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This Article is From Apr 14, 2012

Drone strikes will go on in Pakistan: US officials

Drone strikes will go on in Pakistan: US officials
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Washington: The White House has no intentions of ending CIA drone strikes against militant targets on Pakistani soil, U.S. officials say, possibly setting the two countries up for diplomatic tensions after Pakistan's parliament unanimously approved new guidelines for the country's troubled relationship with the United States.

US officials say they will work in coming weeks and months to find common ground with Pakistan, but if a suspected terrorist target comes into the laser sights of a CIA drone's hellfire missiles, they will take the shot.

It's not the first time the US has ignored Pakistan's parliament, which demanded an end to drone strikes in 2008. What's different now is that the Pakistani government is in a more fragile political state, and can no longer continue its earlier practice of quietly allowing the US action while publicly denouncing it, Pakistani officials say.

The White House declined to comment. All other officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the high stakes diplomatic jockeying.

The parliament approved on Thursday recommendations intended to guide Pakistan's government in its negotiations to reset the U.S. relationship. The guidelines allow for the blockade on US and NATO supplies to be lifted. The lawmakers demanded a halt to CIA-led missile attacks but did not make that a prerequisite to reopening the supply lines.

The relationship between Pakistan and the U.S. faltered after a series of incidents in 2011 that have damaged trust on both sides - from the controversy over CIA security officer Ray Davis who killed two Pakistani alleged assailants and was later released to the U.S. Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in May, without Pakistani permission. But the arguable nadir in relations came in November, when U.S. forces returned fire they believed came from a Pakistani border post, killing 24 Pakistani troops.

Those incidents led to the ejection of US military trainers who'd worked closely with Pakistani counter-insurgent forces, slowed CIA drone strikes, and joint raids and investigations by Pakistan's intelligence service together with the CIA and FBI. The border incident led to the shutdown of border supply lines into Afghanistan, more than doubling the cost of shipping in supplies for the war effort.

A recent series of high level US military and State Department visits have produced backroom understandings on almost every issue except the drones, one former U.S. official briefed on the talks explained, with US officials offering to negotiate some sort of payment to use the border crossing points, for instance. The White House is also still considering issuing an official apology for the deadly border incident, two senior US officials say, which would help ease Pakistani outrage and demonstrate the Pakistani government wrested at least one major concession from the US.

And while the US has no intentions of stopping its CIA and FBI counterterrorist activities on Pakistani soil, the White House could take the step of withdrawing some of the staff for a few months until the spotlight is off the controversy, as it did last year after the Ray Davis incident, and again after the Bin Laden raid.

But neither side is budging on the drone issue, so far, both US and Pakistani officials say.

Saying that the US would wait to see how Pakistan's leaders decide to act, one US official said Washington would "continue to assume that protecting US and Pakistani common interests, especially on counterterrorism matters, is valued by Islamabad."

In the meantime, the White House has raised the bar to who the CIA is allowed to target, applying new limits and all but curtailing so-called "signature strikes" where CIA targeters deemed certain groups and behaviour as clearly indicative of militant activity.

The White House also explored whether giving Pakistan advance notice of the strikes could become the basis of a compromise to keep the operation going.

In exploratory counteroffers, Pakistani officials have suggested the U.S. "transfer ownership" of the drones to the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence, flagging them as Pakistani aircraft, taking off from Pakistani air bases, two Pakistani officials say. The Pakistanis argue their public would react with less venom to errant strikes that hit Pakistani civilian targets, than they do when such strikes are carried out by a foreign force. They point out the drone transmissions have to travel via US-controlled satellites, giving US officials a failsafe to terminate the Pakistani strikes at any time.

An alternate proposal put forward is that the US better arm Pakistan's F-16 fleet, enabling the Pakistani air force to attack the targets. While Pakistani officials insist the jets have proven successful in the past, US officials claim their shots flew wide of the mark, allowing some of the militant targets to escape.

There's little chance of that, with the mountain of evidence the US has built up showing the Pakistani intelligence service's support of Afghan militants. A secret NATO report published in January obtained by the AP concluded that "the government of Pakistan remains intimately involved with the Taliban." Derived from interviews with captured Afghan militants, the report says "in meetings with Taliban leaders, ISI personnel are openly hostile to ISAF (the US coalition), with ISI officers touting the need for "continued jihad and expulsion of 'foreign invaders' from Afghanistan."

"We're floundering" on how to restore the relationship, said Bruce Riedel, former CIA official, and the man who helped the White House craft its policy to reconnect with Pakistan when President Barack Obama took office in 2009. The ISI's support of the Taliban shows that "engagement with the Pakistani government hasn't produced the change we'd hoped for."
 

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