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11 January 2012 |
| http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204624204577183234216799116.html |
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REPORTING
FROM ISLAMABAD,
PAKISTAN -- A
U.S.
drone missile
strike killed four suspected militants
in northwest
Pakistan on Wednesday, ending
a six-week hiatus
in such attacks, imposed by Washington
following
American airstrikes
late last year that killed 24
Pakistani soldiers and severely marred relations between the two
nations.
Pakistani intelligence sources said four suspected militants, all of them non-Pakistanis, were killed in the strike. "The bodies were completely burned beyond recognition," said a local tribesman who spoke on the condition of anonymity. It remained unclear how Pakistan would react, or whether Islamabad tacitly approved the strike. Many Pakistanis denounce the U.S. drone missile campaign as a blatant violation of their country’s sovereignty and contend that the strikes kill many more civilians than militants.
The
Pakistani government has a history of publicly condemning
the
drone campaign while quietly acquiescing
to its continuation.
However, the
U.S. air
strikes that mistakenly killed two dozen
Pakistani soldiers along the Afghan border Nov. 26
incensed the
Pakistani military and government, which viewed the attack as
deliberate and unprovoked.
In retaliation for the airstrikes, Islamabad shut down the use of Pakistan as a transit country for NATO shipments bound for Western forces in Afghanistan. The U.S. was forced to vacate an air base in southern Pakistan that the CIA had used to launch drone flights into Pakistan's volatile tribal areas, though Washington still can carry out drone flights from bases in Afghanistan. Pakistan also threatened to set up air defense systems at the Afghan border that could shoot down U.S. military aircraft crossing into Pakistani territory, and has demanded a new set of ground rules governing cooperation between the two countries. A parliamentary committee on national security is crafting recommendations for those rules, and one of them is a cessation in drone strikes on Pakistani territory, according to a senior Pakistani official familiar with the committee's deliberations. He spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment on the matter. Since
the Nov. 26
incident,
drone
strikes
in
Pakistan have stopped. Current and former
U.S. officials recently told The Times that the CIA had suspended
drone missile
strikes on gatherings
of low-ranking
militants suspected
in attacks on
U.S. troops
in Afghanistan. The move, they said, was an attempt to patch up
steadily eroding
ties between the two countries. |
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