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Report Blames Both US, Pakistan for Nato Attack
By
Media Monitor Desk
WASHINGTON: The US investigations into the Nov 26 border attack
by Nato forces that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers has reportedly
concluded that both US and Pakistan forces bear responsibility
for the incident, The New York Times reported.
The report said: "Mistakes by both American and Pakistani forces
led to airstrikes against Pakistani border posts that killed 24
Pakistani Army soldiers last month".
Even though it spread blame between both countries, the key
finding of the investigation is likely to further enrage
Pakistan: that the airstrikes were ultimately justified because
Pakistani soldiers fired first on a joint team of Afghan and
American special operations forces operating along the often
poorly demarcated frontier between Afghanistan and Pakistan,
American and Western officials, who asked not to be identified
because the report of the investigation had not yet been
released, said Thursday.
The report says that the joint Afghan-American patrol, which was
operating in a remote and mountainous area between the Afghan
province of Kunar and the Pakistani tribal area of Mohmand, came
under machine gun and mortar fire from at least one of the
Pakistani border posts sometime around midnight on Nov. 26,
American and Western officials said. The American official said
the Afghan and American special operations forces believed they
were being attacked by militants, at least initially, and called
for air support.
Why the Pakistanis were firing remains unclear, the American
official said. But in the days after the airstrikes, another
American official in Washington provided part of an explanation:
the Pakistanis apparently had intelligence that the Taliban was
planning to attack the border posts and the Pakistani soldiers
may have mistaken the Afghan and American troopers for
militants.
The United States military report lends credence to that theory:
the officials said it finds that NATO did not inform Pakistan
that the operation on the border was taking place, and thus the
Pakistani soldiers would not have known to expect allied forces
near their posts. NATO and Pakistani forces are supposed to
inform each other when launching operations on the border
precisely to avoid the kind of mistake that took place on Nov.
26.
The second American mistake came when the airstrikes were called
in. The Americans apparently gave the Pakistani Army the wrong
coordinates that were to be struck by Apache attack helicopters
and an AC-130 gunship, the officials said.
It wasn't immediately clear whether the Pakistanis cleared the
strikes after getting the wrong coordinates. They have said they
did not; regardless, the strikes began before their officers
based at NATO coordination posts in Afghanistan had a chance to
check with superiors in Pakistan, according to the Pakistani
account of what took place.
But, as the report shows, even if Pakistan did clear the
strikes, the posts still probably would have been hit because
the Pakistanis had been given the wrong coordinates.
Another safeguard also failed, according to the report: Pakistan
never told NATO it had established the border posts, which had
been up for about three months, said a Western official in
Kabul. Both sides are supposed to inform each other when setting
up new positions along the border, another measure intended to
avoid strikes against each other.
Whether any American service members will be disciplined in
connection with the incident has not been decided, the American
and Western officials said.
NATO's Afghanistan headquarters and the United States Embassy in
Kabul declined to comment on the investigation, referring
queries to the Defense Department and State Department in
Washington. Pakistani officials did not offer any immediate
reaction.
But given the indignant Pakistani response to the raid - "They
killed our sons and we can never forgive this," said one senior
Pakistani defense official in a recent interview, speaking
anonymously because he still works with Americans - Washington
was bracing for another round of recrimination, said the
American and Western officials.
A ban on the shipment of NATO supplies through Pakistan, which
was put in place after the strike, is expected to remain for
some time, the officials said. NATO officials have said the
blockade is not affecting operations because less than 30
percent of supplies for coalition forces in Afghanistan are
currently shipped through Pakistan.
More damaging is the faltering military and counter-terror
cooperation between Washington and Islamabad after a year of
crises that began with the shooting of two Pakistanis by a CIA
contractor in the city of Lahore. The two sides no longer
conduct joint operations along the border, which they had
started doing a few years ago, and intelligence-sharing on a
range of threats from al Qaeda to lesser known Islamist militant
groups has also fallen off, the American and Western officials
said.
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