President Bush authorises US ground operations inside Pakistan
By Peter Symonds
12 September 2008

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In a reckless and criminal attempt to suppress the growing insurgency
in Afghanistan, President Bush has secretly authorised the use of US
Special Forces against targets inside the border areas of Pakistan.
The first publicly acknowledged operation took place on September 3
when helicopter-borne soldiers landed at a village in South
Waziristan, attacked three compounds and slaughtered at least 20
people.

The assault provoked widespread outrage throughout Pakistan. According
to yesterday’s New York Times, more than 20 Navy Seals transported in
helicopters and backed by an AC-130 gunship claimed to have killed
“about two dozen Al Qaeda fighters”. Pakistani officials, however,
have produced a detailed list of the victims, which included at least
six women and two children. All of the dead were local villagers; none
were foreigners or “Al Qaeda fighters”.

The raid, which was followed by three separate US missile strikes in
North Waziristan over the past week, marked a definite shift in White
House policy. American officials confirmed in yesterday’s New York
Times that President Bush signed a secret order in July to allow US
Special Forces to carry out ground assaults in Pakistan without prior
approval from the Pakistani government.

An unnamed senior US official told the newspaper: “The situation in
the tribal areas is not tolerable. We have to be more assertive.
Orders have been issued.” The presidential decision is the culmination
of a lengthy debate at the top levels of the Bush administration,
during which bitter criticisms were made of the Pakistani government
and military for failing to crack down on militant groups in its
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

The New York Times cautiously noted: “It is unclear precisely what
legal authorities the United States has invoked to conduct even
limited ground operations in a friendly country.” In fact, military
attacks on the territory of any nation—allied or not—constitute an act
of war. While a US official claimed that Islamabad had “privately
assented to the general concept of limited ground operations,” the
Pakistani government has publicly opposed any intrusion by US troops
and issued a formal protest over the September 3 operation.

The White House has refused to comment on the New York Times article.
However, in a speech at the National Defence University on Tuesday,
President Bush signalled the underlying shift in the US stance,
declaring that parts of Pakistan, along with Iraq and Afghanistan,
were “all theatres in the same overall struggle”. He also announced a
further build up of US troops in Afghanistan.

Both the BBC and the Associated Press have corroborated the New York
Times story in separate interviews with current and past American
officials. A former intelligence official told the Associated Press
that the Bush administration had also authorised conventional US
ground troops to pursue insurgents across the border into Pakistan.

Another US official justified Bush’s secret order by claiming that
Pakistan’s military intelligence agency—the Inter Services
Intelligence (ISI)—had previously compromised US operations and may
have assisted insurgent attacks inside Afghanistan. “This [the new
order] is a reaction to that and it was sped up by the revelations
about the penetration of the Pakistani intelligence services. It was
decided that we had no choice but to free up the hands of our
commanders,” the official told the Associated Press.

Whatever the actions of sections of the ISI, the basic cause of the
rising insurgency inside Afghanistan is the brutal character of the US-
led neo-colonial occupation of the country. Nearly seven years of air
strikes and raids that have resulted in the death or detention of
thousands of civilians have provoked fierce opposition, particularly
among the Pashtun tribes that straddle the border between Afghanistan
and Pakistan. Having laid waste to much of the south and east of
Afghanistan, the Bush administration is launching a dangerous new war
in neighbouring Pakistan.

The US wars in Afghanistan have already had a deeply destabilising
impact on Pakistan. Under pressure from Washington, the Pakistani
military has dispatched some 120,000 troops to the border areas, where
intense fighting has left many dead on both sides and forced up to
300,000 people to flee. Local tribes are both fearful and resentful at
the growing number of US missile strikes in the FATA by CIA-controlled
Predator drones, which have indiscriminately killed civilians
including women and children.

Pakistani anger

The authorisation of unilateral US ground attacks inside Pakistan is
profoundly embarrassing for the government and the military. Referring
to last week’s US raid, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, head of the
Pakistani military, declared on Wednesday that “such like reckless
actions only help the militants and further fuel the militancy in the
area”. He flatly denied that there was any “agreement or understanding
with the coalition forces whereby they are allowed to conduct
operations on our side of the border”.

In a chilling warning of potential Pakistani-US clashes, General
Kayani declared: “The sovereignty and territorial integrity of the
country will be defended at all cost.” The fact that Kayani, who
previously has been regarded as sympathetic to Washington, made such a
threat is an indication of deep ruptures within the Pakistani
military. The army’s operations in the FATA have already provoked
opposition in the officer caste, many of whom are ethnic Pashtuns
sympathetic to the local tribes.

More broadly, there are deep concerns in the army hierarchy that
Pakistan’s backing for the US occupation of Afghanistan and more
broadly the bogus “war on terrorism” has weakened the country’s
strategic position vis-à-vis India, its main regional rival. Following
the September 11 attacks, Washington pressured former Pakistani
strongman Pervez Musharraf to withdraw support from what was regarded
as an important ally—the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Now Pakistan
confronts a situation in Afghanistan where India has established close
links with the US-backed puppet president Hamid Karzai. At the same
time, the US has forged a closer strategic relationship with New
Delhi, even as it has continued to berate Islamabad for failing to do
enough in the “war on terror”.

As far as the Pakistani military is concerned, US Special Forces
operations inside Pakistani territory set a dangerous precedent for
other powers, especially India, to do the same. The political
establishment in New Delhi routinely brands separatist militias in
Indian-controlled Kashmir as “terrorists”. The most chauvinistic
elements have in the past called for Indian military action against
“terrorist training camps” in Pakistani-held Kashmir. Amid rising
unrest in Kashmir, there are undoubtedly fears in Islamabad that India
may take advantage of the political turmoil in Pakistan and the
virtual civil war along the border with Afghanistan.

Some commentators have speculated that Kayani’s unusually blunt
comments were simply a shot across the bows of Pakistani President
Asif Ali Zardari, who was formally installed in office the previous
day. Zardari has repeatedly expressed his support for Washington’s
“war on terror” and invited Afghan President Karzai to the swearing-in
ceremony on Tuesday. At the same time, however, Zardari is acutely
aware that most Pakistanis are opposed to the US occupation of
Afghanistan and to US incursions. Following Kayani’s statement, Prime
Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani vowed yesterday to defend the
country’s borders, adding: “I have the same opinion as that of the
army chief on US measures and there is no disparity between our
viewpoints.”

Whatever Kayani’s immediate motives, his statement reflects the depth
of both anti-US sentiment among Pakistani population and the crisis in
the military and political establishment. Pakistan remains heavily
reliant on American financial and military aid, but the price has been
deepening political turmoil, a weakened strategic position and an
escalating war throughout the FATA region. By authorising the use of
US troops inside Pakistan, the Bush administration is inflaming an
already explosive situation. Having created two quagmires in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the US is well on the way to producing a third.
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