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Bush administration threatens military intervention in Pakistan
By Peter Symonds
21 July 2007
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The Bush administration this week signalled a tough new stance
on Pakistan, demanding that military strongman General Pervez
Musharraf takes action against Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters in
areas bordering Afghanistan, and threatening US strikes if he
failed to do so.
White House spokesman Tony Snow told the US media on Thursday
that Musharraf was going to have to be more aggressive,
in dealing with security problems in the border regions. Asked
if US military forces would be sent into Pakistan, Snow declared:
We never rule out any options, including striking actionable
targets.
Bushs Homeland Security Adviser Frances Townsend delivered
essentially the same message during a media conference on Tuesday
on the latest National Intelligence Estimate, which claimed that
Al Qaeda had regenerated in safehavens in Pakistans
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). She diplomatically
declared that Musharraf was a key ally in war on terrorism
and hailed his speech against extremism following
the Pakistan militarys bloody seizure of the Lal Masjid,
or Red Mosque, in Islamabad last week.
Nevertheless, Townsend stressed that US military strikes inside
Pakistan would not depend on Musharrafs permission. While
refusing to be drawn on details, she declared: Theres
no question, the presidents made perfectly clear, if we
had actionable targets anywhere in the world, putting aside whether
it was Pakistan or any place else, we would pursue the targets.
Townsend said the Bush administration had been pressuring the
Musharraf regime for months to take military action against Al
Qaeda and other Islamist groups. It is no secret there have
been a series of very senior-level US government officials to
engage with President Musharraf and address this very issue, beginning
with the vice president [Dick Cheney in February]. And obviously
there are conversations between the president and President Musharraf.
[Defence] Secretary Gates has been out, Deputy Secretary [of State]
Negroponte and a raft of senior intelligence officials,
she said.
The comments produced a sharp rebuff from the Pakistani Foreign
Office, which issued a statement on Friday declaring threats of
unilateral US attacks on targets inside Pakistan as irresponsible
and dangerous. The statement said Pakistan was committed
to combatting extremism and terrorism and emphasised:
We have repeatedly made our position clear that whatever
counter-terrorism action is to be taken inside Pakistan, it will
be taken by our own security forces.
Such statements, however, are largely political posturing aimed
at deflecting growing anti-US sentiment. As in September 2001,
when the Bush administration threatened to bomb Pakistan back
to the Stone Age if it did not end support for the Taliban regime
in Afghanistan, Musharraf is being confronted with an US ultimatum
to take action in the border areas or face the consequences.
Constant American pressure was undoubtedly a major factor in
Musharrafs determination not to compromise with Islamic
militants and to storm the Lal Mashid last week. More than 100
people, including 11 soldiers, died in the course of the siege
that began in early July. The brutal military operation provoked
protests in North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and other areas
of Pakistan, and prompted tribal leaders in the border area of
North Waziristan to end last Septembers agreement with the
Musharraf regime to halt clashes with security forces.
Over the past week, suicide bombings and attacks on Pakistani
military and police have claimed more than 130 lives. At least
48 people were killed on Thursday in three separate attacks across
the countrytwo on army and police camps in the northwest
and the third on a convoy of Chinese mining company workers in
the southwestern province of Baluchistan. Another four people
died yesterday after a suicide car bomber hit a security checkpoint
on the outskirts of Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan.
Fighting between Pakistani security forces and Al Qaeda and
Taliban fighters is set to intensify after Musharraf ordered the
military to bolster its presence in tribal areas near the border
with Afghanistan. A full army division was dispatched to the Swat
district of North West Frontier Province, which was declared last
week to be a highly sensitive zone. Parts of the district
have been placed under military curfew. Extra troops have been
reportedly sent to North and South Waziristan.
A delegation of tribal elders was meeting with pro-Taliban
groups in North Waziristan yesterday, to try to resurrect the
truce agreement, but any positive outcome is unlikely. Under last
Septembers deal, the Pakistani military agreed to pull out
of the area in return for guarantees that tribal leaders would
prevent the cross-border movement of anti-US insurgents. The Bush
administration scarcely concealed its bitter opposition to the
agreement, which it claims has allowed Al Qaeda and the Taliban
to consolidate a safehaven. In her press briefing this week, Townsend
declared: It hasnt worked for Pakistan. It hasnt
worked for the United States.
Destabilising Musharraf
US demands for military action and threats of intervention
can only further destabilise the already beleaguered Musharraf
regime. The bloody end to the Lal Mashid siege provoked widespread
revulsion and further alienated Islamic fundamentalist parties
on which Musharraf has previously relied at both the national
level and the provincial level in the North West Frontier Province
and Baluchistan. Renewed military operations in the tribal border
areas will generate greater opposition and resistance.
