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Pakistan Lends Support for U.S. Military Strikes

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Pakistan's leaders have publicly denounced U.S. missile strikes as an attack on the country's sovereignty, but privately Pakistani military and intelligence officers are aiding these attacks and have given significant support to recent U.S. missions, say officials from both countries.

American unmanned Predator aircraft have killed scores of Islamic militants in Pakistan in more than 30 missile strikes since August, provoking outrage in the South Asian nation. Two in the past four days have killed more than 50 suspected militants. Yet, with the Taliban pushing deeper into the country, Pakistan's civilian and military leaders, while publicly condemning the attacks, have come to see the strikes as effective and are passing on intelligence that has helped recent missions, say officials from both countries.

As a result, "the Predator strikes are more and more precise," said a Pakistani official.

Eleven of al Qaeda's top 20 commanders have been killed or captured since August because of the Predator missions conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency, according to the Pakistani official, and current and former U.S. intelligence officials.

Dennis C. Blair, the new U.S. director of national intelligence, said last week that "a succession of blows" to al Qaeda in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas have thrown the group off balance, forcing it to promote inexperienced operators to leadership posts.

According to Pakistani and U.S. officials, among those killed have been al Qaeda military's chief, Khalid Habib; Abu Layth al-Libi, whom U.S. officials described as "a rising star" in the group; Abu Khabab al-Masri, al Qaeda's leading chemical-weapons expert; and Usama al-Kini, who was believed to be involved in the 1998 bombings of the U.S embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and later planned attacks in Pakistan.

Drones help in surveillance and target identification as well as strikes. On Jan. 22, Pakistani paramilitary forces arrested Zabu ul Taifi, a Saudi national and alleged al Qaeda operative, in an operation described by a Pakistani intelligence officer as "a direct result of better cooperation" with the U.S.

An officer from Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistan's premier spy agency, said Mr. Taifi was located at a safe house in the Khyber Agency, one of the tribal areas that run along the border with Afghanistan, through a combination of human intelligence from Pakistani agents, informants on the ground and aerial surveillance by U.S. drones.

Once authorities were confident Mr. Taifi was in the walled, mud compound, Pakistani paramilitary forces backed by helicopters grabbed him, the officer said. Throughout, Predator drones hovered overhead and would have attacked if Mr. Taifi or other suspects had tried to escape, the officer said. In all, Mr. Taifi and six other men -- Afghans and Pakistanis -- were nabbed in the raid.

Maj. Gen Akhtar Abbas, a spokesman for the military, said Pakistan and the U.S. "have a long history of military cooperation and intelligence sharing." But he said it doesn't include the missiles strikes. "We have made our opposition clear," he said. "The strikes are counterproductive."

But other Pakistani officials say there has been a shift in Pakistan's private response to U.S. insistence the strikes go ahead. Initially, Pakistani complaints were genuine, these officials say, and reflected widespread discontent with the U.S.-led war on terror.

But after Pakistan's complaints were repeatedly rebuffed by the U.S. and with the Taliban making gains against the Pakistani military and the police, these officials say President Asif Ali Zardari and top military leaders decided in recent months to aid the American effort in the hopes it will help them regain control over the tribal areas. The Taliban and al Qaeda have flourished in those areas bordering Afghanistan since 2001. The cooperation also could prove as a counterbalance to U.S. displeasure over a peace deal announced Monday with a Taliban faction in Swat Valley.

The protests are "really for the sake of public opinion," said one Pakistani official. "These operations are helping both sides. We are partners on this."

A former U.S. intelligence official said cooperation has always been strong between the two countries' intelligence services. "There's always been a double game," the former official said. "There's the game they'll play out in public [but] there has always been good cooperation."

Further evidence of the close working relationship between the two countries came last week, when Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat who is chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the Predators are flown out of a base in Pakistan, not U.S. bases in Afghanistan, as many counterterrorism analysts had believed.

Her spokesman, Phil LaVelle, later said she was referring to a "front-page Washington Post story in March." But she made no reference to news reports in her remarks. Pakistan has since denied Ms. Feinstein's account, but former U.S. intelligence officials confirmed that it was accurate, lamenting the fact she stated it publicly. "It was a big mistake on her part," said one.

Most of the Predator strikes have so far targeted al Qaeda and Taliban fighters who attack U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan, using Pakistan's tribal areas only as a rear base. But in exchange for helping the U.S., Washington is "sharing more intelligence with" Islamabad on Taliban factions focused on toppling Pakistan's government, said the Pakistani official.

While officials say there is overlap between the Pakistani Taliban, who fight under the banner of the Tehrik-e-Taliban, and the Afghan Taliban, the two are considered distinct networks with different aims.

