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Drones Make More New Enemies Than They Kill
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Has
the US Given Israel a Green Light To Attack Syria?
I was visiting
Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States when the phone on his
desk rang.
"The hot
line," he said. "Sorry I have to take this call."
As he listened,
his face grew darker and darker. Finally, he banged down the phone
and exploded: "Another US drone attack that killed a score
of our people. We were never warned the attack was coming. We are
supposed to be US allies!"
This strongly
pro-American ambassador was wrong. While the US hails Pakistan as
a key non-NATO ally, the US treats it like a militarily occupied
country. The government in Islamabad is left to observe increasing
drone attacks and CIA ground operation with deepening embarrassment
and helplessness.
Average Pakistanis
have no doubt about what’s happening. Most believe their nation
was more or less occupied by the US after the 2001 attacks on the
US.
The Pakistani
leader who allowed this to happen, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, has admitted
that the US put a gun to his head and demanded he allow the US to
use Pakistan’s army, air bases, ports, intelligence service, logistics,
and air space – or face war. Musharraf quickly caved in to the US
ultimatum, something a tough predecessor, Gen. Zia ul-Haq, would
have surely rejected.
As US drone
attacks intensify in Pakistan’s tribal belt and inside Afghanistan,
the government of President Asif Ali Zardari, which was engineered
into power by Washington and sustained by US dollars, keeps imploring
the US to halt the attacks that are enraging Pakistanis. Senior
Pakistani diplomats have been warning that the drone strikes that
have so far killed 2,500-3,000, mostly civilians, are fuelling extremist
groups in Pakistan and humiliating its armed forces.
No one in Washington
is listening. Islamabad’s attempted to show some independence by
halting US-NATO truck convoys from Karachi to Afghanistan for seven
months after a deadly US air attack last November that killed 25
Pakistani soldiers.
But the blockade
was recently lifted after $1 billion of American aid to Islamabad
was unfrozen. The dollars are flowing again – many of them right
back out into Swiss, Dubai or Singapore bank accounts.
Anti-American
feelings in Pakistan have been soaring. Some polls show over 90%
of respondents expressing hatred or anger against the US. These
public sentiments have been worsened by more loose talk by Republicans
in Washington about seizing Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, making Pakistan’s
province of Baluchistan a separate state, or putting Pakistan on
America’s terrorist list.
There are even
rumbles from the far right and pro-Israel neocons about attacking
Pakistan. America’s failing war in Afghanistan is being blamed on
the Pakistan-backed Haqqani group which is also ironical since during
my days in Afghanistan in the 1980’s, Haqqani was a favorite of
CIA.
Washington’s
not so discreet threats of punishment have abated for the moment
thanks to the mess in Syria and rising threat of war against Iran.
But Pakistan remains a potent generator for anti-American jihadist
sentiment, and for rising anti-Muslim sentiment in America.
Ironically,
the US went to war in Afghanistan to supposedly punish anti-American
groups, yet now ends up creating ten times more enemies in Pakistan.
Meanwhile,
the truck craziness has reared its head again. Supply trucks for
US and NATO forces are backed up at Pakistani border crossing points
because supposedly because of security threats.
Trucking supplies
into northern Afghanistan via the Black Sea, Russia, and Central
Asia has been costing the US $100 million monthly at a time when
44 million Americans live below the poverty level. Flying supplies
and munitions from the US to Afghanistan costs ten times more than
ground transport.
On top of this,
Taliban and its allies are annoyed that the truck convoys have stopped.
Why? Because they were being paid off millions more of baksheesh
by the US to let the convoys pass.
Talks this
past week in Washington between CIA chief David Petraeus and Pakistan’s
new intelligence director, Lt. Gen. Zahir ul-Islam were said to
be cordial but not discernably productive. Nor were talks between
top Pakistani and US generals. Diplomats seem to have dropped out
of the picture.
August
8, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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