US WAR ON PAKISTAN CONTINUES
By Farooq Sulehria
On January 1, US drones pounded Waziristan in Pakistan's
Tribal Areas. Death toll was 5. It was an obnoxious new
year message (reiterated on Jan. 2 with 3 more deaths)
to Pakistan: 2009 would not be different from the
previous year.
''In 2008, US attacked Tribal Areas and Frontier
province for at least 35 times '', a defense official
told this scribe. ''Since 2004, the USA has attacked
Pakistan at least 50 times, claiming over 450 lives'',
he added.
These strikes---by Predator drones as well as commando
raids from helicopter-- increased in frequency during
Bush's waning months and have been seen in Pakistan as
America's third war. Unlike the other two, Iraq and
Afghanistan, the war against Pakistan is though
undeclared yet it was, according to New York Times,
approved by George Bush in July 2008.
Commentators fear an increased US onslaught as Barack
Obama assumes office since he has been publicly
advocating that the United States must be willing to
strike al-Qaeda targets inside Pakistan. "If we have
actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist
targets and President Musharraf won't act, we will," he
told a union-activists meeting back in August 2007. His
comments have caused great anxiety in Pakistan.
Apparently, Pakistan government has strongly condemned
the US strikes inside Pakistan but has not reacted
militarily. However, recurring Taliban attacks on Nato
supplies moving through Peshawar have been seen as a
Pakistani shot across the bow to Washington. Reportedly,
70 percent Nato supplies, destined for Afghanistan, move
through Pakistan. In last six months, 230 trucks have
been destroyed in six such attacks. In December, Nato
supplies thrice came under attack in 24 hours. Talking
to this scribe, Ahmed Rashid attributed the war-like
situation at Pak-Afghan border to ''Taliban's winter
offensive aimed at pre-empting arrival of 30,000 US
troops reaching Kabul any time this year.'' Writer of
Taliban, journalist Ahmed Rashid has been supportive
of post-9/11US intervention in Afghanistan. Asked why
Pakistan became a target for suicide bombers only after
US occupation of Afghanistan, he blamed ''Musharraf
regime's dual policy: chasing al-Qaida under US pressure
while supporting local extremist groups.'' He sees an
''assertive military policy'' coupled with ''political
strategy and socio-economic uplift'' of the region as a
solution to present chaos in Tribal Areas bordering
Afghanistan.
Asfandyar Wali, president of Peoples National Party (ANP),
however, advocates ''Peace Deals'' with Taliban. The ANP,
a party tracing its roots in Gandhi's Indian National
Congress, won the elections in February 2008 and formed
a coalition government in Frontier province. In a
telephonic interview with this scribe, Wali attributed
the turmoil on Afghan border--- displacing 30,0000
citizens only in Bajour district only--- to US-sponsored
proxy war against Soviet presence in Afghanistan during
1980s.
Activist and writer Tariq Ali, however, believes:''The
strikes against Pakistan represent - like the decisions
of President Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, to bomb
and then invade Cambodia - a desperate bid to salvage a
war that was never good, but has now gone badly wrong''.
The Nato body count in Afghanistan has surpassed 1000.
Ali thinks ''when in doubt, escalate the war is an old
imperial motto''.
Besides precipitating hitherto undeclared Pak-US war,
occupation of Afghanistan has further inflamed Indo-Pak
tensions. Recent terrorist attack on Bombay was yet
another effect of this occupation. Many observers
believe, the Bombay attack November last year was an
attempt to provoke Indo-Pak tension thus forcing
Pakistan to move 130,000 troops from Afghan border to
Indian border. However, Pakistan is also nervous over
growing Indian influence in Kabul. A deadly suicide
attack on Indian embassy in Kabul, July last year, was
blamed on Pakistan. Iran is understandably nervous over
US presence in Afghanistan but Russia and China,
concerned over US presence, have also conducted joint
military operations. Both these countries understand
that US wanted to site military facilities on their
borders in the guise of ''war on terror'' while all the
talk about ''liberation of Afghan women'' was mere a fig
leaf.
If anything, US occupation of Afghanistan has not merely
triggered further terrorism but most dangerously:
district after district in Frontier province is being
lost to Taliban while the writ of Pakistani state has
simply evaporated in Tribal Areas. Since 2003, 13648
people have been killed in clashes between Taliban and
Pakistan's security forces, 5282 of them civilians, 1833
security forces' personnel and 6305 insurgents. In
districts now under Taliban control, a strict 'Shria
code' has been implemented. Beheading, stoning to death,
lashing and amputations are the punishments publicly
meted out to 'adulterers', 'thieves' and 'US spies'.
Besides dress code and compulsory beards for men, women
have been told to stay home. Girls education has not
merely been forbidden, Taliban simply set girls' schools
on fire. Only in Swat district, over 130 schools have
been gutted leaving 72,000 students without any chance
of learning (The News Dec 25). The ''war on terror''
instead of liberating the Afghan woman is instead fast
depriving Pakistani woman of whatever little rights she
had won.
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