US seeks permission to bomb Pak areas

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Well-Known Member
The US has sought "permission" of Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf to bomb the tribal areas of Waziristan and Northern Areas, where 10,000 Al-Qaeda terrorists are reported to have taken sanctuary, well informed sources have said.

US officials, who sounded Musharraf, were reported to have specifically identified the Mahsoud and Khattak tribes as those providing sanctuary to the Al-Qaeda men who had fled Afghanistan to escape the manhunt by US troops.
The sources said the Pakistani military establishment was concerned about the US move, because it felt the move could lead to a revolt by some 100,000 Mahsoud and Khattak soldiers in the army.

Lt. General (Retd.) Ali Quli Khan Khattak, who was overlooked for the army chief's post by former prime minister Nawaz Sharif in favour of Musharraf, had conveyed the concerns of the Khattak and Mehsoud tribes to Gen. Mohammed Aziz, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, the sources said.

He also warned about the possibility of a revolt by the tribespersons in the army should the government accede to the US request.

While senior military officials would not comment on the exact number of Al Qaida activists in Pakistan, they maintained that the figure quoted by US officials was on the "higher side."

The Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), the six-party alliance of Islamic radicals, held nation-wide protests in early January against Musharraf's decision to go along with the US in Afghanistan, the joint military operations in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and US plans to attack Iraq.

The protest by the MMA, which emerged as a major force in the country's political scene after the October elections and rules the volatile NWFP, followed exchange of fire between Pakistani and US troops close to the Pakistan-Afghanistan border on December 29 and January 3.

Addressing a protest rally in Islamabad, Maulana Samiul Haq, a factional leader of the Jamiatul Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), warned that there would be an "open war here" if the US attacked Iraq and that "no American will be safe."

In Karachi JUI chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman called for withdrawal of support to the US if it attacked Iraq while Jamaat-e-Islami chief Qazi Hussain Ahmed, addressing a rally in Peshawar, urged a change in Pakistan's foreign policy "which is in favour of the US and against Muslims and does not reflect the aspirations of the nation."

http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_152624,00050002.htm
 
Hmmm. Isn't Pakistan still having problems on their border with India, a strong Us supporter in the area? And the US has their hands on the power in Afganistan.


You don't suppose Bush is having Imperial urgings, do ya?
 
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