You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
India-Pakistan
US runs out of patience with Pakistan
2008-06-16
The words came from Afghan President Hamid Karzai at the weekend, threatening to send troops into Pakistani territory in hot pursuit of the Taliban, but Islamabad has no doubts Karzai was reading from a script prepared by the United States.

The message is crystal clear: Pakistan's failure to cooperate at the sub-strategic level leaves the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) with no alternative but to mobilize the newly trained Afghan National Army into Pakistan whenever it sees fit.

Karzai said his country had the right to "self defense", adding, "When they [militants] cross the territory from Pakistan to come and kill Afghans and to kill coalition troops it gives us the right to go back and do the same.

"[Pakistani Taliban leader] Baitullah Mehsud should know that we will go after him now and hit him in his house. And the other fellow, [Taliban leader] Mullah Omar of Pakistan, should know the same," said Karzai.

Karzai was reacting to a bad week for the Afghan government and NATO, which lost at least 15 troops in various incidents. Kabul was embarrassed by a carefully planned operation in the southern city of Kandahar in which suicide bombers and about 100 Taliban attacked a jail, resulting in the death of nearly 20 security forces and the escape of over 1,000 prisoners, including 380 Taliban. And in another attack on Saturday, the governor of Helmand province was injured and the police chief killed.

NATO headquarters see the spate of violence as the result of the Taliban's training in Pakistani territory and their ability to easily cross the border into Afghanistan.

The Taliban completed their launch of men last month, promising specific, target-oriented attacks such as the jail operation.

In response, NATO wanted to catch the Taliban in a pincer movement, with Pakistani forces operating from the Mohmand and Bajaur tribal agencies and NATO across the border in Kunar and Nooristan provinces. (See Pakistan's grand bargain falls apart Asia Times Online, March 6.)

Asia Times Online was the first publication to write about US strikes using Predator drones and later a detailed story was published in the New York Times citing US officials who confirmed plans to target Taliban and al-Qaeda sanctuaries in the Pakistani tribal areas, with Pakistani help.

Following US pressure, Pakistan prepared its plan, which Asia Times Online outlined on March 6:

According to Asia Times Online contacts, a military operation is imminent, starting from a base camp in Peshawar in North-West Frontier Province (NWFP). The main focus will be Mohmand and Bajaur agencies, and some other tribal areas, to pre-empt the Taliban's spring offensive in Afghanistan.

Under the initial plan, the operation would have been largely symbolic and the militants had been convinced that if they remained at the forefront and fought against Pakistani troops, their positions would be exposed to the foreign supervisors and they would sustain huge losses.

Instead, if they struck ceasefire deals and retreated from forward positions to the border regions, they would be helped with advance information about possible raids and they could take alternative measures for their survival. They were categorically told that the operation was inevitable, so it would be best for them to take rear positions and flit on both sides of the border for their survival.

The military rationale for adopting this approach was based on pragmatic grounds - that it would cause the militants to evacuate the main tribal areas for Afghanistan or the tribal fringes. This would allow secular Pashtun sub-nationalist forces to regain a hold in the area and develop an atmosphere of peace and reconciliation.

The scheme was a blueprint to get rid of the Taliban-led insurgency from Pakistan and force it back into Afghanistan, but NATO considered it a betrayal on the part of Pakistan, especially it turning a blind eye to the Taliban crossing the border with impunity.

Faced now with the very real threat of coalition raids into its territory, Pakistan might be forced to restart military operations in the tribal areas. Meanwhile, President Pervez Musharraf will have to play a significant role in reassuring Washington that Pakistan is still on board in the "war on terror" and that the Americans need to be patient. Time is not on his side, though.
Posted by:john frum

#1  "US runs out of patience with Pakistan"

I thought that was evident last Wednesday when they waxed the 11 Talipaks or Pakibans or whatever the proper term for Pak Army personnel moonlighting as Taliban is.
Posted by: Chuckles Gruck4066   2008-06-16 18:27  

00:00