How far the Pakistanis are willing to go in helping the Americans take on the Afghan Taliban is an open question. For years, U.S. officials have suspected the Pakistanis of shielding Afghan Taliban leaders, or at least not working very hard to catch or kill them.

Many Afghan Taliban leaders worked closely with ISI to defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and Pakistan was publicly supportive of the Taliban until after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

A senior ISI officer acknowledged his agency maintains contacts with Afghan Taliban leaders at or the near the top of the U.S. target list, such as Mullah Nazeer and Jalaluddin Haqqani. The officer said Mr. Haqqani could be "a force for stability" in Afghanistan, and insisted that he and other Taliban leaders spend most of their time in that country, not Pakistan, as U.S. officials assert.

Pakistan Lends Support for U.S. Military Strikes - WSJ.com
 
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Secrecy and denial as Pakistan lets CIA use airbase to strike militants

The CIA is secretly using an airbase in southern Pakistan to launch the Predator drones that observe and attack al-Qaeda and Taleban militants on the Pakistani side of the border with Afghanistan, a Times investigation has found.

The Pakistani and US governments have repeatedly denied that Washington is running military operations, covert or otherwise, on Pakistani territory — a hugely sensitive issue in the predominantly Muslim country.

The Pakistani Government has also repeatedly demanded that the US halt drone attacks on northern tribal areas that it says have caused hundreds of civilian casualties and fuelled anti-American sentiment.

But The Times has discovered that the CIA has been using the Shamsi airfield — originally built by Arab sheikhs for falconry expeditions in the southwestern province of Baluchistan — for at least a year. The strip, which is about 30 miles from the Afghan border, allows US forces to launch a Drone within minutes of receiving actionable intelligence as well as allowing them to attack targets further afield.

It was known that US special forces used Shamsi during the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, but the Pakistani Government declared publicly in 2006 that the Americans had left it and two other airbases.

Key to the Times investigation is the unexplained delivery of 730,000 gallons of F34 aviation fuel to Shamsi. Details were found on the website of the Pentagon’s fuel procurement agency.

The Defence Energy Support Centre site shows that a civilian company, Nordic Camp Supply (NCS), was contracted to deliver the fuel, worth $3.2 million, from Pakistan Refineries near Karachi.

It also shows the fuel was delivered last year, when the United States escalated drone attacks on Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas, allegedly killing several top Taleban and al-Qaeda targets, but also many civilians.

A source at NCS, which is based in Denmark, confirmed that the company had been awarded the contract and had supplied the fuel to Shamsi, but declined to give further details.

A spokesman for the US embassy in Pakistan told The Times: “Shamsi is not the final destination.” However, he declined to elaborate and denied that the US was using it as a base.

“No. No. No. No. No. We unequivocally and emphatically can tell you that there is no basing of US troops in Pakistan,” he said. “There is no basing of US Air Force, Navy, Marines, Army, none, on the record and emphatically. I want that to be very clear. And that is the answer any way you want to put it. There is no base here, no troops billeted. We do not operate here.”

He said that he could not comment on CIA operations.

The CIA declined to comment, as did the Pentagon. But one senior Western source familiar with US operations in Pakistan and Afghanistan told The Times that the CIA “runs Predator flights routinely” from Shamsi.

“We can see the planes flying from the base,” said Safar Khan, a local journalist. “The area around the base is a high-security zone and no one is allowed there.”

He said that the outer perimeter of Shamsi was guarded by Pakistani military, but the airfield itself was under the control of American forces.

Shamsi lies in a sparsely populated area about 190 miles southwest of the city of Quetta, which US intelligence officials believe is used as a staging post by senior Taleban leaders, including Mullah Omar. It is also 100 miles south of the border with Afghanistan’s southern province of Helmand and about 100 miles east of the border with Iran.

That would put the Predators, which have a range of more than 2,000 miles and can fly for 29 hours, within reach of militants in Baluchistan, southern Afghanistan and in Pakistan’s northern tribal areas.

Paul Smyth, head of operational studies at the Royal United Services Institute, said that 730,000 gallons of F34, also known as JP8, was not enough to supply regular Hercules tanker flights but was sufficient to sustain drones or helicopters.

Other experts said that Shamsi’s airstrip was too short for most aircraft, but was big enough for Predators and ideally located as there were few civilians in the surrounding area to witness the drones coming and going.

Farhatullah Babar, a spokesman for the President of Pakistan, Asif Ali Zardari, said that he did not know anything about the airfield. HOwever, Major General Athar Abbas, the chief military spokesman, confirmed that US forces were using Shamsi. “The airfield is being used only for logistics,” he said, without elaborating.

He added that the Americans were also using another airbase near Jacobabad, 300 miles northeast of Karachi, for logistics and military operations.

