US to go ahead with ‘essential’ drone attacks in Pak despite UN call to stop

Washington, Jun.4 (ANI): Notwithstanding a report by a top UN official, which called for the discontinuation of unmanned Predator drone attacks in Pakistan’s troubled tribal areas along the Afghan border, the United States has defended the missile strikes, which many believe have killed more civilians than extremists.

Bruce Riedel, a former Central Investigation Agency (CIA) officials and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Saban Center described the CIA operated attacks as ‘essential’, which were needed to pressurise terror groups like Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

“Drone operations are essential. The drones are part of a much broader effort to put pressure on Al-Qaida through the war in Afghanistan. They”re the cutting edge of the pressure, but they”re not the only pressure,” The Christian Science Monitor quoted Riedel, as saying.

Micah Zenko, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, also argued that the drone attacks were an “essential tool for killing terrorists even if their use should be more carefully scrutinized.”

Zenko, however, pointed out that militants were fast adopting to these strikes, and that their ‘usefulness may be waning.’

A top United Nation (UN) official had criticised the Obama administration for continuing drone attacks in the semi-autonomous tribal areas of Pakistan, as they have resulted in countless civilian deaths.

While US officials have presented an impressive figure of over 500 terrorists being killed in missile hits and only 30 civilians in the past couple of years, UN’s special rapporteur on extra judicial, summary or arbitrary executions Phillip Alston argues that drone strikes amount to a “license to kill” without being held accountable, a license the U.S. would not want any other country to have.

Alston, in his report, said that by carrying out the drone attacks, Washington is just setting a bad example.

“The rules we’re setting for ourselves now are the rules that we”re also setting for others later,” Alston’s report said.

Alston criticized the secrecy of the CIA”s drone attacks, saying they have resulted in “the creation of a major accountability vacuum.”

“Remote attacks also led to a risk of developing a ‘Playstation’ mentality to killing,” he wrote in his report. (ANI)

Turkey sees no impact on Israel drone delivery

June 1 (Reuters) – Turkey’s Defence Minister Vecdi Gonul said on Tuesday a diplomatic crisis with Israel after the Jewish state stormed a Turkish-backed aid convoy will not affect the planned delivery of Israel-made Heron drones to Turkey.

Israel’s long-time Muslim ally Turkey has recalled its envoy to Israel and cancelled joint military exercises after Israeli marines raided an aid flotilla bound for Gaza on Monday.

Earlier this year, the two countries, which have a close military alliance, wrapped up the purchase of 10 Heron drones in a deal worth $180 million. (Reportingby Tulay Karadeniz; Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia; Editing by David Stamp)

US studying options for possible Pakistan strike: Post

Washington, May 29 (IANS) The US is studying options of striking Pakistan if a successful terror attack is traced back to that country, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

Ties between the alleged Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad, and elements of the Pakistani Taliban have sharpened the Obama administration’s need for retaliatory options, senior defence officials were quoted as saying by the newspaper.

They stressed that a US reprisal would be contemplated only under extreme circumstances, such as a catastrophic attack that leaves President Barack Obama convinced that the ongoing campaign of Central Iintelligence Agency (CIA) drone strikes is insufficient.

‘Planning has been reinvigorated in the wake of Times Square,’ one of the officials told the Post.

At the same time, the administration is trying to deepen ties to Pakistan’s intelligence officials in a bid to head off any attack by militant groups.

The US and Pakistan have recently established a joint military intelligence centre on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar in Pakistan, and are in negotiations to set up another one near Quetta, the Pakistani city where the Afghan Taliban is based, according to the US military officials.

The ‘fusion centres’ are meant to bolster Pakistani military operations by providing direct access to U.S. intelligence, including real-time video surveillance from drones controlled by the US Special Operations Command, the Post report said.

But in an acknowledgement of the continuing mistrust between the two governments, the officials added that both sides also see the centres as a way to keep a closer eye on one another, as well as to monitor military operations and intelligence activities in insurgent areas.

