the stepped up operations against in 2007.

“The bus was carrying around 40 people, most of them government employees, when there was a huge blast,” police official Merah Khan told Reuters.

Police said the bus was travelling from Peshawar to the of Charsadda.

Peshawar Pakistan’s semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun regions along the Afghanistan border where Islamist have found refuge despite a series of over the past few years.

The Pakistani Taliban, the Afghan Taliban, al Qaeda and affiliated militant groups are entrenched in the tribal regions, and take advantage of the porous border to launch attacks against NATO and Afghan forces in Afghanistan.

(Reporting by Jibran Ahmad and Faris Ali in PESHAWAR; Writing by Qasim ; Editing by Nicholas )

Pentagon says Pakistan safe havens place Afghanistan mission at risk

1bd40ce240eb852dde2eac406fd4878b Pentagon says Pakistan safe havens place Afghanistan mission at risk

By Senior Producer Charley Keyes

(Phatforums News / ) — The Taliban is weakened but the ability of insurgents to hide across the border in Pakistan is the greatest threat to success in Afghanistan, according to the latest Pentagon evaluation of the war, released this week.

“The insurgency’s in Pakistan, as well as the limited capacity of the Afghan , remain the biggest risks to the process of turning security gains into a durable, stable Afghanistan,” according to the “Report on Progress Towards Security and Stability in Afghanistan,” a congressionally mandated evaluation of the war’s progress that is provided twice a year.

The report comes at a time when American support for the 10-year war is at an all-time low. According to a CNN/ORC International Poll released Friday, only 34% of the public say they support the , one point less than the previous low of 35%, with 63% opposed to the conflict.

The report points directly at Pakistani authorities for aiding the strength of insurgents on that side of the border.

“Pakistan’s selective counterinsurgency operations, passive acceptance – and in some case, provision – of insurgent safe havens, and unwillingness to interdict materiel such as IED components, continue to undermine security in Afghanistan and threaten ISAF’s ( Force) campaign,” the report says.

On Thursday, the deputy U.S. commander in Afghanistan raised one example of how the Pakistani is complicit in insurgent attacks.

“We have seen indications where fires have originated from positions that were in to some Pakistan outposts,” Lt. Gen. Curtis Scaparrotti told Pentagon reporters. “You’ll see what just appears to us to be a collaboration or was a collaboration or, at a minimum, looking the other way when insurgents conducted rocket or mortar fire in what we believe to be visual sight of their posts.”

The report looks back over the six-month period ending September 30 and was delivered to Congress on Thursday afternoon. Eight of these so-called 1230 reports – known for the part of the legislation which requires regular assessment of security and stability – have been issued.

At a Friday afternoon briefing at the Pentagon, officials from the Defense Department and State Department emphasized that the report showed progress, as well as a focus on challenges ahead.

“We are succeeding, the President’s strategy is succeeding, the sacrifices of the American troops in Afghanistan are being rewarded, the efforts are being rewarded with success,” said a senior defense official, who can’t be identified by name under the ground rules of the briefing.

In response to a question about falling public support demonstrated by the CNN poll, officials pointed to what they said were “widespread misperceptions” about the war, with a too-frequent focus on high-profile attacks while ignoring behind-the-scenes success such as improvement in the Afghanistan security forces.

“We want people to be able to draw their own conclusions from the report,” the senor defense official said. “Certainly my personal message is that we are having much more success than people realize.”

The latest assessment cites sustained progress and improvement in security as well as advances by local forces in seven parts of the country, including the capital, covering 25% of the population.

But by a variety of measurements – including overall violence, public feelings of insecurity and a lack of faith in officials – the report paints a picture of a mission far from complete.

“Although the security situation continues to improve, the Afghan government must continue to make progress toward key governance and development initiatives for security gains to become sustainable,” the report says.

The time period covered in the document includes high-profile attacks including the September attacks on the U.S. Embassy and headquarters in Kabul, fresh demonstration of what the report labels as “insurgent determination” to target the capital region.

“Nevertheless, these attacks were operational failures,” the report says. “And the ANSF (Afghan National Security Forces) responded quickly and efficiently, demonstrating their growing capacity and ability to assume security lead in the transitioning areas.”