Pakistan gave America permission to use Shamsi, Jacobabad and two other bases — Pasni and Dalbadin — for the invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001. US Marine Special Forces were based at Shamsi and, in January 2002, a US Marine KC130 tanker aircraft crashed close to its runway, killing seven Marines on board.

Jacobabad became the main US airbase until Bagram, near Kabul, was repaired, while Pasni, on the coast, was used for helicopters and Dalbadin as a refueling post for special forces’ helicopters. However, in December 2001, Pakistan began sharing Jacobabad and Pasni with US forces as India and Pakistan began massing troops on their border. In July 2006 the Pakistani Government declared that America was no longer using Shamsi, Pasni and Jacobabad, although they were at its disposal in an emergency.

The subject has become particularly sensitive in the past few weeks as President Obama has made it clear that he will continue the strikes while reviewing overall US strategy in the region.

The latest strike on Monday — the fourth since Mr Obama took office — killed 31 people in the tribal agency of Kurram, and another on Saturday killed 25 people in South Waziristan, according to Pakistani officials.

Shah Mehmood Qureshi, the Pakistani Foreign Minister, responded on Sunday by categorically denying that Pakistani bases were used for US drone attacks.

Aerial assault

— Armed predator unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have been in use since 1999

— The aircraft is controlled from the ground using satellite systems and onboard cameras

— The MQ9 craft, which is used in Afghanistan, is 11m long, has a 20m wing span and a cruise speed of up to 230mph. Each can carry four Hellfire missiles and two bombs

— Three systems were bought by the RAF last year for £500m

Sources: Jane’s Information, US Airforce, RAF, Times archives

Secrecy and denial as Pakistan lets CIA use airbase to strike militants - Times Online
 
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the Predator strikes are more and more precise," said a Pakistani official.

Eleven of al Qaeda's top 20 commanders have been killed or captured since August because of the Predator missions conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency, according to the Pakistani official, and current and former U.S. intelligence officials


with the Taliban making gains against the Pakistani military and the police, these officials say President Asif Ali Zardari and top military leaders decided in recent months to aid the American effort in the hopes it will help them regain control over the tribal areas

Our "Sovereignty" contingent maynot realize it but they have played themselves into hands of those who are no friends of the Pakistani state and Nation, in fact they are they enemies of the very idea of Pakistan. Perhaps this will give them cause to reconsider.

:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan::pakistan::pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:
 
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This should of great concern after the disclosure that India is sponsoring the Taliban to carry out attacks on Pakistan. Islamabad find itself in a difficult and precarious bind.
 
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This should of great concern after the disclosure that India is sponsoring the Taliban to carry out attacks on Pakistan. Islamabad find itself in a difficult and precarious bind.

The WSJ article, in combination with the recent airstrikes on militants linked with B Mehsud, seems to indicate that this greater cooperation from Pakistan is paying of in terms of combating Pakistan's enemies in Pakistan as well.

So perhaps it is not so great a concern, because the targeting of Taliban factions in Pakistan means that Indian proxies are being attacked as well.
 
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The WSJ article, in combination with the recent airstrikes on militants linked with B Mehsud, seems to indicate that this greater cooperation from Pakistan is paying of in terms of combating Pakistan's enemies in Pakistan as well.

So perhaps it is not so great a concern, because the targeting of Taliban factions in Pakistan means that Indian proxies are being attacked as well.

So it seems that Zardari was right in pointing out the Taliban threat which is in fact an Indian threat. It seems the Americans are also aware of the tricks being played by India in Afghanistan. It appears the Indian plan will fail in dismantling Pakistan which is good news for the region. I think the Indians overplayed their hand here. The cooling in relationship between Karzai and the US indicates a change of emphasis and policy which seems to be going in Pakistan's favour. However, another Mumbai style attack could change the balance again. I think it remains a very fluid situation.
 
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So it seems that Zardari was right in pointing out the Taliban threat which is in fact an Indian threat. It seems the Americans are also aware of the tricks being played by India in Afghanistan. It appears the Indian plan will fail in dismantling Pakistan which is good news for the region. I think the Indians overplayed their hand here. The cooling in relationship between Karzai and the US indicates a change of emphasis and policy which seems to be going in Pakistan's favour. However, another Mumbai style attack could change the balance again. I think it remains a very fluid situation.

The Indian hysteria and warmongering over Mumbai, despite immediate Pakistan offers of cooperation, joint investigation etc., can perhaps be seen in the context of trying to influence the environment in their favor with a new incoming US adminsitration - if the US is busy trying to stop India from attacking Pakistan, then it will not be looking at regional dispute resolution or Indian support for terrorism in Pakistan through Afghanistan.
 
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^You guys are inventing conspiracies out of thin air.

Just offering analysis - that is why I used the word 'perhaps'. You can argue against it by actually pointing out why it might be flawed, but merely resorting to 'conspiracy' is disingenuous.
 
