Pakistan Forces Clash With NATO Forces

Posted on 18. May, 2011 by in Pak-US Relations

Clash of Allies – US-Pakistani tensions on the rise; The Drop Scene Coming Close!

By Keith Jones

Two Pakistani soldiers were injured Tuesday when Pakistani ground troops were fired on by NATO helicopters that had crossed into Pakistani airspace over North Waziristan. NATO denied that its helicopters entered into Pakistan, but did concede that they fired into North Waziristan after coming under attack.

The Pakistani army said it has lodged a “strong protest” with NATO, while making clear that it stood by the troops’ action to oppose this latest violation of Pakistani sovereignty.

Yesterday’s border clash came amid the deepest crisis in US-Pakistani relations since the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. At the time, Washington threatened to bomb Pakistan “back into the Stone Age” if it did not break relations with the Taliban regime in Kabul and provide logistical support for the US invasion of Afghanistan.

The current crisis was provoked by the unilateral May 2 raid the US mounted in Abbottabad, deep inside Pakistan, to assassinate Osama bin Laden. The operation included plans to attack Pakistan’s military if it tried to oppose this violation of Pakistani sovereignty.

Last weekend, Pakistan’s parliament unanimously passed a resolution denouncing both the May 2 raid and the ongoing US campaign of Predator drone strikes inside Pakistan, warning that Pakistan would resist future encroachments on its sovereignty.

The resolution was passed the day after an 11-hour closed door session of parliament, at which Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the head of Pakistan’s main military intelligence agency, the ISI, gave a lengthy presentation on the May 2 raid and US-Pakistani relations. Pasha was flanked by the military brass, including the head of the armed forces, General Ashfaq Parvaz Kayani.

Parliamentarians who attended the closed-door session said Pasha reported he recently had had a “shouting match” with CIA boss Leon Panetta.

Pasha denied that there is, or ever has been, any formal agreement between Pakistan’s military and the US allowing the CIA to carry out Predator drone strikes in Pakistan. However, he is said to have conceded that most of the strikes are launched from a CIA-controlled Pakistani air base. Under questioning, he also said that Pakistan’s US-supplied F-16 jets could shoot down the drones.

Pasha reportedly bitterly attacked the US, with which the Pakistani elite has a six decades long military-strategic partnership, for repeatedly and invariably betraying Pakistan.

As for the illegal mission that led to the killing of Bin Laden, Pasha characterized it as a “sting operation,” aimed at discrediting and humiliating Pakistan.

He made clear that the raid had raised the risks of a military confrontation with India. He took note of the Indian military’s boasts that it can mount an Abbottabad-type raid in Pakistan. According to Dawn, Pakistan’s most influential daily, Pasha then said that “a contingency plan was in place and targets inside India had already been identified. ‘We have also carried out rehearsal for it’.”

The US has used the Bin Laden affair—the revelation that Bin Laden lived in Pakistan, including for several years in the garrison city of Abbottabad—to pressure Islamabad to escalate the counter-insurgency war it has waged in Pakistan’s Pashtun tribal areas for the past seven years. This aims to help suppress opposition to the US occupation of Afghanistan. The war has caused thousands of civilian deaths through carpet-bombing and shelling, forced hundreds of thousands from their homes, and helped further entrench the power of Pakistan’s military-security forces.

On May 12 the New York Times wrote that after “the May 2 raid that killed Bin Laden in Pakistan, American officials say they now have greater leverage to force Pakistani cooperation in hunting down Taliban and Al- Qaeda leaders, so the United States can end the war in Afghanistan.”

Senator John Kerry visited Pakistan this past Monday, bringing a series of demands from the Obama administration—backed up by threats, including of possible cuts to the $3 billion in annual civilian and military aid the US provides Pakistan. Kerry was also reportedly mandated to convey assurances that Islamabad would be included in any negotiations to include sections of Taliban into the US-backed puppet regime in Kabul, and that Washington will ensure that India’s role in Afghanistan is limited.

Kerry spoke of “profound” consequences if the US-Pakistan rift is not bridged. On his return to the US, Kerry said Pakistan’s leaders had agreed to act on some of the Obama administration’s demands, but that he could not say what this entailed. “Some of” these things, said Kerry, “are very important to us strategically, but they are not appropriate to discuss publicly.”

Kerry also made clear that the US will maintain or even escalate pressure on Islamabad. “This relationship,” he declared, “will not be measured by words or by communiqués after meetings like the ones that I engaged in. It will only be measured by actions”.

He said that Pakistan’s leaders had agreed to “concrete,” “precise,” “measurable” steps that “are in many cases joint”—i.e. involve closer cooperation between US and Pakistani forces. “We will know precisely what is happening with them in very, very short order.”

The US has long pressed Pakistan’s military to invade North Waziristan, home to the Haqqani network—a Taliban-aligned Islamist militia with longstanding ties to Pakistani security forces, and formerly to the CIA. US officials have also discussed plans to extend Predator drone strikes beyond these areas, and specifically to mount attacks around Quetta. A city of almost a million people, Quetta is reportedly home to the Taliban leadership-in-exile.

In the two weeks since the Abbottabad raid, Washington has brazenly ignored Pakistani complaints about the legality of the drone strikes. Not only have they insisted that the attacks will continue, but the CIA has increased their frequency.

