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Pakistan’s drone dilemma

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Pakistan’s drone dilemma
By Tayyab Siddiqui
Sunday, 18 Jul, 2010
Strategic dialogue at the ministerial level between Islamabad and Washington, initiated during President Bush’s visit to Islamabad in 2006, has been revived with vigour. The last session was held in Washington in March and the next is due in July in Islamabad.

The dialogue is aimed at providing a wider and durable base and inter alia has focused on priority areas like the economy, energy, education, science and technology and agriculture.

The optimism associated with this process, however, has fallen short of the efforts. Official circles in Pakistan are wary of the assurances and commitments of the US administration. Several rounds of discussions in the two capitals over the last four years have failed to accomplish or craft the vision of a broad-based long-term and enduring partnership.

The reasons include not only time and resource constraints but also lack of mutual understanding and divergent interests. India is yet another factor that has frayed the mutual relationship. The US’s obvious tilt towards India in preference over Pakistan’s interest has denied strong public support, the bedrock for any sustainable and durable relationship.

Lack of meaningful action on the proposals and promises made for economic measures, such as establishment of Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (ROZ), Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) and Free Trade Area Agreement (FTA), have frustrated Pakistan.

Similarly, bracketing Pakistan with Afghanistan has hurt the sensitivities of public opinion, entirely unhelpful for developing a strong foundation of a mutually supportive relationship. Long-lasting friendships can last only if the emotional and psychological make-up of the nation is reckoned with and policies designed in conformity with its ethos, culture and history.

The great sacrifices made by Pakistan and enormous suffering that the nation has endured over the last eight years of the war against terror have remained unappreciated and non-recompensed. To add insult to injury, the CIA based in Afghanistan has been conducting drone attacks in violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty and in total disregard of the government’s protests.

US media reports have, however, repeatedly alleged that the drone attacks have tacit understanding and approval of military authorities in Pakistan. Pakistan’s ambassador to the US indirectly confirmed this, in a press briefing on July 2: “Pakistan has never said that we do not like the elimination of terrorists through predator drones.” This duplicity primarily stems from the public reaction to Islamabad’s acquiescence to the drone attacks.

The drone attacks have been disproportionate to their objectives, causing avoidable loss of human life and resources. The drone strikes are counter to any move to bring the two partners together. They have remained a sad reminder of US’s lack of concern by a friend also claiming to be a strategic partner.

The US’s refusal to stop these attacks or to provide drone technology to Pakistan to meet its security interests and also to carry out attacks with moderation and where absolutely unavoidable, do not meet the spirit of President Obama’s assurance that “America will remain a strong supporter of Pakistan’s security and prosperity, long after the guns have fallen silent.”

The US must recognise that no matter what the volume of economic assistance given to Pakistan, it will never inspire any feelings of friendliness and partnership until the recurring drone attacks are stopped in accordance with the national milieu.

Drone attacks are reprehensible not only in their violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty but also for the civilian deaths they cause and which are becoming increasingly frequent. So far, 144 drone strikes have been carried out in the tribal areas with 1,366 civilian casualties, according to the US National Counterterrorism Center.

These attacks are causing deep hatred of the US and their military value is also questionable. In May 2009, in a testimony to US Congress, US Advisor to Gen. David Kilmulllen, asked the Obama Administration to call off the drone attacks stating, “We have been able to kill only 14 senior Al Qaeda leaders since 2006 and in the same period, killed over 700 Pakistani civilians.” The unkindest cut of all was delivered by President Obama who dismissed Pakistan’s protests against drone attacks: “We cannot tolerate a safe haven for terrorists whose location is known and whose intentions are clear.”

These attacks have proved counterproductive, both in military and emotional terms. A US think tank has assessed the impact stating, “Predator strikes have inflamed anti-American rage among Afghans and Pakistanis, including first and second generation immigrants in the West as well as elite members of the security services.”

Drone attacks are now broadening the area of concerns. Philip Alston, the UN Human Rights Council’s investigator, in a report to the UNGA has warned that “drone strikes employed to attack target executions may violate international law.

The onus is really on the government of the US to reveal more about the ways in which it makes sure that arbitrary executions and extrajudicial executions are not in fact being carried out through the use of these weapons.”

The legal and juridical aspects of the drone strikes are not only becoming a subject of scrutiny and denunciation internationally, but domestically too the debate is extending to legal forums.

Tehrik-i-Insaaf chairman Imran Khan has moved the Supreme Court to declare the predator drone attacks a war crime and violation of sovereignty of Pakistan. The Lahore High Court, in another case, has asked the government to adopt measures to stop them.