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Just offering analysis - that is why I used the word 'perhaps'. You can argue against it by actually pointing out why it might be flawed, but merely resorting to 'conspiracy' is disingenuous.

You are implying that India devised a strategy to distract the US from Indian support of the Taliban by using the Mumbai terror attacks to create a climate of hostility?

Let see - what could be the problem with this analysis - well firstly, India had no idea that the attacks were going to happen, so that would dash any hopes of long term strategy.
Secondly, the Indian response would have been the same, irrespective of its "ulterior motives" because of domestic pressure to "act tough" against Pakistan support and harbouring of terrorists.

Infact, I'd say that the terrorists themselves chose the opportune moment to attack - just when things were starting to look up in bilateral relations.
Its far more likely that forces within Pakistan were working to ensure that the peace process fails.
 
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The Indian hysteria and warmongering over Mumbai, despite immediate Pakistan offers of cooperation, joint investigation etc., can perhaps be seen in the context of trying to influence the environment in their favor with a new incoming US adminsitration - if the US is busy trying to stop India from attacking Pakistan, then it will not be looking at regional dispute resolution or Indian support for terrorism in Pakistan through Afghanistan.

It aint that straight forward as you say. Paksitan has been blamed before for blasts as far as london, and have been blamed and accussed before of having terror camps inside its sovereign land.

26/11 was a continuation of that series of blames / accusations. Prior to 26/11 too Pakistan has been threatened with military actions by US / India.

In that context India's war mongering was not a official divertionary tactic, but played by the media to appease its domestic viewership. Army chief would have replied in affirmitive to Questions' specific to preparedness and quotes thus given were used out of context to satisfy jingoism. And that was gleefully accepted by Pakistani media who replied in kind.

Pakistan has always waited for pressure / situations to emanate to act, and thats the main reason why they arent trusted to weed out these elements. If Pakistan had fought these guys as if it was there problem rather than with a attitude as if they were fighting for somebody else's cause Pakistan's position in world scenario would have been mighlty different.
 
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You are implying that India devised a strategy to distract the US from Indian support of the Taliban by using the Mumbai terror attacks to create a climate of hostility?

Let see - what could be the problem with this analysis - well firstly, India had no idea that the attacks were going to happen, so that would dash any hopes of long term strategy.
Secondly, the Indian response would have been the same, irrespective of its "ulterior motives" because of domestic pressure to "act tough" against Pakistan support and harbouring of terrorists.

Infact, I'd say that the terrorists themselves chose the opportune moment to attack - just when things were starting to look up in bilateral relations.
Its far more likely that forces within Pakistan were working to ensure that the peace process fails.

Terrorists will always be looking to ensure pace processes fails - but the Indian response IMO was overboard becausee:

1. Domestic Political compulsions - a scapegoat had to be found to absolve the GoI of ineptitude, and redirect the wrath of the public at the perpetual 'enemy' Pakistan.

2. They saw an opportunity to put pressure on Pakistan, raise tensions, and therefore undermine Obama's stated policy of addressing Kashmir as part of a regional resolution of issues culminating in all parties working towards the same objectives in Afghanistan. They did not go looking for this, but the opportunity did present it self and the GoI took it.

3. Related to the second, it distracted the Obama administration and directed its attention towards cooling tensions, instead of addressing Indian complicity in terrorism in Pakistan. Again, not something the GoI went out looking for, but the opportunity presented itself.
 
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It aint that straight forward as you say. Paksitan has been blamed before for blasts as far as london, and have been blamed and accussed before of having terror camps inside its sovereign land.

26/11 was a continuation of that series of blames / accusations. Prior to 26/11 too Pakistan has been threatened with military actions by US / India.

In that context India's war mongering was not a official divertionary tactic, but played by the media to appease its domestic viewership. Army chief would have replied in affirmitive to Questions' specific to preparedness and quotes thus given were used out of context to satisfy jingoism. And that was gleefully accepted by Pakistani media who replied in kind.

Pakistan has always waited for pressure / situations to emanate to act, and thats the main reason why they arent trusted to weed out these elements. If Pakistan had fought these guys as if it was there problem rather than with a attitude as if they were fighting for somebody else's cause Pakistan's position in world scenario would have been mighlty different.

Pakistan has not been accused, nor is their any evidence of, institutional involvement in any of those cases. The Indian response was one of accusing Pakistani institutions of involvement, and has continued despite their own investigation indicating no Pakistani institutions were involved.

This was a deliberate provocation by India.
 
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Pakistan has not been accused, nor is their any evidence of, institutional involvement in any of those cases. The Indian response was one of accusing Pakistani institutions of involvement, and has continued despite their own investigation indicating no Pakistani institutions were involved.

This was a deliberate provocation by India.

Would you blame India if it attacks only those elements within your land?
 
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