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	US-Led NATO Forces in Afghanistan Extend War into 
	Pakistan  
	By Abdus Sattar Ghazali 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 8, 2010 
	   With three cross border attacks into Pakistani territory the 
	US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan have apparently extended Afghan-war into 
	Pakistan.    According to Nato, a remote Afghan military outpost in 
	the eastern province of Khost, close to Pakistan border, came under fire on 
	Saturday. "Two helicopters were engaged and acted in self-defense. They 
	crossed very briefly into Pakistani territory and neutralized the threat," 
	said Captain Ryan Donald, a spokesman for Nato. "Later in the day, two 
	helicopters received small-arms fire and, in self-defense, returned fire. In 
	doing so, they entered Pakistan very briefly." Donald said 49 militants had 
	been killed in the first incursion and four to six were killed in the second 
	attack, according to a review of the video surveillance tapes from the 
	helicopters. He said Nato was investigating reports of a third incursion, 
	which took place Sunday. There was uproar in Pakistan’s National 
	Assembly. Opposition leader, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, said that this 
	violation of Pakistani borders is against our sovereignty and the government 
	should take appropriate measures to stop such incidents in future. He said 
	the United States is only friend of its own cause and it was time to ask 
	Washington whether it was Pakistan’s friend or foe. “The United States never 
	gave a space to Pakistan being its ally in war against terror,” he said. 
	Chaudhry Nisar also recalled the humiliating manner in which Pakistani 
	military officials were offloaded at a US airport a few weeks ago.    
	At the same time, Pakistan Muslim League-N legislator, Khurram Dastgir, 
	quoting from Bob Woodward's new book, Obama's Wars, told the 
	parliamentarians that more than 3,000 CIA agents were deployed in the fight 
	against terror. According to the excerpts published by Washington Post and 
	New York Times, Woods says that the US Central Intelligence Agency is 
	running and paying for a secret 3,000-strong army of Afghan paramilitaries 
	whose main aim is assassinating Taliban and al-Qa'ida operatives not just in 
	Afghanistan but across the border in neighboring Pakistan's tribal areas. He 
	describes these forces as elite, well-trained units that conduct highly 
	sensitive covert operations into Pakistan as part of a stepped-up campaign 
	against al-Qa'ida and Afghan Taliban havens there.    Meanwhile, the 
	assembly of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where these attacks are being 
	launched, on Tuesday termed the drone attacks and ground offensive by the 
	US-led Nato forces on Pakistani soil as attack on the country’s sovereignty. 
	The assembly unanimously adopted a resolution jointly moved by all the 
	parliamentary parties. The resolution said the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly 
	condemned the frequent drone attacks in the tribal areas of Pakistan and 
	airspace violations by the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) 
	helicopters. The resolution termed it a direct blow to the integrity and 
	sovereignty of the country and asked the federal government to take concrete 
	steps in this regard.    In a strongly worded editorial, the Nation, a 
	leading newspaper of Pakistan said now the US has begun the next phase of 
	its agenda targeting Pakistan and that is the aerial gunship attacks from 
	across the Afghan border into Pakistan. “As so many had been predicting, if 
	the Pakistani state did not de-link itself from the misguided US ‘war on 
	terror’, the US would eventually shift the centre of gravity of the war from 
	Afghanistan to Pakistan and move militarily into Pakistani territory. This 
	is exactly what is now happening. Already the US has been carrying out drone 
	attacks against Pakistanis, killing thousands of innocent citizens in their 
	wake and perhaps in the process a few militants also. US covert operatives 
	and Special Forces have spread themselves all over Pakistan and these 
	revelations and warnings in the Pakistani media have been there for some 
	time.”    Another leading Pakistanis newspaper, The News, wrote: “We 
	have sent a demarche of protest to NATO headquarters in Brussels, saying 
	that we may be 'constrained' to consider response options if our sovereignty 
	is further violated. But what does it mean? Are our forces going to be 
	ordered to shoot down American helicopters? Engage American troops on 
	Pakistan soil? America, it seems, is going to fight its war wherever it 
	wants -- and damn the consequences.”   Amid uproar in Pakistan’s 
	parliament and media against the three attacks, US military chief Admiral 
	Mike Mullen called the Pakistani military leadership on Tuesday and assured 
	them that Washington respected Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial 