At the same time, Musharrafs efforts to forge closer
political relations with secular parties has been plagued by sustained
protests against his attempts to dismiss Chief Justice Iftikhar
Muhammad Chaudhry. The Supreme Court yesterday delivered a blow
to Musharraf by throwing out corruption charges against Chaudhry
and reinstating the suspended judge. The decision will only complicate
Musharrafs plans to be reelected as president, while retaining
his post as army chiefan arrangement that Chaudhry may declare
unconstitutional.
At a meeting with newspaper editors on Wednesday, Musharraf
downplayed fears that he would use the eruption of Islamist violence
as the pretext to declare a state of emergency and postpone elections.
He nevertheless made clear that he intended to remain as military
head. Musharrafs determination to do so reflects his very
narrow base of support and his fear that the army could turn against
him if he relinquished direct control.
One of the reasons why Musharraf struck a deal with pro-Taliban
tribes in North Waziristan last September was that signs of rebellion
were already beginning to emerge in the officer corps. Significant
layers of the military are ethnic Pashtuns who have strong ties
with tribal groups in the border areas and inside Afghanistan
itself. Some 600 Pakistani troops had died in the fighting.
Any unilateral US intervention in Pakistan would evoke broad
public opposition and exacerbate tensions inside the countrys
security forces. In comments reported by McClatchy Newspapers,
retired Lieutenant General Hamid Gul warned: People in that
area are really angry and annoyed with what happened [at the Lal
Mashid]... If our military moves in there it will have to fight
its way through and that will be very badyou cannot do reconstruction
in that sort of environment and you will lose the battle for hearts
and minds.
Whatever the political consequences, however, Musharraf has
little choice but to accede to US demands for a crackdown on Islamic
militants and anti-US insurgents. A senior US official involved
in the White House discussion told the New York Times on
Wednesday: Weve seen in the past that hes sent
people in and they get wiped out. You can tell from the language
today that we take the threat from the tribal areas incredibly
seriously. It has to be dealt with. If he can deal with it, amen.
But if he cant, hes got to build and borrow the capability.
The Bush administration is currently providing support to Pakistan
to bring the border tribes under control. Washington has pledged
$750 million in economic development aid over five years to win
hearts and mindsa drop in the bucket compared to the
huge social problems in these impoverished and economically backward
areas. The US is considering a $350 million request from Islamabad
to help train, equip and deploy Pakistani military forces, including
to establish a new Frontier Corps to police the tribal
regions.
Washington has already carried the war on terror
into Pakistan. US intelligence and police officials have collaborated
closely with Pakistani authorities since 2001 to hunt down key
members of the Al Qaeda and Taliban leadership. Several incidents
over the past five years indicate that the US military is engaged
in covert operations inside Pakistan using predator drones and
possibly special forces troops. Last October, local villagers
in the Bajaur agency accused the US military of being directly
involved in a devastating missile attack on a mosque that left
more than 80 students and teachers dead.
The hardening of Washingtons public stance this week
is a warning that more extensive US operations are being prepared.
An article published on the Asia Times website on July
3 entitled US to hunt Taliban inside Pakistan revealed
that discussions in Washington and with Islamabad have been underway
for sometime. According to its sources, at least four areas in
North and South Waziristan are being targetted. Operations
inside Pakistan might be carried out independently by the United
States, probably with air power, by Pakistani forces acting alone
or as joint offensives. In all cases, though, the US will pull
the strings, for instance, by providing the Pakistanis with information
on targets to hit.
The New York Times on Wednesday also confirmed that
the White House is planning to escalate military operations inside
Pakistan. In weighing how to deal with the Qaeda threat
in Pakistan, American officials have been meeting in recent weeks
to discuss what some said was emerging as an aggressive new strategy,
one that would include both public and covert elements. They said
there was growing concern that pinprick attacks on Qaeda targets
were not enough, but also said some new American measures might
have to remain secret to avoid embarrassing General Musharraf,
the article stated.
In the event of a US attack inside Pakistan, few people will
be fooled by Musharrafs denials of any involvement. Hoping
to stem its own deep political crisis at home, the Bush administration
is recklessly destabilising another country in a move that is
certain to further fuel anti-American sentiment and reverberate
throughout the broader region.
See Also:
In a stunning rebuke to Musharraf, Supreme
Court orders chief justice reinstated
[21 July 2007]
Musharraf lauds Lal Masjid massacre
[13 July 2007]
Democrats halt Senate debate on Iraq
war
[20 July 2007]
Bush administration releases report on
terror threat: A new pretext for American militarism and domestic
repression
[19 July 2007]
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