Some of the strongest language is focused on the safe havens in Pakistan, with the report labeling them the insurgency’s greatest enabler. They have become more important as American and coalition forces have cleared insurgents’ hotbeds inside Afghanistan.

The report says that the successful U.S. raid by Navy SEALS on the Osama bin Laden compound in May, and recent indirect fire by the Pakistan military across the border, have led to a further deterioration of Afghanistan-Pakistan cooperation.

The report notes that major attacks were carried out by the Pakistan-based Haqqani network, deemed a terrorist organization by the .

“Addressing insurgents emanating from Pakistan is critical to the success of ISAF’s campaign and Afghanistan’s future,” the report says. “ISAF will continue to assist Pakistan in denying Taliban and Haqqani safe haven from which they can plan and conduct attacks.”

At the end of September, the United States had almost 98,000 military personnel in Afghanistan, and international partners had 46,400. But the Afghan public continues to worry about their security.

“Since April 2011, overall Afghan perceptions of security worsened slightly,” the report says. “This is likely due to the increase in combat operations due to the summer fighting season as well as the Afghan population’s perception of decreased freedom of movement due to insurgent-emplaced IEDs, the number one cause of civilian casualties in Afghanistan.”

The report reminds American taxpayers that even after the U.S. military withdraws by 2015, there will be substantial bills to pay for Afghanistan security forces. So far the United States has provided the largest share of costs for police and other forces, while the international community also has contributed. “Nonetheless, the United States will likely continue to provide the preponderance of funding the ANSF for the foreseeable future,” the report said.

Corruption continues to be a central concern, both for the U.S. and Afghanistan residents.

“During the reporting period, the Afghan government made only limited progress in building the human and institutional capacity for sustainable government,” according to this latest study. “Despite continued U.S. and coalition support, the Afghan government continues to lack the resolve to address many corruption issues.”

And despite insistence by the Afghanistan government that local firms take on jobs now performed by outside security firms, the Defense Department report suggests that it will be impossible to meet a March 2012 timetable because of a variety of training and logistics failures.

Pakistan military denies BBC report on Taliban links

835d0760cc732398ea7b8c39f872af14 Pakistan military denies BBC report on Taliban links

(Reuters) – ’s strongly denied Thursday a BBC report that alleged the Pakistani , along with its intelligence arm, supplied and protected the Afghan and al Qaeda.

A number of middle-ranking Taliban commanders detailed what they said was extensive Pakistani support in interviews for a BBC Two , the first part of which was broadcast Wednesday.

A former head of Afghan intelligence also told the program Afghanistan gave Pakistan’s former president, General Pervez Musharraf, information in 2006 that Osama bin Laden was hiding in northern Pakistan. The former al was killed in the same area by U.S. special forces in May this year.

“We consider that this report is highly biased, it is one-sided, it doesn’t have the version of the side which is badly hit or affected by this report,” Major General Abbas, spokesman for the Pakistani military, told Reuters.

“So therefore, other than that, it’s factually incorrect.”

One Taliban commander, Mullah Qaseem, told the BBC Pakistan had played a significant role in providing supplies and a for Afghan Taliban fighters.

Abbas denied the claim, questioning Qaseem’s credibility.

He said the head of Pakistan’s spy agency, the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), had already said “not a single bullet or financial support” had been given to groups named in the BBC report.

The has long suspected Pakistan, or elements within the ISI, of supporting militant groups in order to increase its influence in Afghanistan, particularly after NATO combats troops leave in 2014.

In September, Admiral Mike Mullen, then the top U.S. , accused Pakistani intelligence of backing violence against U.S. targets including the U.S. embassy in Kabul. He said the al Qaeda-linked Haqqani network, blamed for the September 13 embassy attack, was a “veritable arm” of the ISI.

Pakistan denies the U.S. allegations

Pakistan supported the Afghan Taliban before the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. It was one of only three countries to have diplomatic relations with the Islamist group.

Abbas said the number of attacks against the ISI by the Pakistani Taliban — about 300 ISI officials have been killed in

bombings — was proof the ISI did not support .

(Additional reporting by Adrian Croft in London; Editing by Paul Tait)

Pakistan urges U.S. to share intelligence on Zawahri

b578d224261a69c84be6e6920113cdb1 Pakistan urges U.S. to share intelligence on Zawahri

() – Pakistani called on the United States on Sunday to share information about new al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri after U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said he believed that ’s successor was in Pakistan.