President Obama said during his campaign for the presidency that he would be willing to order strikes in Pakistan, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a television interview after the Times Square attempt that ‘if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences.’

Obama dispatched his national security adviser, James L. Jones, and CIA Director Leon Panetta to Islamabad this month to deliver a similar message to Pakistani officials, including President Asif Ali Zardari and the military chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani.

Jones and Panetta also presented evidence gathered by U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies that Shahzad received significant support from the Pakistani Taliban.

The US options for potential retaliatory action rely mainly on air and missile strikes, but could also employ small teams of US Special Operations troops already positioned along the border with Afghanistan.

One of the senior military officials said plans for military strikes in Pakistan have been revised significantly over the past several years, moving away from a ‘large, punitive response’ to more measured plans meant to deliver retaliatory blows against specific militant groups.

‘The general feeling is that we need to be circumspect in how we respond so we don’t destroy the relationships we’ve built’ with the Pakistani military, a second official said.

US Special Operations teams in Afghanistan have pushed for years to have wider latitude to carry out raids across the border, arguing that CIA drone strikes do not yield prisoners or other opportunities to gather intelligence.

But a 2008 US helicopter raid against a target in Pakistan prompted protests from officials in Islamabad who oppose allowing American soldiers to operate within their country.

The CIA has the authority to designate and strike targets in Pakistan without case-by-case approval from the White House. U.S. military forces are currently authorized to carry out unilateral strikes in Pakistan only if solid intelligence were to surface on any of three high-value targets: Al Qaeda leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, or Taliban chief Mohammad Omar. But even in those cases, the military would need higher-level approval.

The report quoting a senior US military official said the centres would be used to track the Afghan Taliban leadership council, known as the Quetta shura. But other officials said the main mission would be to support the US military effort across the border in Kandahar, Afghanistan, where a major US military push is planned.

U.S. studies options for possible Pakistan attack – Wpost

U.S. miliary leaders are reviewing options for a unilateral strike in Pakistan if there is a successful attack on American soil tied to the country’s tribal areas, The Washington Post reported in its Saturday edition.

The newspaper said senior U.S. military officials stressed a possible strike would only be considered under extreme circumstances such as a catastrophic attack that convinced President Barack Obama that the campaign using CIA drone strikes is not working.

The officials said airstrikes would be the most effective option in reducing the threat posed by al-Qaeda and other groups, but the United States must be careful not to damage its miliary relationship with Pakistan to a point where it cannot be repaired.

CIA-operated drones have targeted Taliban figures in Pakistan’s tribal areas and the group has vowed to avenge missile strikes that have killed some of its leaders.

The failed Times Square bombing on May 1 has revived international fears about Pakistan, a U.S. ally in the campaign against militancy. It also has forced the Obama administration to review how it would respond to a successful attack on U.S. soil.

U.S. authorities say Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistani-American, has admitted to the Times Square bomb attempt and has been cooperating with investigators since his arrest on May 3.

American and Pakistani authorities are likely scrambling for clues on whether those detained have ties to militants in Pakistan, who are bent on toppling the state and are violently opposed to the U.S. presence.

Three children among seven killed in Pakistan

Islamabad, May 13 (DPA) Three boys died and two people were injured Wednesday when a bomb exploded in a camp of Afghan refugees in northwestern Pakistan, police said.

Separately, Taliban militants killed two men in the same region, accusing them for spying for the United States, while a blast ripped through an oil tanker carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan, killing two people in Pakistan’s southwestern province.

Local police officer Mohammad Aslam said that an explosion took place in the outskirts of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber-Paktunkhwa province, formerly known as North West Frontier Province.

‘Three children aged between 10 and 13 died in the blast while one child and a man were injured,’ said Aslam. ‘The nature of the blast is not known yet. Our bomb disposal squad is on the spot and they are collecting evidence to determine what sort of bomb that was’.

Peshawar has seen dozens of bombings carried out by Taliban militants who have intensified attacks to avenge Pakistan’s ongoing assaults in their strongholds in lawless tribal region along Afghan border.

