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It's being said that Wikileaks tells secrets about US involvement in Pakistan.

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truedelphi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-10 03:46 AM
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It's being said that Wikileaks tells secrets about US involvement in Pakistan.
Edited on Fri Dec-24-10 03:47 AM by truedelphi
But those of us who read Mother Jones and "The Nation" knew about Pakistan expansion way back in January of 2010.

motherjones.com/politics/2010/01/tomdispatch-what-watch-2010


3. How big will the American presence in Pakistan be as 2010 ends?

Let's start with the fact that it's already bigger than most of us imagine. Thanks to Nation magazine reporter Jeremy Scahill, we know that, from a base in Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, officers of the U.S. Joint Special Operations Command, with the help of hired hands from the notorious private security contractor Xe (formerly Blackwater), "plan targeted assassinations of suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, ‘snatch and grabs' of high-value targets and other sensitive action inside and outside Pakistan." Small numbers of U.S. Special Forces operatives have also reportedly been sent in to train Pakistan's special forces. U.S. spies are in the country . U.S. missile- and bomb-armed drones, both CIA- and Air Force-controlled , have been conducting escalating operations in the country's tribal borderlands. U.S. Special Operations forces have conducted at least four cross-border raids into Pakistan's tribal borderlands unsanctioned by the Pakistani government or military (only one of which was publicly reported in this country). And the CIA and the State Department have been attempting ( against some Pakistani resistance) to build up their personnel and facilities in-country. This, mind you, is only what we know in a situation in which secrecy is the order of the day and rumors fly.

In the meantime, the Obama administration has been threatening to widen its drone war (and possibly other operations) to the powder-keg province of Baluchistan, where most of the Afghan Taliban's leadership reportedly resides (evidently under Pakistani protection) and to the fighters of the Haqqani network , linked to both the Taliban and al-Qaeda, in the Pakistani border province of North Waziristan. Right now, these threats from Washington are clearly meant to motivate the Pakistani military to do the job instead. But as that is unlikely—both groups are seen by its military as key players in the country's future anti-Indian policies in Afghanistan—they may not remain mere threats for long. Any such U.S. moves are only likely to widen the Af-Pak war and further destabilize nuclear-armed Pakistan. In addition, the Pakistani military is not powerless vis-à-vis the U.S. For one thing, as Robert Dreyfuss of the Nation's "Dreyfuss Report" recently pointed out , it has a potential stranglehold on the tortuous U.S. supply lines into Afghanistan, already under attack by Taliban militants, that make the war there possible.

Pakistan is the Catch-22 of Obama's surge. As in the Vietnam War years, sanctuaries across the border ensure limited success in any escalating war effort, but going after those sanctuaries in a major way would be a war-widening move of genuine desperation. As with the Air Force in Afghanistan, watch Pakistan not just for spreading drone operations, but for the use of U.S. troops. If by year's end Special Operations forces or U.S. troops are periodically on the ground in that country, don't be shocked. However it may be explained, this will represent a dangerous failure of the first order.


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