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Pakistan army: Intel on bomb sites was wrong
By Nahal Toosi - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jun 17, 2011
ISLAMABAD Pakistans army said Friday that its attempts to destroy four militant bomb-making factories only partly succeeded because intelligence on two of the sites was wrong.
But the army also disputed media reports that security forces had tipped off insurgents after getting U.S. intelligence on the factories, calling those assertions of collusion totally false and malicious.
The carefully worded, two-paragraph army statement never says the U.S. shared intelligence on the sites in question. It also was unclear about their exact location and does not say when the raids occurred.
Nonetheless, its likely to further add to tensions between the U.S. and Pakistan, which have been unusually high since the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
American officials told The Associated Press in early June that theyd shared satellite information with Pakistan about two militant bomb-making factories and that within 24 hours, they watched the militants clear out the sites, raising suspicions that the Pakistanis shared the information.
Various media accounts said the factories were in the Waziristan stretch of Pakistans tribal belt, where al-Qaida and Taliban fighters have long proliferated.
The intelligence sharing was part of a U.S. attempt to improve the relationship with Pakistan.
The alliance has been especially weakened since the May 2 killing of the al-Qaida chief in the northwest Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad. Bin Ladens presence there has only added to U.S. suspicions that elements within Pakistans powerful security establishment were playing a double game by colluding with some militants while going after others.
Pakistani leaders have denied knowing that bin Laden was in Abbottabad and U.S. officials have said theres no evidence yet that the upper ranks of the Pakistani military or civilian leadership helped hide him. But Pakistanis are furious that the U.S. staged the raid without any warning or Islamabads consent.
They also are angry over a series of recent media reports that seem to cast more doubt on their activities, including the one about the factories.
The statement says the army launched attacks on four compounds suspected to be where militants built improvised explosive devices which typically come in the form of roadside bombs. Two were found to match that description and were destroyed, but the information on the others was incorrect.
Some persons have been arrested and they are under investigation, the statement adds.
Also Friday in Pakistans northwest, security forces backed by artillery killed 12 Islamist militants in a tribal region where insurgents have been mounting cross-border attacks from Afghanistan, a government administrator said.
The attacks have upset Pakistan, which says they are happening because U.S. and NATO forces are not doing enough to protect the territory on the Afghan side. Western forces have had the same complaints about Pakistans activities on its side of the boundary.
The search operation Friday took place in the Mamund area of the Bajur tribal region. It came a day after more than 200 militants launched a cross-border attack on a village in the same area. Government official Tariq Khan said Fridays search came after fresh intelligence reports on militants coming from Afghanistan to the area to target tribal militiamen and troops stationed there.
We are deploying additional security forces in our villages and towns located near the Afghan border to protect our areas, he said, adding that tribal elders were asked to remain vigilant and alert authorities of any militant movement.
The information could not be verified independently because access to the area is restricted.
Pakistans military has launched offensives aimed at clearing Bajur of al-Qaida and Taliban fighters, but the militants there still retain the ability to strike. The U.S. has supported Pakistans efforts to clear Bajur, but it has also pushed it to go after militants in North Waziristan. Many of the militant groups in that region are focused on attacking Western forces in Afghanistan.
However, Pakistan has resisted the appeals to go into North Waziristan. It says it is too stretched fighting militant groups that have staged attacks on its soil to open up a new front. Some critics believe Pakistan wants to remain on good or at least neutral terms with the North Waziristan militants so that it has allies in Afghanistan once the U.S. withdraws from the region.
Associated Press writers Matiullah Achakzai in Chaman and Anwarullah Khan in Khar contributed to this report.
Pakistan army denies colluding with insurgents - Military News | News From Afghanistan, Iraq And Around The World - Military Times