During his first trip to Kabul on Saturday as Pentagon chief, Panetta said he believed that the new al Qaeda leader was living in Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt on the .

The Pakistani military said its troops were already carrying out “intense operations” against al Qaeda and its affiliates as well as “terrorists leadership” and high value targets (HVTs) who pose a threat to Pakistan’s .

“We expect U.S. intelligence establishment to share available information and actionable intelligence regarding Al Zawahri and other HVTs with us, enabling Pakistan Army to carry out targeted operations,” a said in a statement.

The former CIA chief said the strategic defeat of al Qaeda was within reach if the United States could kill or capture up to 20 remaining leaders of the core group and its affiliates.

He said these militant leaders were living in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and in North Africa.

Panetta said now was the time — in the wake of bin Laden’s killing in Pakistan in May — to intensify efforts to target al Qaeda leadership, adding that the United States would like Pakistan to target Zawahri in the .

Pakistan is an important U.S. ally, but relations have been seriously damaged after U.S. Navy SEALs killed bin Laden in a secret raid in the Pakistani military town of without informing Islamabad in advance.

The United States has also stepped up missile strikes by remotely-piloted drone aircraft in Pakistan’s ethnic Pashtun tribal lands, long regarded as a global hub of .

Pakistan publicly criticizes drone strikes and often demands the United States provide intelligence on militant leaders hiding in its tribal regions so it can take action against them.

However, there have been persistent suspicions in Washington that Pakistani intelligence agencies maintain ties with these militants.

U.S. media last month reported that Panetta confronted Pakistan with evidence that militants had vacated bomb-making in Waziristan after the Unites States shared intelligence with Pakistan, suggesting that it had tipped off the insurgents.

The Pakistan army denied the reports.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Sugita Katyal)

AP sources: Pakistanis tip off militants again

349d49d6ca853deb73d18c93a218d7bb AP sources: Pakistanis tip off militants again

(AP) — U.S. officials say Pakistan has apparently tipped off at two more bomb-building in its tribal areas, giving the terror suspects time to flee, after U.S. intelligence shared the locations with the .

Those officials believe Pakistan’s insistence on seeking local tribal elders’ permission before raiding the areas may have most directly contributed to the militants’ flight. U.S. officials have pushed for Pakistan to keep the location of such targets secret prior to the operations, but the say their troops cannot enter the lawless regions without giving the locals notice.

All officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss matters of intelligence.

The latest incidents bring to a total of four bomb-making sites that the U.S. has shared with Pakistan only to have the terrorist suspects flee before the Pakistani military arrived much later. The report does not bode well for attempts by both sides to mend relations and rebuild trust after the U.S. raid on May 2 that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, a Pakistani army town only 35 miles (56.32 ) from the .

The Pakistanis believe the Americans violated their by keeping them in the dark about the raid. believe bin Laden’s location proves some elements of the Pakistani army or intelligence service helped hide the al-Qaida mastermind, bolstering their argument that the raid had to be done solo.

The U.S. officials explained Saturday how they first offered the location of the third, and then the fourth site, in order to give Pakistan another chance to prove it could be trusted to go after the militants.

In the tradition of ‘trust but verify,’ the Americans carefully monitored the area with satellite and unmanned , to see what would happen, after sharing the information a third and fourth time, the officials said.

In each case, they watched the militants depart within 24 hours, taking any weapons or bomb-making materials with them, just as militants had done the first two times. Only then, did they watch the Pakistani military visit each site, when the terror suspects and their wares were long gone, the officials said.

Pakistan’s army on Friday disputed reports that its security forces had tipped off insurgents at bomb-making factories after getting intelligence about the sites from the United States. The army called the assertions of collusion with militants “totally false and malicious.”

Army officials further claimed they had successfully raided two more sites, after finding nothing at the first two, but a Pakistani official reached Friday offered no details of what they found there.

The official admitted that in each raid, however, the Pakistani security services notified the local elders who hold sway in the tribal regions. The official said they would investigate U.S. charges that the militants had been tipped off.

Two U.S. officials said they were asking the Pakistanis to withhold such sensitive information from the elders, and even their lower ranks, to prove they could be trusted to keep a secret, and go after U.S. enemies.

