Walking on very thin ice
WASHINGTON - Even as Pakistan's prime minister again
publicly demanded an end to controversial US drone strikes in his country
during a meeting with US President Barack Obama Wednesday, secret documents
reveal long-time collusion with the CIA-led targeted assassination program.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's visit coincided with
fresh allegations this week by human rights groups that US drone strikes in
Pakistan's tribal regions may amount to war crimes.
On Thursday, the Washington Post said it had obtained
top-secret CIA documents and Pakistani diplomatic memos explicitly confirming
what was already apparent to many - that "top officials in Pakistan's
government have for years secretly endorsed the programme and routinely
received classified briefings on strikes and casualty counts".
"This whole business of 'they [Islamabad]
secretly or tacitly agreed to the strikes' is very, very dangerous,"
Jeremy Rabkin, a member of the board of directors at the US Institute of Peace,
an independent national security institution here, and a professor of law at
the George Mason University School of Law, told IPS.
"It doesn't mean very much to us if the Pakistani
government can't even endorse the drone programme in front of their own
people," he said.
According to Professor Rabkin, the secret deal between
the US and Pakistani governments could pose a serious threat to US interests in
the long run. "If you look at the anger of the Pakistani people, it is
clear that we've acted against their consent, and that doesn't do us any good.
I think we're on very thin ice," he said.
Two days before the Post's revelations were published,
Sharif continued to press Obama to put a definitive end to drone strikes at an
appearance at the US Institute of Peace.
"The issue has become a major irritant in our
bilateral relations," Sharif said Tuesday. "I would therefore stress
the need for an end to drone strikes."
However, the evidence suggests that this stance is
merely a political maneuver aimed at appeasing Sharif's audience back home.
"What we do know from sources such as Wikileaks
is that in the last government at least the prime minister and the president
knew about the strikes and supported them," Christine Fair, an assistant
professor at Georgetown University here and a fellow at West Point's Combating
Terrorism Center, said Wednesday.
Fair cited a statement by a high-ranking US military
official saying that "the US-Pakistan relation is improving because they
are letting us kill their terrorists."
While the Washington Post documents cover the period
from 2007 to late 2011, some say that the two countries have shared a covert
deal on drone operations ever since the first strike in 2004, which presumably
targeted Nek Muhammad Wazir, a greater enemy to Pakistan than he was to the
United States as he had twice attempted to assassinate then-President Pervez
Musharraf.
"The first drone strike in June 2004 was
basically the first time the CIA was allowed to use drones. Musharraf had
allowed the CIA to carry out these operations. That was the deal from the beginning,"
Mark Mazzetti, the national security correspondent for the New York Times said
Wednesday.
Afghanistan
Despite the public outrage over the US drone
programme, Afghanistan has been and still is the primary source of tension in
US-Pakistan relations, with a looming US withdrawal from Afghanistan set for
2014.
In a statement delivered on Tuesday at the US
Institute of Peace, Sharif said he believes that "a peaceful, stable and
united Afghanistan is in Pakistan's vital interest."
However, the relationship between the two countries
plunged into crisis in the immediate aftermath of the US raid that captured and
killed Osama Bin Laden in northeastern Pakistan in May 2011, which was
allegedly conducted without the prior consent of the Pakistani government.
The government in Islamabad soon responded by blocking
US and NATO access points in and out of Afghanistan, creating a substantial
logistical obstacle to US military movements there. The supply routes opened
again in July of 2012.
The Obama administration has also faced critiques over
a US airstrike that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers near the country's border with
Afghanistan.
Pakistan has allegedly taken steps of its own aimed at
achieving a peaceful solution to the 12-year old conflict in neighboring
Afghanistan.
Last month, the government in Islamabad agreed to
Afghan requests to release long-time leader and founding member of the Afghan
Taliban Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar. Pakistani authorities hoped to finally get
the peace process started by having the Taliban negotiate with the Afghan
government.
According to recent reports, however, Baradar may not
be free at all. No negotiations have been set so far, and there have been no
talks of setting up a location either. Some suggest that he is still being held
captive by Pakistani authorities
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