The US has encouraged Islamabad to target Taliban and Al Qaeda militants who launch regular cross-border raids from their hideouts in rouged tribal region on international forces into Afghanistan.

In addition to the efforts by around 150,000 Pakistani troops against Islamist insurgency, the American CIA has also launched a covet war in Pakistan’s tribal region with unmanned drone aircrafts.

More than 900 people, most of them Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, have been killed in the missiles attacks carried out by the drones since August 2008.

Following almost every drone strike Taliban respond with killing alleged US spies who they believe guide the drones by planting electronic devices near possible targets.

Wednesday, residents found the bodies of two people dumped in Miranshah, the main town in tribal district of North Waziristan that is a major bastion of militants.

An intelligence official said that a note attached with the bodies comprised a promise from Taliban for the same fate for all those who ‘intended to spy for the Americans’.

North Waziristan has been severely hit by drone attacks in recent months. Twenty-four people died in two US aerial attacks in the district Tuesday.

Also Wednesday, a blast destroyed a tanker carrying fuel supplies for the NATO troops in the landlocked Afghanistan, killing two by-passers and injuring two more.

The attack took place in Chaman, the main border town in south-western Baluchistan province that adjoins Afghan province of Kandahar.

‘One child and a man died in the attack, while two more were wounded,’ said Ata Mohammad of the border security police. ‘Several shops near the bombing place also caught fire’. Mohammad suspected that Taliban could be behind the bombing.

US turns down Pak’s request for drone technology

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): The United States has reportedly rejected Pakistan’s fresh demands of handing over unmanned drone technology to it, highly placed sources in the Pakistan military have revealed, adding that Washington’s refusal could see Islamabad further delay its decision to launch a new war front against militants in North Waziristan.

“Apart from other issues, the issue pertaining to transfer of requisite drone technology could cause delay in Pakistan’s launching of military operation in North Waziristan”, The Nation quoted the sources, as saying.

Pakistan has already developed drones capable of reconnaissance missions, but it still lacks the technology to attach weapons to the indigenous drones so that it can carry out attacks against extremists in the country’s semi-autonomous tribal regions by it self.

The well-placed military sources said that it was imperative for the Obama Administration to provide the drone technology to enable it take action against extremists flourishing on the terror hot beds situated along the Afghan border.

“Drones with weapon systems are imperative to meet Pakistan’s pressing needs in tackling low intensity conflict such as terrorism especially with back up intelligence support from US satellite network on Pak- Afghan border” they said.

Islamabad has long been opposing the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes in the restive tribal areas, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-American sentiments amongst the population, however, it is believed that Pakistan is privately sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs. (ANI)

Pak security forces kill over 43 Taliban in separate clashes in FATA

Islamabad, May 10 (ANI): Over 43 extremists have been killed in separate operations conducted by Pakistan security forces across the Federally Administered Tribal Areas over the last 24 hours.

Ground troops assisted by fighter jets killed at least 33 militants in Orakzai Agency, officials said.

Pakistan Air Force jets pounded suspected Taliban hideouts in Kasha, Teerangra , Khawri and other regions killing over 10 militants, The Daily Times reports.

Security forces also claimed to have killed two Taliban commanders in Swat.

On Sunday, at least 10 suspected extremists were killed and several others wounded in a US drone strike in North Waziristan

Security officials said unmanned aircrafts targeted a suspected militant hideout in Inzarkas village, situated some 50 kilometres west of Miranshah, the main town in the volatile North Waziristan region killing 10 extremists on the spot.

“The missiles struck a militant compound in the village, killing at least 10 rebels,” a local security official said.

“It was, however, not immediately known if any high-value target was present in the area at the time of attack,” the official added.

The missile hit came amidst reports that the United States is planning to greatly expand the use of drones against militants in Pakistan’s troubled tribal regions along the Afghanistan border following the failed Times Square bombing plot, which was masterminded by an American citizen of Pakistan origin, Faisal Shahzad. (ANI)

Cockroach’s brain fires out walking commands

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Researchers have, for the first time, found that cockroach’s brain fires out commands to walk and run—a feat that has paved way for better rescue robots.