At least two of the sites were run by the Haqqani network, which is part of the Taliban, closely allied with al-Qaida, and blamed for some of the deadliest attacks against U.S. troops and civilians in neighboring Afghanistan. Pakistan has long resisted attacking the Haqqani network, saying the group has never attacked the state of Pakistan.

The intelligence sharing was intended as a precursor to building a new joint intelligence team of CIA officers together with Pakistani intelligence agents. But U.S. officials say Pakistan has failed to quickly approve the visas needed, despite agreeing to form the team in May.

U.S. officials have also accused Pakistan of holding up to five Pakistani nationals accused of helping the CIA spy on the Abbottabad compound in advance of the bin Laden raid.

While not confirming the number, a Pakistani official said any citizen who worked with the U.S. to spy on the compound had betrayed his or her country by failing to tip off the government that someone the Americans wanted was hiding in the compound. Such a tip, the official said, could have saved the Pakistani government the embarrassment of being surprised by the bin Laden raid.

If India and Pakistan Come to Nuclear Blows, Blame U.S.: Mishra

c116ccc4536ba1a4b60f301c47d14eba If India and Pakistan Come to Nuclear Blows, Blame U.S.: Mishra

(Phatforums Blog/ Bloomberg) - Are India and likely to stumble into nuclear war? This appalling possibility has long been kept alive by conflicts between the two historical enemies, but it may have been pushed closer to fulfillment by a catastrophic failure of U.S. foreign policy in South Asia.

In recent weeks, a cover story in the Economist on the world’s “most dangerous border” described Pakistan’s rush to militarize its nuclear capacity, and former U.S. Secretary of State warned of a pre-World War I, Balkans-like scenario in South Asia that leads to a global conflict.

Other developments, which have largely escaped the radar of Western commentators, give deeper cause for foreboding. A day after U.S. Navy seals killed Osama Bin Laden, the Indian army and air chiefs declared that the Indian military was capable of mounting similar operations in Pakistan. Pakistan’s , Ahmad Shuja Pasha, responded with the claim that the Pakistani military had already rehearsed on India.

This isn’t just playground posturing. Soon after conducting in 1998, India’s Hindu nationalist threatened Pakistan with an “all-out war.” The rhetoric on the other side of the border was no less temperate. In 2001, the Hindu nationalist-led responded to a terrorist attack by Pakistan-trained militants on India’s Parliament by mobilizing hundreds of thousands of troops on the border. Both nations eventually pulled back from the brink.

Angry Indian Politicians

But since then, terrorist attacks, such as the one on Mumbai in November 2008, routinely provoke angry calls from Indian politicians and news commentators for surgical strikes on training camps and headquarters of extremist groups in Pakistan.

Writing as Israel pounded Gaza a few weeks after the Mumbai attacks, the former diplomat Shashi Tharoor spoke of India’s “Israel envy.” Indians know that war with Pakistan would be catastrophically counterproductive. Yet, as he wrote, “when Indians watch Israel take the fight to the enemy, killing those who launched rockets against it” some of them “cannot resist wishing that they could do something similar in Pakistan.”

One reason India hasn’t is that since 2004 it has had a prime minister, Manmohan Singh, who remains committed to improving relations with Pakistan. (That Singh is one of an aging generation of Sikhs born in undivided India may have something to do with this outlook.) Last month, he distanced himself from India’s Strangelovian military bosses and talking heads, and “a line of thinking” that he said was “mired in a mindset that is neither realistic nor productive.”

Manmohan Singh’s Dilemma

Singh knows that the long-unresolved issue of Kashmir lies at the heart of the tense relationship between India and Pakistan. More than 70,000 people, mostly Muslim, have died in India-administered Kashmir as troops have battled an insurgency backed by Pakistan. Any “Idiot’s Guide to South Asia” will tell you that peace in the region will remain a distant dream until India and Pakistan reach a solution acceptable to Kashmiri Muslims as well as nationalists in both countries.

This will initially require, at the very least, India to shift it troops out of the Kashmir valley, where during the past two summers hundreds of thousands of Indian soldiers have confronted increasingly nonviolent and overwhelmingly young Muslim protesters. Unfortunately, India’s new image in Europe and as a rising power has diminished the Indian appetite for compromise and negotiation.