Unquestionably the US has many ways to pressure Islamabad. Not least of these is the country’s desperate need for further financial support from the IMF. Although the Pakistani military criticizes the US, it knows that its position and privileges are bound up with its decades-long mercenary relationship with US imperialism.

However, the Pakistani elite also finds its geopolitical position undermined by US strategy in Asia. Under US pressure, Islamabad had to abandon the Taliban regime in Kabul, which had been a Pakistani proxy regime, thus opening the door for arch-rival India to increase its influence in Afghanistan.

More broadly, the US’s forging of a “global strategic” partnership with India, with a view to containing China, has altered the balance of power between Pakistan and India, the two main rival, nuclear-armed South Asian states. The US has fashioned a unique position within the world nuclear regulatory framework for India, giving it access to civilian nuclear technology so it can concentrate its nuclear program on weapons development. Meanwhile, Washington treats Pakistan as a nuclear pariah, also blocking the energy-starved country from building a pipeline to transport Iranian natural gas.

In response to US pressure, Pakistani officials point to continuing US dependence on Pakistan as the conduit for three-quarters of the supplies for the US-NATO war machine in Afghanistan.

Pakistani leaders are also promoting the close, longstanding ties between Islamabad and Beijing. Pakistani government officials have repeatedly called China Pakistan’s “all-weather” and “best” friend, while noting that Beijing was virtually alone in the world in criticizing the US’s raid on Abbottabad as a flagrant violation of Pakistani sovereignty.

On Tuesday, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani began a 4-day visit to China. Last week, Nawaf Sharif, the leader of the principal opposition party, also praised China: “At this crucial juncture of history, I cannot say anybody is standing with Pakistan except for China.”

Neither Washington nor Islamabad is seeking to break the reactionary partnership between US imperialism and the Pakistani military. However, as the US recklessly presses forward with its war to subjugate Afghanistan and establish a beachhead in oil-rich Central Asia, and to counter a rising China by courting India, events can easily spin out of control.

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Courtesey WSWS


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11 Responses to “Pakistan Forces Clash With NATO Forces”

  1. babur

    20. May, 2011

    Looking at the history of Pakistan its not hard to know their character. These Woman killers, Shia beaters and Ahmadiya hatters have no substance but talks only. Pakistan is the keep of Americans who can screw them as and when they want no excuse. China is a boy friend who is learning to take them to bed conveniently.
    Shameless people redicule their masters (USA., UK) to deceive poor Pakistanis fearing to avert their wrath. When will they need Allah if not now? Think…

    Reply to this comment
  2. RabbitNexus

    20. May, 2011

    Up yours babur you arrogant twat. You're a big mouth and a small brain behind a keyboard.

    Reply to this comment
  3. Claudius Stahlkopf

    21. May, 2011

     The best carte to play for Pakistan ,   is to ask the Chinese officialy to protect them against the US , and make trouble in the moslem country's against the US  by giving them material to make a dirty bomb as an exemple !!!

    Reply to this comment
  4. Claudius Stahlkopf

    21. May, 2011

    When you have an ennemy like the US a country without scrupulus , you have to get them with their own medecine  , every country have his hell of Achillus .
    Pakistan must hurry up to fight back against the US ,  because the US now have big worried with the midle East outcome  , and will be hesitant to have an other serious problem in their hands

    Reply to this comment
  5. babur

    21. May, 2011

    The question is why should China help Pakistan? Wish full thinking, Inshaallah nothing will happen before you deserve it.
    America did help Pakistan with Dollars and weapons for what avail, to help America to molest Pakistan and rape it.
    Pakistan did sucour to China passing on its soverinity on highest peaks and through to Baloshistan to touch badly needed water.
    Who help whom is not the matter of what you think or demand and Allah has no control on human politics. Politics makes strange bed fellows folks if you dance with two guys at one time it's difficult game to play. Ameen!!!!!!!!

    Reply to this comment
  6. António

    21. May, 2011

    The U.S. dollar is dead. The vampires who really rule the USA, from Israel, has used the U.S. dollars to feed their business that is war. If the others go the way of open war, only make them more comfortable. As simple as that. 

    Reply to this comment
  7. George

    21. May, 2011

    Babur sounds like an Israeli organ stealer pedaphile murderer.

    Reply to this comment
  8. babur

    21. May, 2011

    "Grasp wisdom from any direction it comes from" – Lord Buddha
    I'm a QAFIR I don't believe in MOHAMMAD (pbuh) but believe in Allah.
    I don't hurt anyone including cattles - "hate evil not the evil doers". 
    I have nothing to teach the misled humans "Truth and non-violence are as old as the hills." One day we will rise above these sectarian concepts vile poison formented by fake Gods and their messangers. Ameen!!!!!!!

    Reply to this comment
  9. Archie1954

    22. May, 2011

    Pakistan is just a means to an end for the US empire. Until the Pakistani people can stand on their own two feet without US money and armaments it will be a slave to American demands. Right now it is close to a failed state but one with nuclear weapons. The best thing that could happen would be for the US to find some brains and get the heck out of Dodge!

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  10. [...] Pakistan Forces Clash With NATO Forces [...]

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  11. Moha

    27. Nov, 2011

    India is a backward country, they still have castes for god sake, China on the other hand is the future and was always a faithful trade partner and ally of the muslim world, why is pakistan bowing to the US when it is a nuclear nation is a mystery for me, lack of backbone maybe or maybe too many sell out at the highest ranks

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