A team led by Roy Ritzmann, Case Western Reserve University biology professor, has shown a direct link between neurons at the center of an insect brain and changes in behaviour.

They recorded neural activity in the central complex of walking cockroaches and found that in the same area of the brain where visual, chemical and tactile information from the world outside is processed, the firing of neurons is correlated to the insect”s stepping rate.

This means that cockroaches walk or run when their brains decide to do so.

“Robots were sent into the World Trade Center after 911. By the time the driver would see an obstacle, they were stuck,” said Ritzmann.

“We see in these animals an ability to adapt to difficult and changing terrain and conditions. What we”d like to see is a robotic brain that can make these kinds of decisions,” he continued.

He believes that the research could help lead to better robots to search collapsed mines and buildings, to pilot drones, and for space exploration, where signals from Earth to a far off planet takes minutes, hours or longer.

Thus, to make a robot that can turn, back up, climb over or burrow under and obstacle without the guidance of a far off rescue worker using computer controls, the best thing would be to mimic an insect”s comparatively simple brain.

However, to get these first recordings of neural activity, Research Assistant Allan Pollack spent more than a year perfecting techniques to perform brain surgery in an area the size of the head of a pin.

After delicately cutting through the brain sheath and exposing the central complex, he inserted a hair-thin braid of four wires that can monitor activity of groups of neurons or stimulate the groups with electricity.

With the braid implanted, cockroaches were tethered over the simplest version of a treadmill—a greased glass plate.

The researchers waited, sometimes for three hours or more, for a cockroach to begin walking, and to change speeds, all without prodding.

“We wanted to study the cockroach when it wants to move,” said Ritzmann.

He found that when he graphed the sums of the insects” step rates and sums of the neural firing, they produce a similar pattern.

The steps come about 450 milliseconds after the neural firing.

“This is a breakthrough on a number of different levels. It was a real accomplishment to record the neural activity of walking. The interesting finding is the cockroach can control speed with the brain,” said Dr. Sasha Zill, a professor of anatomy and pathology at the Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine at Marshal University.

Zill explained research shows animals from humans to – now, cockroaches – walk by sending a signal from the brain down to a part of the spinal cord or the equivalent, which generates a pattern of signals that direct the orderly contraction of muscles needed for each step.

The findings are published online in Current Biology. (ANI)

Shahzad”s hatred stemmed from personal failure, war on terror

New York, May 6 (ANI): Confessed Times Square car bomber Faisal Shahzad”s hatred stemmed from personal failure and the US-led Allied war on terror in Afghanistan.

According to the New York Daily News, a raft of grievances that built up over time fueled his descent from a suburban Connecticut family man to a wanna-be terrorist.

It quoted law enforcement sources, as saying that “He did a slow burn.”

“[He was] slowly radicalized as events piled up – the war in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, Muslim brothers being killed, innocent people being hit by drones from above,” one source said.

Shahzad, the son of a wealthy Pakistani family who earned a college degree and an M.B.A. in America, offered few clues of his growing resentment toward his adopted country.

But last year, Shahzad”s fixation on U.S. policy in the Middle East was evident at a house party in leafy Shelton, Conn.

Neighbor Dennis Flanner said a brooding Shahzad was staring at the TV news in a room packed with drunken partygoers.

“They were talking about those drones blowing things up in Afghanistan,” Flanner, 18, said. “He was the only one watching it. Everybody else was just having a good time.”

At one point, Flanner said, a reveler told Shahzad to loosen up and have some fun. Shahzad wasn”t having it.

“They shouldn”t be shooting people from the sky,” Shahzad replied, according to Flanner. “You know, they should come down and fight.”

By that point, Shahzad, a financial analyst, was starting to shed his middle-class life.

