US military report shares blame on NATO bombing of Pakistani soldiers (VIDEO)
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A US military investigation into the Nov. 26 NATO bombardment of two Pakistani checkpoints has cast blame on both the Americans and the Pakistanis. The report, released yesterday, said that the Americans failed to share crucial information about their future military movements because its commanders didn鈥檛 trust their Pakistani counterparts, but also said that Pakistani troops fired on a joint US-Afghan patrol, even after the joint patrol identified itself.
NATO bombs killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, an event that worsened already bad relations between the two supposed allies. The report doesn鈥檛 appear to have improved matters. , with Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas calling it 鈥渟hort on facts.鈥
鈥Pakistan鈥檚 army does not agree with the findings of the US/Nato inquiry as being reported in the media,鈥 Gen. Abbas told reporters in Islamabad. 鈥淭he inquiry report is short on facts.鈥
The Nov. 26 incident occurred when a joint US-Afghan commando raid on a supposed militant camp on the Afghan-Pakistan border apparently stumbled onto a Pakistani paramilitary force instead. US investigators say the Afghans and Americans came under fire, and called in for air support when the Pakistani patrol continued to fire.
The Afghan-Pakistani border is notoriously porous and poorly marked, so in a sense, it is surprising that more of these events don鈥檛 occur. It is likely that the US and Afghan patrol would have operated with GPS equipment, with villages, border lines, and specific coordinates for their target clearly marked at all times. But the winding trails that border residents take to reach pastureland or marketplaces don鈥檛 respect boundaries, and it鈥檚 plausible that either the joint Afghan-US patrol and the Pakistani soldiers may have gone astray.
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The Nov. 26 NATO bombing attack couldn鈥檛 have come at a worse time in US-Pakistani relations. Many Pakistanis were already angered by a series of US military drone attacks within Pakistani airspace, the arrest of a CIA contractor Raymond Davis in a double-murder case, and finally, the US military raid, on Pakistani soil, that killed Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden in the town of Abbottabad on May 1.
As Monitor correspondents Issam Ahmed and Owais Tohid wrote in a May 2 story, Bin Laden鈥檚 presence a few hundred yards away from Pakistan鈥檚 military academy 鈥 nicknamed Pakistan鈥檚 West Point 鈥 gave suspicions that some members of Pakistan鈥檚 government must have known he was there. Yet while opinion polls show that only 9 percent of Pakistanis 鈥渓iked鈥 Bin Laden and 80 percent disliked him, the attack by US soldiers on Pakistani soil became transformed into a debate over Pakistani sovereignty.
US investigators in the NATO bombing incident say that it should have been clear to the Pakistani soldiers that they were firing on a US-Afghan coalition force and should have stood down.
Brig. Gen. Stephen Clark, an Air Force special operations officer who led the investigation, told reporters at a press conference that there was that prevented Pakistan and the US from giving each other specific details of their troops鈥 movements and locations.
Yet while the US appears to be attempting to set their relations with Pakistan back on course, a scan of Pakistani papers this morning shows that Pakistanis themselves have much bigger concerns. Most Pakistani papers lead with stories about rumors of a possible military coup.
In the Daily Times, Tanveer Ahmed quotes a "tirade" by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, .
鈥淐onspiracies are being hatched to pack up the elected government,鈥 Gilani told a gathering at the National Arts Gallery. He did not specifically blame the military, but later in the day he made clear in a speech to parliament that the army must operate under the control of the government. 鈥淭hey have to be answerable to this parliament,鈥 Gilani said. 鈥淭hey cannot be a state within a state.鈥 He called the army 鈥渄isciplined鈥, saying that they 鈥渇ollow the constitution鈥 and 鈥渨ill remain under the government鈥.聽
In Dawn, a Reuters agency story reports that Pakistan Army Chief Gen. Ashraf Kayani told troops that the , and that coup rumors were just 鈥渟peculation.鈥
And in the Nation, Pakistan鈥檚 Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry assured citizens that , since disputes could now be settled in a court that was trusted to be independent.
"Past are the days when the courts used to endorse unconstitutional measures; instead, we are sitting here to safeguard the Constitution," Justice Chaudhry was quoted as saying.
For the US and NATO, the worsening of relations with a frontline ally and the domestic instability within that country are both threats to the logistical flow of supplies to their bases in Afghanistan. More than half of all non-military supplies -- items like clothes, and food, and medicines -- are trucked through Pakistan after being offloaded at the Pakistani port of Karachi. But Pakistan banned any further shipment of NATO and US military supplies after the bombing raid. Thursday's investigation report will do little to change that.聽