CIA suspends drone missile strikes in Pakistan: report
LOS ANGELES, Dec 24(Dawn): The US Central Intelligence Agency has suspended drone
missile strikes on gatherings of low-ranking militants in Pakistan due to tensions with that country, The Los Angeles Times reported. Citing
unnamed current and former US officials, the newspaper said late Friday the undeclared halt in CIA attacks is aimed at reversing a sharp erosion of
trust between the two countries. US-Pakistani relations deteriorated last month after a series of US air strikes killed 24 Pakistan soldiers near
the border with Afghanistan. A joint US-Nato investigation concluded that a disastrous spate of errors and botched communications led to the
deaths. Pakistan has rejected the findings. The pause in the missile strikes comes amid an intensifying debate in the administration of President
Barack Obama over the future of the CIA’s covert drone war in Pakistan, the paper said. The CIA has killed dozens of al-Qaeda operatives and
hundreds of low-ranking fighters there since the first Predator strike in 2004, but the program has infuriated many Pakistanis, the report
noted. Some officials in the State Department and the National Security Council say many of the airstrikes are counterproductive, The Times
said. They argue that rank-and-file militants are easy to replace, and that Pakistani claims of civilian casualties, which the United States
dispute, have destabilized the government of President Asif Ali Zardari. Some US intelligence officials are urging the CIA to cut back the
paramilitary role it has assumed since the September 11, 2001, attacks to refocus on espionage, the paper pointed out. They suggest handing the
mission to the Pentagon’s Joint Special Operations Command, which flies its own drones and conducts secret counter-terrorism operations in Yemen
and Somalia, The Times noted.
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