Following Russia’s Example

Singh faces a strident domestic constituency that believes in isolating and neutering Pakistan while striking Kashmir with what a former Indian diplomat called, invoking Russia’s example in Chechnya, an “iron fist.” There is in India, as in Israel, a public opinion that recoils at the prospect of talking on equal terms with neighbors viewed as terrorists.

As is the case in the Middle East, the only country to have leverage with both parties is the U.S. And there are few obstacles to using this leverage with India. The close American relationship with India is still new, and not captive to domestic politics in the U.S.

Seeking to make India a strategic counterweight to China, and a solid business partner, the administration of George W. Bush rewarded it with an exceptionally generous nuclear deal. Prime Minister Singh expressed the sincere gratitude to India’s pro-American political and business elites when he blurted out to Bush in late 2008, “The people of India deeply love you.” Barack followed up the nuclear agreement with a host of economic deals during his visit to India in November last year.

America’s Dual Role

There is of course an unresolvable contradiction in a foreign policy that builds up India’s military and economic capacity while pushing Pakistan to launch resource-draining campaigns against extremists. Not surprisingly, the sight of the U.S. cozying up to Pakistan’s traditional enemy has made the Islamabad establishment not only more paranoid, but also more duplicitous in its dealings with American military and intelligence.

The diplomatic advantages of the new American intimacy with India have yet to come into clear view. Unlike Bush, President Obama is fully aware of the importance of Kashmir to his most urgent foreign policy challenge: stabilizing Afghanistan and Pakistan. He came to office claiming that “working with Pakistan and India to try to resolve the Kashmir crisis in a serious way” were among the “critical tasks for the next administration.”

Obama spoke of devoting serious diplomatic resources to get a special envoy in there, to figure out a plausible approach, and essentially to make the argument to the Indians: “You guys are on the brink of being an economic superpower, why do you want to keep on messing with this?”

Arguing With Pakistan

The argument for the Pakistanis was to be: “Look at India and what they are doing, why do you want to keep being bogged down with this, particularly at a time when the biggest threat now is coming from the ?”

But as the WikiLeaks cables revealed, the Obama administration surrendered quickly to the Indian ultimatum that the envoy to the region, the late Richard Holbrooke, exclude Kashmir from his responsibilities. Holbrooke himself remained convinced, according to his widow, Kati Marton, that Pakistan would remain unstable and vulnerable to extremism until adequate steps to resolve Kashmir were taken; he advocated more American pressure on India in this regard.

When Obama visited India in late 2010, however, he chose to encourage India’s naively triumphalist self-perception as a country that has “already arrived.’’ It’s unlikely that he subscribes to the anachronistic Cold War binaries of the Bush administration that counterpoised India and China. Yet he carefully avoids mentioning Kashmir in his speeches.

Like the Balkans

Perhaps it’s not too late for Obama to try the more evenhanded and integrated approach to India and Pakistan that he outlined as a candidate. The mood in both countries is febrile – - Kissinger’s analogy with the pre-WWI Balkans is exact in this respect.

The Indian media are giving extensive coverage to the terrorism trial in Chicago that implicates Pakistani intelligence in the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Any new terrorist attack originating in Pakistan would vastly increase the number of Indians clamoring for a punitive assault on their malevolent neighbor; and even Prime Minister Singh may not be able to resist them.

Pakistan of course has been readying itself for a military incursion across the border. Last month, it tested a remarkably mobile missile system designed to unleash low-yield nuclear weapons on tank formations. The bin Laden killing and successive attacks by the Pakistani Taliban and have left its military and intelligence establishments humiliated and seething with anger.

Faced with a rash Indian strike, it might well behave even more recklessly — an increasingly plausible scenario that America’s rigidly compartmentalized policies in South Asia have done little to thwart.

(Pankaj Mishra is a columnist for Bloomberg View. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Pankaj Mishra in Mashobra, India, at Hidden Email Address

Pakistanis protest drones as 6 die in strikes

ad0d9f9be005693b885cdf376753904b Pakistanis protest drones as 6 die in strikes

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Hundreds of villagers shout anti-U.S. slogans in Mir Ali
* A second suspected drone strike kills two shortly after four die in another strike
* The incidents take place in
* North Waziristan is one of seven districts of Pakistan’s volatile tribal region near

Islamabad, Pakistan () — Pakistani villagers protested Sunday against missile strikes that they believe come from unmanned U.S. aircraft, as at least six suspected were killed in two separate strikes.

