(11-16) 04:00 PST Washington - --
The United States and Pakistan reached tacit agreement in
September on a don't-ask-don't-tell policy that allows unmanned
Predator aircraft to attack suspected terrorist targets in rugged
western Pakistan, according to senior officials in both countries. In
recent months, the U.S. drones have fired missiles at Pakistani soil at
an average rate of once every four or five days.
The officials described the deal as one in which the U.S.
government refuses to acknowledge publicly the attacks while Pakistan's
government continues to complain noisily about the politically
sensitive strikes.
The arrangement coincided with a suspension of ground assaults into
Pakistan by helicopter-borne U.S. commandos. Pakistani President Asif
Ali Zardari said in an interview last week that he was aware of no
ground attacks since one on Sept. 3 that his government vigorously
protested.
Officials described the attacks, using new technology and improved
intelligence, as a significant improvement in the fight against
Pakistan-based al Qaeda and Taliban forces. Officials confirmed the
deaths of at least three senior al Qaeda figures in strikes last month.
Zardari said that he receives "no prior notice" of the air strikes
and that he disapproves of them. But he said he gives the Americans
"the benefit of the doubt" that their intention is to target the Afghan
side of the ill-defined, mountainous border of Pakistan's Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), even if that is not where the
missiles land.
Civilian deaths remain a problem, Zardari said. "If the damage is
women and children, then the sensitivity of its effect increases," he
said. The U.S. "point of view," he said, is that the attacks are "good
for everybody. Our point of view is that it is not good for our
position of winning the hearts and minds of people."
A senior Pakistani official said that while the attacks contribute
to widespread public anger in Pakistan, anti-Americanism there is
closely associated with President Bush. Citing a potentially more
favorable popular view of President-elect Barack Obama, he said that
"maybe with a new administration, public opinion will be more
pro-American and we can start acknowledging" more cooperation.
The official, one of several who discussed the sensitive military
and intelligence relationship only on condition of anonymity, said the
U.S-Pakistani understanding over the air strikes is "the smart middle
way for the moment." Contrasting Zardari with his predecessor, retired
Gen. Pervez Musharraf, the official said Musharraf "gave lip service
but not effective support" to the Americans. "This government is
delivering but not taking the credit."
Between December and August, when Musharraf stepped down, there
were six U.S. Predator attacks in Pakistan. Since then, there have been
at least 19. The most recent occurred early Friday, when local
officials and witnesses said at least 11 people, including six foreign
fighters, were killed. The attack, in North Waziristan, one of the
seven FATA regions, demolished a compound owned by Amir Gul, a Taliban
commander said to have ties to al Qaeda.
Pakistan's self-praise is not entirely echoed by U.S. officials,
who remain suspicious of ties between Pakistan's intelligence service
and FATA-based extremists. But the Bush administration has muted its
criticism of Pakistan. In a speech to the Atlantic Council last week,
CIA Director Michael Hayden effusively praised Pakistan's recent
military operations, including "tough fighting against hardened
militants" in the northern FATA region of Bajur.
Along with the stepped-up Predator attacks, Bush administration
strategy includes showering Pakistan's new leaders with close, personal
attention. Zardari met with Bush during the U.N. General Assembly in
September, and senior military and intelligence officials have
exchanged near-constant visits over the past few months.
Pakistan's new intelligence chief, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha,
traveled to Washington in late October, and Gen. David Petraeus,
installed Oct. 31 as head of the U.S. Central Command, visited
Islamabad on his third day in office. Last Wednesday, Hayden flew to
New York for a secret visit with Zardari, who was attending a U.N.
conference.
Despite improved relations with the Bush administration, Zardari
said, "we think we need a new dialogue, and we're hoping that the new
government will ... understand that Pakistan has done more than they
recognize" and is a victim of the same insurgency the United States is
fighting. Pakistan hopes that a $7.6 billion loan from the
International Monetary Fund, announced Saturday, will spark new
international investment and aid.
Pakistan, whose military has received more than $10 billion in
direct U.S. payments since 2001, also wants the United States to
provide sophisticated weapons to its armed forces, Zardari said. Rather
than using U.S. Predator-fired missiles against Pakistani territory, he
asked, why not give Pakistan its own Predators? "Give them to us. ...
We are your allies," he said.