	integrity. The daily Dawn of Pakistan reported that the calls were made 
	after Pakistan lodged strong protests against a series of attacks by the 
	US-led International Security Assistance Force during the last three days, 
	and conveyed to the United States that if forces in Afghanistan continued to 
	violate its territorial integrity it would be forced to consider appropriate 
	response. Diplomatic sources in Washington told Dawn that Pakistan had 
	informed the Americans that while Islamabad was America’s partner in the war 
	against terror, “they are very sensitive to their sovereignty and 
	territorial integrity”. The Pakistanis insisted that the UN and Nato mandate 
	for operating inside Afghanistan ended on the Afghan border and “it does not 
	cover an inch of Pakistani territory”.   Tellingly, Admiral Musllen’s 
	assurance about respecting Pakistan’s sovereignty belies a report by the New 
	York Times that General David H Petraeus, the Commander of US and NATO 
	forces in Afghanistan, has warned the Pakistan army that America could 
	launch ground operations in the tribal areas, if Islamabad refused to 
	dismantle the militant network in North Waziristan. The New York Times 
	reported on Monday:   As evidence of the growing frustration of 
	American officials, Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in 
	Afghanistan, has recently issued veiled warnings to top Pakistani commanders 
	that the United States could launch unilateral ground operations in the 
	tribal areas should Pakistan refuse to dismantle the militant networks in 
	North Waziristan, according to American officials. “Petraeus wants to turn 
	up the heat on the safe havens,” said one senior administration official, 
	explaining the sharp increase in drone strikes. “He has pointed out to the 
	Pakistanis that they could do more.”    Special Operations commanders 
	have also been updating plans for cross-border raids, which would require 
	approval from President Obama. For now, officials said, it remains unlikely 
	that the United States would make good on such threats to send American 
	troops over the border, given the potential blowback inside Pakistan, an 
	ally. But that could change, they said, if Pakistan-based militants were 
	successful in carrying out a terrorist attack on American soil. American and 
	European intelligence officials in recent days have spoken publicly about 
	growing evidence that militants may be planning a large-scale attack in 
	Europe, and have bolstered security at a number of European airports and 
	railway stations.    The paper also said that as part of its covert 
	war in the region, the C.I.A. has launched 20 attacks with armed drone 
	aircraft thus far in September, the most ever during a single month, and 
	more than twice the number in a typical month. “This expanded air campaign 
	comes as top officials are racing to stem the rise of American casualties 
	before the Obama administration’s comprehensive review of its Afghanistan 
	strategy set for December. American and European officials are also 
	evaluating reports of possible terrorist plots in the West from militants 
	based in Pakistan.”    A US official on Wednesday was quoted by AFP as 
	confirming reports of an al Qaeda plot to attack targets in Western Europe 
	and the United States, but said it was not clear where and when the threat 
	was meant to be launched. “The threat is, at this point, credible but not 
	specific,” said the official, who asked to remain unnamed. “It's unclear, 
	for instance, precisely where something might occur. For that reason, people 
	shouldn't limit their thinking to the United Kingdom, France, or Germany,” 
	the official told AFP. “And while no one should dismiss the prospect of a 
	Mumbai-style operation, it's entirely conceivable that other modes of attack 
	are in play.”   Interestingly, Pakistan's army on Wednesday dismissed 
	as “very speculative” media reports that this month's upsurge in US drone 
	strikes on militants in the country's northwest sought to disrupt attacks on 
	European cities. Pakistani military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told 
	Reuters: “We don't have any information or intelligence that militants had 
	gathered there (in North Waziristan) and were plotting attacks. There is 
	absolutely no intelligence on that.” “Basically it's very speculative,” he 
	said of the western media report. “It's a very speculative story. It does 
	not quote any credible source.”   What these claims, counter claims, 
	assurance by Admiral Mulles and veiled threat by General David H Petraeus 
	indicate? Perhaps the three incursions into volatile Pakistani territory is 
	a dry run for an all out military operation by the US-led Nato forces inside 
	Pakistan as General Petreaus has threatened.   Abdus Sattar 
	Ghazali is the Executive Director of the online magazine American 
	Muslim Perspective: 
	www.amperspective.com email: 
	asghazali786@gmail.com   
	  
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