Public resentment against these attacks, it is argued, is being exploited by rightist elements to maintain that the US does not wish to see any strong Muslim state and that the US and its strategic partner India are bent on destabilising Pakistan.

Whatever the impact of such feelings, there is no doubt that drone attacks have become a rallying cry for militants feeding the flow of volunteers as is evident from the terror strikes and suicide attacks in Pakistani cities.

Pakistan must raise the issue of drone attacks in the forthcoming round of the strategic dialogue and firmly state that Pakistan’s role in the war against terror would be in proportion to US compliance with Pakistan’s security interests. The drone issue will determine the future of relations with the US. The sooner the two sides comprehend, better for them.

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/04-drone-dilemma-qs-03
 
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Drone attacks are probably the most insultive move ever by allied powers against Pakistan. We happily played into the laps of oil rich sheikh and now bearing the grunt. Where is King Abdullah and his mujahideen "taliban" ???
 
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Pity seeing the figures are so easily available no one at dawn bothered to correct the glaring errors in this article before they published it.

1393 is not the number of civilians killed but the total killed 2004-2010 in a total of 114 strikes.

Drone attacks in Pakistan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Since 2006, there have been 1,285 leaders and operatives from Taliban, al Qaeda, and allied extremist groups killed and 97 civilians killed. Data for 2004 and 2005 are not available at this time.
The Long War Journal - Charts on US Strikes in Pakistan

Yes 97 civilians are too many but we need to debate based on facts.
 
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sure we can stop them . drone are not a big threat but our own government are not letting it stop.
 
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Those who sanction the use of alien force from outside on their people and land, probably do not deserve a country and are in danger of losing it with such deep rooted and carefully orchestrated feelings about this war on terror. Killing everyone who poses a security risk in these tribal areas, from what I have read anyways, will be an unending and useless game. Just about anyone with fuzz on their tennis balls carries an AK-47. Are these tribal traditionalists all terrorists just because the current geo-political climate tells us to label them as such?
 
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this is bad . pakistan govt should do something about it. and to all the victims ,Rahmat Allah Alayk.
 
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These drone attacks are blowing our soverginity and pride like a sucide bomber!
 
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Mapping US drone and Taliban attacks in Pakistan

* BBC Urdu report shows 2,500 people have been killed in US drone and terrorist attacks since January 2009
* Drone attacks have tripled under Obama administration


Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: According to a research carried out by the BBC Urdu service, nearly 2,500 people have been killed as a result of US drones and Taliban attacks since January 2009.

The research shows how Taliban strongholds in the border area close to Afghanistan have been targeted by US drone aircraft, while, at the same time, Taliban have carried out attacks across Pakistan.

Missile attacks by US drones in the Tribal Areas have more than tripled under the Obama administration, research by the BBC Urdu service shows.

Compared with 25 drone strikes between January 2008 and January 2009, there were at least 87 such attacks between President Barack Obama taking office on January 20, 2009 and the end of June 2010.

More than 700 people have been killed in such attacks under Obama, compared with slightly fewer than 200 from under his predecessor, George W Bush.

The Taliban backlash over the same period has been even more violent. Terrorists have struck more than 140 times in various locations, killing more than 1,700 people and injuring hundreds more, the BBC research shows.

While attacks by the Taliban cannot be described as direct retaliation for drone strikes, they are firmly a part of the battle the US and Pakistani authorities are fighting against terrorist bases in Pakistan.

Over the same 18-month period, many more than 2,500 people have died in offensives by the Pakistani Army and fighting between troops and the Taliban. Exact figures are impossible to obtain.

Places such as Swat and South Waziristan, which have seen offensives by the military, are virtually closed to independent media and other groups.

The increased frequency of drone strikes follows a reported shift in the US policy to extend its drone operations. It has moved from targeting al Qaeda suspects to including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, who are believed to be providing a haven for al Qaeda leaders and operatives.

The bulk of these attacks have been in North Waziristan, with the neighbouring South Waziristan the next main target.

Areas hit by drone attacks

Area No of deaths

S Waziristan 279

N Waziristan 386

Bajaur 14

Bannu 5

Orakzai 8

Kurram 54

Areas worst hit by terrorists

Peshawar 362

Lahore 253

Khyber 120

Rawalpindi 98

Lakki Marwat 93

Kohat 91

Dera Ismail Khan 77

Lower Dir 75

Karachi 69

Dera Ghazi Khan 50
 
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