In June, he quit the job he had held since 2006 at marketing firm Affinion. Banks foreclosed on the home he had owned since 2004 and where he had lived with his wife, Huma Mian, and their young son and daughter.

In the fall, Shahzad went to Pakistan, where he admits getting bomb training, according to a federal complaint. When he returned to the U.S. in February, he rented an apartment in a shabby area of Bridgeport, Conn.

“It looks like everything was tilting toward, ”I”m not succeeding in America. I”m going back to Pakistan, and I”m going to carry out an attack,”” said former FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt.

Van Zandt said it was revealing that Shahzad opted not to carry out a suicide attack.

“It tells me that his dedication to whatever motivation he had to do this was not to the level of what we”ve seen of other Middle Eastern terrorists. He was not that radicalized.” (ANI)

Evidence of Pak Taliban role in Times Square foiled plot mounting: US

Washington, May 6 (ANI): After two days of intense questioning of Times Square bombing suspect, Faisal Shahzad, American officials are more or less convinced about the Pakistani Taliban inspiring and training the latter prior to the Saturday night incident.

Officials have confirmed that Shahzad has discussed his contacts with the group, and added that more evidence has been accumulated, but won’t be disclosed for the time being.

According to the New York Times, Department of Homeland Security officials have directed airlines to speed up their checks of new names added to the no-fly list.

The failed attack has produced a flurry of other proposals to tighten security procedures, including calls by members of Congress to more closely scrutinize passengers who buy tickets with cash.

American officials said their understanding of the plot would evolve as a dragnet spanning two continents gathered more evidence.

One issue that the investigators are vigorously pursuing is who provided Shahzad cash to buy the S.U.V. and his plane ticket to Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.

They also said that it is becoming increasingly difficult to separate the operations of the militant groups in Pakistan’s tribal areas. There is no doubt among intelligence officials that the barrage of attacks by C.I.A. drones over the past year has made Pakistan’s Taliban, which goes by the name Tehrik-i-Taliban, increasingly determined to seek revenge by finding any way possible to strike at the United States.

If the Pakistani Taliban was involved in the Times Square bombing plot, the organization is only the latest militant group to expand beyond a local political agenda and strike the United States.

A successful attack on American soil could have significant payoffs, said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at Georgetown University.

The message may be, “ ‘The U.S. is pounding us with drone attacks, but we’re powerful enough to strike back’; it’s certainly enough to attract ever more recruits to replace those they’re losing,” Hoffman said. (ANI)

Times Square bombing is a reaction to US drone attacks: Qureshi

Islamabad, May 5 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Mahkdoom Shah Mehmood Qureshi believes the attempted Times Square bombing is a reaction to U.S. drones targeting Taliban followers along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

“This is a blow back. This is a reaction. This is retaliation. And you could expect that. Let”s not be naive. They”re not going to sort of sit and welcome you eliminate them. They”re going to fight back,” CBS News quoted Qureshi, as saying.

Qureshi was speaking as police in Pakistan police confirmed the arrest of two people, one of whom, Tauseef Ahmed, is believed to have travelled to the U.S. to meet Faisal Shahzad. Both were arrested in Karachi, Pakistan.

CBS News has also learned that Shahzad may have spent at least four months training at a terrorist camp – raided in early March by Pakistani forces.

Though Pakistan is a key ally to the U.S., the country is still seen as a fertile training ground for militants.

Faisal Shahzad comes from a wealthy and educated family. His father is a retired high-ranking Air Force officer. But the failed plot will no doubt put new pressure on Pakistan to crack down on insurgents within its borders. (ANI)

After civil nuke deal snub, US now rejects Pak’s drone technology demand

Washington, Mar.27 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has admitted that the United States has not yet heeded Islamabad’s plea to hand over the unmanned Predator aircrafts to enable it to carry out the drone attacks targeting the extremists.

“I don’t think so,” Qureshi said in response to a question that whether the US has agreed to his country’s long standing demands for the drone technology.