“Anyone who is a friend of the U.S. is a traitor,” the protesters chanted, among other slogans against Washington and the Central Intelligence Agency.

Around 900 people protested against drone strikes in the town of Mir Ali in North Waziristan on Sunday.

The protest was organized by a group of local villagers who claim they are innocent victims of drone strikes.

Most of the local businesses were shut down due to the protest, which had support from students, businessmen and shopkeepers.

“If drone strikes are not stopped, we will take gun instead of pen against the U.S.,” one student protester said.

Suspected U.S. carried out two strikes in northwest Pakistan Sunday, killing four suspected militants in one and two in another, two Pakistani said.

In the first strike, suspected drones fired two missiles on the militants’ vehicle in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan, one of the seven districts in Pakistan’s volatile tribal region bordering Afghanistan.

The militants in the second were riding on a motorcycle near Datta Khel when they were hit by a missile from the unmanned drone, officials said.

The officials asked not to be named because they are not authorized to speak to the media.

North Waziristan is one of seven district’s in Pakistan’s tribal region and widely believed to be a safe haven for al Qaeda-linked militant groups who attack U.S. and NATO forces across the border in Afghanistan.

Washington has pressed the Pakistani to launch an offensive in North Waziristan, but it has refused, saying its troops are stretched thin with at least 10 other operations elsewhere.

The has stepped up drone strikes targeting Pakistan’s tribal region with more than 100 attacks last year, mostly targeting North Waziristan.

The is the only country in the region known to have the ability to launch missiles from drones, which are controlled remotely.

U.S. officials normally do not comment on suspected drone strikes.

Human rights groups inside and outside Pakistan call U.S. drone strikes “targeted killings” outside a war zone, and say they break the rules of war and kill too many civilians.

Pakistan denies U.S. request to expand drone access, officials say

c358c7c09cc7ca3e8b79e04d8f1f906f Pakistan denies U.S. request to expand drone access, officials say

burn a U.S. flag last month in Quetta to protest against the threat of American drone attacks.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Source: U.S. made the request about three weeks ago
* says it can handle operations
* The nations have agreed to enhance intelligence-sharing

RELATED TOPICS

* Pakistan
* Central Intelligence Agency
* Afghanistan War
* Quetta
*

, Pakistan (CNN) — Pakistan has rejected a U.S. request to expand drone access to more of the country, two senior Pakistani military officials told CNN.

“Neither the government nor the military is in a position to face possible domestic pressure on the expansion of ,” one of the officials said.

Pakistan’s military and its civilian government have, however, agreed to expand intelligence-sharing with the , including enhancement of intelligence using CIA officials in the country, a second official said. “Pakistan has given a green light to the U.S. to enhance its intelligence capability on Pakistan’s soil.”

The officials asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter and because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The United States made the request, to extend drone use into the western Pakistan city of Quetta and tribal areas near the Afghan border, about three weeks ago, a senior NATO military official told CNN.

Abdul Basit, spokesman for the Pakistan Foreign Ministry, said he didn’t know whether the United States had made the request but added, “Pakistan will never allow that to happen because Pakistani forces are fully capable of conducting all operations.” Pakistan is interested in enhancing “real-time intelligence sharing” with its coalition partners, he said.

Pakistan’s interior minister denied the presence of the Quetta Shura, a group of senior leaders believed to be residing in Quetta. “Nothing exists with the name of Quetta Shura in Pakistan,” Rehman Malik told reporters in Karachi, Pakistan, on Monday.

Four suspected were killed Monday in a suspected U.S. drone strike in the tribal region, told CNN. On Sunday, at least five suspected were killed in a suspected drone strike.

The Monday strike was the 95th this year, compared to 52 strikes in 2009, according to a count by CNN’s Islamabad bureau.

U.S. officials normally do not comment on suspected drone strikes, but the United States is the only country in the region known to have the ability to launch missiles from remote-controlled aircraft.

