Pakistan Wants US to Stop Drone
Attacks If Logistics to Afghanistan to Resume
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Pakistan to US: It's drones or transit
Russia Today TV, 27 April, 2012, 16:28
Islamabad’s clear ultimatum to fully stop drone strikes in
Pakistan has found no understanding in Washington which refuses to
change its air warfare tactics. Consequently, logistic routes to
Afghanistan remain closed to the US.
The United States Special Representative for Afghanistan and
Pakistan Marc Grossman meeting with Pakistani officials in Islamabad has
abstained from giving any promises the US will quit drone strikes. It’s
his first visit to the country since the air strike last November which
badly damaged US-Pakistani relations.
Ahead of the talks in Islamabad on Thursday Pakistani Foreign
Minister Hina Rabbani Khar sent a clear message that ending drone
strikes is condition of fruitful co-operation. The US never listened to
similar demands before, she said, adding “I hope their listening will
improve”.
However, the Ambassador tersely brushed aside a
question on the cessation of future drone strikes by saying that the US
and Pakistan have jointly made efforts on counter-terrorism against
al-Qaeda and other militant groups, and in this regard Pakistan and the
US have to continue to work together.
At a news conference after the
talks in Islamabad Pakistani Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani showed
that Pakistan is not going to make concessions: "We consider drones as
illegal, non-productive and accordingly unacceptable."
Parliamentary guidelines issued by the Parliamentary Committee on
National Security (PCNS) in April have called for an apology from the US
for last November’s NATO air strike, as well as a stop to future drone
strikes. The parliamentary review of US-Pakistani relations was launched
after a friendly fire incident when an American assault helicopter fired
on a Pakistani outpost on the Afghan border which killed 24 Pakistani
soldiers.
Despite US apologies the question of drone strikes in Pakistan
remains a stumbling bloc in bilateral relations.
The US Special Envoy Marc Grossman said after the meeting that
“Washington respects the Pakistani parliamentary review”.
“Parliament has spoken and we respect that. It is not for us to
pick and choose. It is for Pakistan to decide how to factor in these
parliamentary recommendations,” he concluded.
The US does not intend to abandon a program it considers
successful, believes Robert Farley, an Assistant Professor at the
University of Kentucky. “The US military believes that this (drones) is
the easiest and the most efficient way to kill militants,” he told RT.
Last week a commander of the corps in Pakistan’s northwest
proposed an alternative to drones’ strikes. The US could share
intelligence with Islamabad so the ally’s F-16 fighter jets could target
militants on Pakistan’s soil, reported Reuters.
Pakistan routes
vital for Afghanistan campaign
Having refused to discuss drone operations the US nevertheless
hope to achieve some progress in talks on re-starting supplies to
Afghanistan via Pakistan.
“We want to work to reopen the ground lines of communication,”
Grossman outlined. “No one came here expecting that we would solve all
these problems. The goal was to set a basic philosophy and the teams
will try to work on it," he added.
Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani replied that this issue had
been discussed and that Pakistan was preparing for further exploratory
meetings on the subject. “[The] arrangement that exists will not be
valid and we have to work out a new arrangement. The process will begin
as and when the Cabinet decides," he maintained.
After the incident in November Islamabad refused to allow NATO
forces to ship crucial food and military hardware to neighboring
Afghanistan through Pakistani territory.
The NATO/ISAF convoys going through Pakistan were the principal
logistical supply route for coalition forces in Afghanistan, as the
shortest and most economical. It has been used for a decade since the
beginning of the military campaign in Afghanistan.
Up to 75% of ammunition, vehicles, foodstuff and around 50% of
fuel needed by the coalition forces fighting the Taliban were
transported using the Pakistan route.
Washington conducted talks with former Soviet republics in
Central Asia trying to re-route supplies using an air bridge. But air
logistics appeared more expensive, while delivering fuel for thousands
of vehicles by air is really an irresolvable task. Washington addressed
Moscow which agreed to help with transit, but refused to pass any
weapons and ammunition. Thus Pakistan remains the preferred route for
the supplies.
If Pakistan refuses to re-open its borders to NATO convoys, it
will make coalition operations in Afghanistan “considerably more
difficult”, said Robert Farley, an Assistant Professor at the University
of Kentucky.
He stressed that supplying any sort of high intensity operations
in Afghanistan via alternative routes would be much less economical.
“I have friends in the military who have argued that the support
through Pakistan is really critical to continuing operations in
Afghanistan at any degree of efficiency,” Farley revealed to RT.
Pakistani president calls for building mutual trust with U.S.
ISLAMABAD, April 27, 2012 (Xinhua) --
The Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari Friday told a top visiting
U.S. diplomat that building the mutual trust between the two countries
is the key to the bilateral re-joining the counter-terrorism
cooperation.
"Pakistan and the United States share many important areas where
there was convergence of mutual interests. The most notable among those
were the goals of stability and peace in Afghanistan and the complete
defeat of Al-Qaeda," President Zardari said in the meeting with
Ambassador Marc Grossman, U.S. Special Envoy to Afghanistan and
Pakistan.
Grossman was in Islamabad for bilateral talks and to represent
the United States in the trilateral forum, which also groups Pakistan
and Afghanistan.
President Zardari reiterated Pakistan's opposition to the United
States drone strikes in the country's tribal region and said Islamabad
has always maintained that drone attacks were highly counter productive
in the war against militants as it inflamed public sentiments due to
innocent civilian casualties, said the Presidential Spokesman Senator
Farhatullah Babar.
The president said that both the sides should consider setting up
a framework of mechanism to find a mutually acceptable alternative to
the U.S. drone strikes, the spokesman said.
He said that Pakistan wanted to re-engage with the United States
at all levels in the light of the parliamentary review. He said that
Pakistan was committed to providing assistance to the international
presence in Afghanistan. However, the international community should
share the financial and economic cost of services and goods involved in
the process.
The spokesperson emphasized upon the need for evolving a
mechanism for counter-terrorism cooperation between the two countries
during the meeting with the president.
The president also emphasized upon early resolution of the issue
of reimbursement of Coalition Support Fund (CSF) arrears. He said that
CSF reimbursements were a sticking point in the relationship which
needed to be addressed urgently.
Ambassador Grossman thanked the President for meeting and said
that the United States respected the Parliamentary process of overview
of relationship. He said that the United States wanted to work with
Pakistan and expressed the hope that the bilateral relations would be
back to normal soon.
Editor: Mu Xuequan