In an interview with the CNN, Qureshi, acknowledged that the CIA operated missile hits inside Pakistan’s geographical boundaries has ‘taken out some valuable targets’ but added that the Obama Administration would be able to reduce the existing massive anti-America sentiment in Pakistan by offering it the drone technology.

“The issue of sovereignty is there. People of Pakistan feel strongly about it. We want the ownership. We make the decision when to operate. It will help improve the feelings in Pakistan,” Qureshi said.

Pakistan has been pestering the US to hand over drone technology to it so that it can carry out strikes on suspicious militant targets in the lawless tribal regions along the Afghan border.

Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying that they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-Americanism among the population, it is believed that it is sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hideouts.

The US has rejected Pakistan’s demand for armed drones, but during his recent Islamabad visit US Defence Secretary Robert Gates had offered to provide at least a dozen ‘unarmed aerial vehicles to Pakistan.

The Shadow surveillance drone was seen as a compromise aimed at enticing Pakistan further into the ‘war on terror’ and helping the country’s political leadership explain the drone strikes to the country’s people. (ANI)

U.S. looks to export drone technology to allies

Defence Secretary Robert Gates said on Thursday he hoped to export coveted U.S. drone technology to allies, despite legal hurdles, and played down the threat from rival drone programs in nations like Iran.

Gates, testifying at a Senate hearing, said it was in the U.S. interest to try to help friendly nations get drone technology, despite limitations on exports imposed by an international pact.

“There are other countries that are very interested in this capability and frankly it is, in my view, in our interest to see what we can do to accommodate them,” Gates said.

The drones have proven to be a crucial technological advantage for the U.S. military in Afghanistan and Iraq, allowing it to remotely track and kill insurgents and giving troops eyes-in-the-sky battleground imagery in real time.

The CIA has used drones armed with missiles to ramp up its covert campaign to kill al Qaeda and Taliban targets in Pakistan.

“The reality is so far we have been in situations where (drone) technology cannot be used, or has not been used against our troops anywhere,” Gates said.

But that might not remain the case, he said. He cited Iran, which he has said is providing limited support to Afghan insurgents, and which is developing unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs.

“Iran has UAVs and that is a concern because it is one of those areas where I suppose if they chose to, in both Iraq and Afghanistan, they could create difficulties for us,” Gates said.

Still, he called UAVs “relatively slow flyers” that could be neutralized by the Air Force if they threatened U.S. forces.

“I actually think our ability to protect our troops from these things particularly in a theater of combat like this is actually quite good,” he said.

Militant groups, as opposed to other countries, were a bigger concern when it came to the spread of drone technology.

“My worry would be capabilities like this getting into the hands of non-state actors who could use them for terrorist purposes,” Gates said.

PENT-UP DEMAND

The U.S. aerospace industry estimated in December that U.S. military demand for unmanned aircraft would double over the next five years after rising 600 percent since 2004. It is also hoping for growth abroad.

The industry wants to change the Missile Technology Control Regime, or MTCR, a pact among at least 34 countries aimed at curbing the spread of unmanned delivery systems that could be used for weapons of mass destruction.

Gates said he shared concerns of lawmakers about the spread of the technology to adversaries and “about these capabilities getting into the hands of those who are our adversaries.”

But he also said the United States had only sold UAVs to Italy and Britain so far.

“With respect to export … I think there are some specific cases where we have allies with whom we have formal treaty alliances who have expressed interest in these capabilities,” he said.

“And we have told them that we are limited in what we can do by the MTCR, but I think it’s something we need to pursue with them.”

Northrop Grumman’s Global Hawk, which provides surveillance capabilities, has drawn interest from countries including South Korea, Japan and Singapore as well as Britain, Spain and Canada, a company spokeswoman said in December.

Washington announced plans to give Pakistan surveillance drones but Islamabad also wants shoot-and-kill drones, like the Predator, which may be armed with Hellfire missiles.

(Editing by Eric Beech)

Taliban call Pak army ‘impure force’

PESHAWAR: The Taliban on Friday responded to the military’s allegations that the militants were being backed by India and Israel by distributing pamphlets that described the Pakistan Army as an “impure force” working at the behest of the CIA and FBI.

