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In secret deal, ISI allows U.S. drone war to resume

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Pakistan's military has agreed to the
resumption of the United States' drone
strikes against terrorist groups operating
on its soil, highly-placed diplomatic
sources told The Hindu.
The agreement, the sources said, was
hammered out by Inter-Services
Intelligence chief Lieutenant-General
Shuja Ahmad Pasha and Central
Intelligence Agency director David
Petraeus at a secret meeting in Doha last
month.
The pact ends a six-week cessation of
operation that began after a November 26,
2011 U.S. airstrike claimed the lives of 24
Pakistani soldiers.
Islamabad had responded to the deaths by
shutting down drone flights from the
Shamsi in Balochistan, and ordering dozens
of CIA staff out of the country.
Pakistan's intelligence chief also agreed,
the sources said, to allow the CIA to expand
its presence at the Shahbaz airbase near
Abbottabad. The base is a key hub for the
CIA's field networks to identify targets and
plant electronic microchips that guide
drone-fired missiles to their targets.
The drone agreement, a senior western
official familiar with the negotiations told
The Hindu, was driven by Pakistani
intelligence's desire for greater influence
in ongoing negotiations in Doha between
the U.S. and the Taliban.
It also reflected, he said, the realisation
that the U.S. support would be critical to
rescheduling repayment of loans from the
International Monetary Fund and other
multilateral institutions.
Nine drone strikes have taken place since
the meeting. Badr Mansoor, believed by the
CIA to be al-Qaeda's seniormost Pakistani
commander, was killed in one attack on
February 9. Aslam Awan, another alleged
al-Qaeda commander, was killed in a strike
on January 10.
Even though upwards of 30 people have
been killed in the new wave of strikes,
there have been no protest from the
Pakistan Army or politicians — in stark
contrast to the fury aroused by similar
attacks last year.
ISI about-turn
Leaked U.S. diplomatic cables show that
both Pakistan Army Chief Parvez Kayani
and Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani had
secretly authorised the drone campaign,
even while opposing it in public.
The Pakistan Army, however, stepped up its
opposition to the drone programme last
year, seeking to use it as a bargaining chip
to deter CIA operations targeting terrorist
networks with close links to the ISI, like the
Lashkar-e-Taiba and Afghan jihadist
Sirajuddin Haqqani's networks.
Following a strike directed at Taliban
commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur, which
claimed over 40 lives, General Kayani
called the drone operations “intolerable.”
The drone war, his aides privately argued,
had made Pakistan a target of retaliatory
bombings by terrorists, and diminished the
ISI's influence with jihadist groups at home
and in Afghanistan.
Figures compiled by the Washington, DC-
based New America Foundation show there
were 362 drone strikes last year, in which
between 362 and 500 jihadists were killed.
In 2010, the U.S. carried out 581 strikes,
killing up to 939.
 
. . . .
In secret deal, ISI allows U.S. drone war to resume
what kind of secret:lol: is this which is revealed & guyz here running a thread about it??
 
.
Pakistan's military has agreed to the
resumption of the United States' drone
strikes against terrorist groups operating
on its soil, highly-placed diplomatic
sources told The Hindu.
The agreement, the sources said, was
hammered out by Inter-Services
Intelligence chief Lieutenant-General
Shuja Ahmad Pasha and Central
Intelligence Agency director David
Petraeus at a secret meeting in Doha last
month.
The pact ends a six-week cessation of
operation that began after a November 26,
2011 U.S. airstrike claimed the lives of 24
Pakistani soldiers.
Islamabad had responded to the deaths by
shutting down drone flights from the
Shamsi in Balochistan, and ordering dozens
of CIA staff out of the country.
Pakistan's intelligence chief also agreed,
the sources said, to allow the CIA to expand
its presence at the Shahbaz airbase near
Abbottabad. The base is a key hub for the
CIA's field networks to identify targets and
plant electronic microchips that guide
drone-fired missiles to their targets.
The drone agreement, a senior western
official familiar with the negotiations told
The Hindu, was driven by Pakistani
intelligence's desire for greater influence
in ongoing negotiations in Doha between
the U.S. and the Taliban.
It also reflected, he said, the realisation
that the U.S. support would be critical to
rescheduling repayment of loans from the
International Monetary Fund and other
multilateral institutions.
Nine drone strikes have taken place since
the meeting. Badr Mansoor, believed by the
CIA to be al-Qaeda's seniormost Pakistani
commander, was killed in one attack on
February 9. Aslam Awan, another alleged
al-Qaeda commander, was killed in a strike
on January 10.
Even though upwards of 30 people have
been killed in the new wave of strikes,
there have been no protest from the
Pakistan Army or politicians — in stark
contrast to the fury aroused by similar
attacks last year.
ISI about-turn
Leaked U.S. diplomatic cables show that
both Pakistan Army Chief Parvez Kayani
and Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani had
secretly authorised the drone campaign,
even while opposing it in public.
The Pakistan Army, however, stepped up its
opposition to the drone programme last
year, seeking to use it as a bargaining chip
to deter CIA operations targeting terrorist
networks with close links to the ISI, like the
Lashkar-e-Taiba and Afghan jihadist
Sirajuddin Haqqani's networks.
Following a strike directed at Taliban
commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur, which
claimed over 40 lives, General Kayani
called the drone operations “intolerable.”
The drone war, his aides privately argued,
had made Pakistan a target of retaliatory
bombings by terrorists, and diminished the
ISI's influence with jihadist groups at home
and in Afghanistan.
Figures compiled by the Washington, DC-
based New America Foundation show there
were 362 drone strikes last year, in which
between 362 and 500 jihadists were killed.
In 2010, the U.S. carried out 581 strikes,
killing up to 939.

Link please??
 
. .
Ah! The color of money is all encompassing!! Never mind the drones killing hundreds of innocent civilians and little children. They're just a statistic. This amounts to crass abettment by the Pakistani Establishment of the human rights violations being committed by the US of A. But who cares? It's the money, stupid!

Or probably the PA is allowing the Yanks to fight their war as it's too tough for them to take on the terrorists running riot in the badlands of Waziristan! So the best option for the PA is to outsource the job. Good idea, what? Let others fight your wars! Like the yahoos they are sending across into Kashmir as cannon fodder in a decade long proxy war.
 
. .
This is all a lie. You can check with Zaid Hamid and also Hamid Gul or any member secretary of the Duffa-e-Pakistan. ISI has no role in this selling of nation that Zardari is undertaking. It is all Gilani's fault and he is selling the nation and allowing the drone strikes. Gilani is charging huge Billions of Dollars for it and Zardari is also getting commission. Kiyani and Pasha are being faithful to the country and they are telling the corrupt civilian government that the drones should stop. Kiyani already threatened US and also said that he will shoot drones down but Gilani is stopping the pilots from pressing the missile releasers. This is not ISI's fault. It is all propaganda and the truth is that it is the corrupt civilian government which is selling the country to US. The ISI and Pakistani army are now only the last institution which is fighting for the honour of the Pakistan and the generals do not have any greed at all. If someone has doubts then you can see the truth behind the scandals of mehran bank (not to be confused with mehran attack. That is different Zardari conspiracy), Fauji foundation NATO transporation contracts, plots or land scams etc.
 
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