Nato says Afghan campaign ‘unimpeded’ by Pakistan row

84ae5768f23a006da68a079b4de39cd1 Nato says Afghan campaign unimpeded by Pakistan row

Nato insists its war effort in Afghanistan has not been impeded by a row with Pakistan that has left its supply routes vulnerable.

Attacks on convoys have soared since Pakistan shut a key border-crossing because of a Nato air-strike which killed at least two soldiers.

The US has now apologized for the , promising to work with Pakistan to prevent a repeat of the incident.

Nato says it expects the border dispute to be resolved soon.

But relations with have been placed in further doubt by a White House report that has questioned Pakistan’s willingness to curb militants.

Taliban Conflict

* Who are the Taliban?
* Q&A: Fighting the Taliban
* Challenges for Afghan forces
* Fraud fears over election

Tanker attacks

An estimated 6,500 oil tankers and other supply vehicles are waiting for the crossing to reopen, including around 150 tankers stranded at the crossing.

In the latest attacks blamed on militants, at least 40 tankers carrying fuel for Nato were destroyed on Wednesday.

Brigadier-General Josef Blotz, a spokesman for the Nato-led International Assistance Force (ISAF), told the Reuters news agency operations were “not impeded at all by these incidents” and only a third of ISAF’s fuel supplies came via Pakistan.

He added the publication of a joint inquiry into last week’s Nato helicopter attack could help bring about the reopening of the border route through the Khyber Pass.

Analysis
Paul Adams BBC News, Washington

The latest White House assessment of the war in Afghanistan suggests the Pakistani military’s reluctance to take on the Taliban or al-Qaeda on its side of the border is as much a political choice as a reflection of an under-resourced military choosing what it can or cannot do.

This summer’s devastating floods clearly gave the Pakistani authorities yet another headache, but the White House assessment paints a picture of a military that stays close to main roads, disrupting and displacing militants but not willing or able to stabilize areas afterwards.

The report also criticihttp://mail..com/a/scottdavignon.com/#mbox/12b3044cacb67491ses Pakistan’s president, Asif Ali Zardari, for traveling to after the August flooding, saying this had damaged his image at home and abroad, as well as exacerbating inter-party tensions and civil-military relations.

Confidence in the civilian government, it says, has dropped steeply throughout the year, although confidence in the military has actually climbed.

* Suspicion over Nato tanker attacks

An initial investigation found the helicopters attacked a border post after Pakistani guards fired warning shots and that the incident could have been avoided with better communication.

“We do expect that with the closure of the assessment… we are closer to a resolution of all the problems,” Brig Gen Blotz said.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry said the security situation was being reviewed and a decision to reopen the route would be made in due course.

The American apology to the dead and injured in the air strike came in a statement from US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson who paid tribute to Pakistan’s “brave security forces”.

She pledged the United States would “coordinate with the government of Pakistan to prevent such tragic accidents from taking place in the future”.

Nato’s Gen David Petraeus also apologized and vowed to work to stop similar incidents happening in the future.

‘Political choice’

However, a White House report to the US Congress questioned Pakistan’s willingness to tackle militants operating in the tribal areas of , close to the Afghan border.

The report said Pakistan’s military stayed close to the main roads, avoiding “military engagements that would put it in direct conflict with Afghan Taliban or al-Qaeda forces in North Waziristan”.

This was “as much a political choice” as a question of military ability, the report said.

Although it said operations against insurgents had continued in , soldiers had stayed close to roads and progress was slow.

So far there has been no official reaction in Pakistan to the report.

Sherry Rehman, an MP from President Asif Ali Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party said she did not believe “too much would be made” of the report because the government was preoccupied with other challenges such as flooding.

But she told the BBC “a censorious tone always upsets Pakistan and if the government doesn’t react certainly the political class will”.

Vital crossing

Pakistan said three of its soldiers were killed in the helicopter strike on 30 September and responded by closing the Torkham crossing, seen as vital for supplying the US and Nato troops in Afghanistan.

More than 100 tankers destined for Afghanistan have since been destroyed.

The Chaman crossing in Balochistan remains open, but this is not as convenient for supplies bound for Kabul.

Supplies can also be brought into northern Afghanistan via Uzbekistan and .

62b5185ecc6d82eb96673ed4ed21ebed Nato says Afghan campaign unimpeded by Pakistan row