The local Taliban distributed the pamphlets at mosques after Friday prayers in Miranshah and other areas of the Waziristan tribal region, local residents said.

The pamphlets described the Pakistan Army as a “napak fouj” (impure force) that worked at the behest of the CIA and FBI.

They said the army derived its strength from the “terrorists” of private security contractor Blackwater, US drones, CIA, FBI, India’s RAW intelligence agency and Israel’s Mossad spy service.

The pamphlets also said the Pakistan Army was funded by the US, NATO and the UN.

Children standing at the main gates of mosques distributed the two-page pamphlets to people, local residents said.

On March 2, Pakistani planes had dropped pamphlets in North Waziristan that claimed India, Israel and al-Qaida were funding Taliban fighters in the region.

In a first, Nato & Pak share tactical plans

WASHINGTON: Nato commanders in Afghanistan have begun traveling to Pakistan to share plans for military operations for the first time, a senior US official has said.

The apparent aim is to make sure that militants don’t slip back and forth the unmarked, mountainous border region to escape coalition or Pakistani forces. According to the official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity, the sharing of tactical information represents a new level of cooperation for the forces battling the Taliban, al-Qaida and other militants.

“That has not happened before,” the official said. The official said Taliban leaders can no longer be certain of finding “safe haven” in Pakistan after battling coalition forces in Afghanistan. Missiles launched from US drones have reportedly killed dozens of militants in Pakistan in recent months, but American officials do not confirm the existence of the covert CIA programme.

Musharraf urges US to hand over drones to Pak

London, Sep.10 (ANI) : Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf has urged the United States to hand over the unmanned drone aircrafts to Pakistan so that it could carry out the offensive against the extremists on its own rather than relying on foreign countries.

In an interview with a private television channel, Musharraf said the war against terrorism was not only in Washington’s interest but in the interest of Islamabad also.

“I personally believe that drones should be given to Pakistan because the sensitivity is American troops or any foreign troops coming into Pakistan. It was not for United States alone … it was for Pakistan,” Musharraf said.

Musharraf also questioned the authenticity of audio and video tapes of Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden which have surfaced in the recent past, saying he believed that bin Laden is dead.

“There is even a doubt whether he is alive. Because right in the beginning he was a dialysis patient, he was a kidney patient; therefore I wonder if he is alive,” The News quoted Musharraf, as saying.

Commenting on the alliance with the US, the former general said Pakistan would continue its support to Washington’s struggle against extremism in the region, but highlighted that there is a growing discontent among the Pakistanis regarding US’ actions.

“Pakistan is united and remains an American ally, but a growing divide is emerging because Pakistanis generally don’t like the U.S,” said Musharraf.

He said Pakistan helped the US to defeat the erstwhile USSR in Afghanistan, but was left ‘high and dry’ after the war which lasted almost ten tears.

“The U.S. also turned away from Pakistan in the intervening years. There was a strategic shift in the United States where they shifted towards India, which was always with the East, and never with the West,” Musharraf added. (ANI)

Pak starts production of indigenous drone ‘Falco’

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): Pakistan has started production of indigenous unmanned aircrafts commonly known as drones from its leading aeronautical factory in Kamra in Punjab province.

The Pakistani version of drone called Falco is being produced in collaboration with an Italian company at the Kamra based Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC), the Daily Times reports.

“Falco is an advanced, tactical UAV designed by Selex Galileo Italy. It would address current and future surveillance and reconnaissance needs of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF),” a Pakistan Air Force (PAF) spokesperson said.

Islamabad has been pushing United States to provide the drone technology, if not the aircrafts, so that it could carry out operation against the Taliban and other extremist groups on its soil.

While Pakistan says the missile hits are proving counterproductive in the war on terror with more civilians being killed, America maintains that the drone strikes are proving to be very effective against the militants based in the lawless tribal regions along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

During his meeting with the visiting US Special Envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, earlier this week, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani had urged the US to provide drone technology to Pakistan.

Gilani, during the meeting, told Holbrooke that Pakistanis were concerned about the US drone attacks inside their country, and that the missile hits were proving counterproductive in the war on terror.

Gilaini said the strikes by unmanned predators are promoting ‘anti-Americanism’ in Pakistan.

“Drone attacks remain a matter of public concern in Pakistan. The US should provide drone technology to Pakistan, enabling its armed forces to take action against terrorists,” he said. (ANI)

12 killed in pre-dawn drone attack in Miranshah

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): At least twelve people were killed in a suspected US drone strike in the Danday Darpa Khel area of Miranshah early morning today (Friday).

According to sources, US drones fired several missiles targeting a house in the region killing all the 12 people on the spot besides wounding many others.

Eyewitnesses said casualties may rise as more people are feared trapped inside the rubble.

Sources said that all victims belonged to Afghanistan.

Immediately after the strike there were reports of extremists carrying out synchronized attacks in the region in retaliation of the drone hit.

Militants attacked three check-posts situated near the Miranshah air force base, The News reported.

Officials have imposed an indefinite curfew in Miranshah and adjacent areas after the incident. (ANI)

‘Drones may kill leaders but not eliminate the Taliban’

Lahore, Aug. 8 (ANI): The US missile strike that killed Baitullah Mehsud may not be sufficient to eliminate the Taliban from Pakistan’s tribal belt.

The terror outfit has intertwined the ethnic identity, religion and politics with extremism, and it will take decades to undo, the Guardian reports.

Behind the rise of Pak-Taliban chief Mehsud in Pakistan lie factors that are not going to be resolved easily.

“Firstly, there is the fusion of Pashtun tribal identity with a radical Islamic identity. The latter has only ever really thrived when grafted onto a sense of local belonging. The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) were Pashtuns from the Pakistani side of the frontier that has split their tribal lands for over a century,” the report said.

Second issue is that the Pashtun tribes of the FATA have the lowest levels of literacy, economic development and infrastructural development of anywhere in Pakistan, it observed.

They are not considered full citizens. Pushed to the margins, they are, in one sense, trying to fight their way into the centre of national political and economic life, the report added.

Finally, there is religious homogeneity: the conservative southwest Asian Deobandi strand of Sunni Islam that has established itself with its system of mosques and free schools across the region, it says.

Put all this together and it is fairly clear that drones may tackle symptoms but not causes. It is also clear why, as my colleague Declan Walsh points out elsewhere on this site, another Mehsud may well emerge soon, it concludes. (ANI)

US planning new strategy to reduce tensions with Pak over drone issue

Islamabad, July 15 (ANI): The United States is working out a new strategy to reduce tensions with Pakistan over the drone strikes.

The Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Paul Jones, told the US Congress recently, that Washington is planning to broaden its public relations initiatives in Pakistan to enable it to understand the US tactics.

Jones highlighted that ‘strategic communications’ were the most important part of US tactics in Pakistan, The Daily Times reports.

He added the US is planning to increase financial assistance to Pakistan “quite significantly” in order to help Islamabad build its own communications strategy.

“Such programmes will help people understand what the goals of the Pakistani government and the international community are, and how they are helping the country of Pakistan,” an article on the website Eurasiatnet quoted Jones, as saying.

Some US experts opine that the Pentagon is relying ‘too much’ on the drones to quell militancy from Pakistan’s tribal region, but also highlighted that a better information strategy could help deescalate the tension substantially.

“Drone strikes excite visceral opposition across a broad spectrum of Pakistani opinion. The persistence of these attacks on Pakistani territory offends people’s deepest sensibilities, alienates them from their government, and contributes to Pakistan’s instability,” Chief Executive Officer of a defense think-tank, Centre for a New American Security, Nathaniel Fick said.

“Currently, strikes from unmanned aircraft are carried out in a virtual vacuum, without concerted information campaigns or an equally robust strategy to engage the people,” Fick added. (ANI)