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Pakistan objects to US strikes without prior notice
20 Jul 2007 16:20:11 GMT
Source: Reuters
ISLAMABAD, July 20 (Reuters) - Pakistan said on Friday it could not accept "indiscriminate action" on its territory by U.S. forces without first being informed that there was an al Qaeda or terrorist target there.

"We remain determined not to allow al Qaeda or any other terrorist entity to establish a safe haven on our territory," Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said in a statement.

"Whatever counter-terrorism action is to be taken inside Pakistan, it will be taken by our own security forces."

White House spokesman Tony Snow said on Thursday that the United States never ruled out any options when it came to striking against al Qaeda or the Taliban.

U.S. forces in Afghanistan have carried out strikes in Pakistan in the past, often using missile-carrying Predator drone aircraft, without confirming them, in order not to embarrass President Pervez Musharraf, an important ally.

"We cannot, nor should we be expected to, take (accept) indiscriminate action over a large territory without any precise information about any al Qaeda or terrorist hideout," the Pakistani statement said.

The United States has been putting pressure on Pakistan to do more to curb al Qaeda activities on its territory -- notably in North Waziristan, a tribal area near the Afghan border regarded as a safe haven for militants since the government made a peace pact there last September.

The deal was struck because of the mounting casualties of the Pakistani army, which had more than 700 soldiers killed fighting militants in the tribal lands. The army still has around 85,000 troops stationed in border areas.

Militants tore up the deal this week, adding to the problems Musharraf is facing from Islamists who have launched a suicide bomb campaign in the aftermath of an army operation to crush a militant stronghold in an Islamabad mosque earlier this month.

At least 180 people, mostly police and soldiers, have been killed in the Islamist offensive, while 102 people, mostly followers of a Taliban-style militant movement, were killed in the siege and commando assault on the capital's Red Mosque.

Snow said Musharraf "is now going to have to be more aggressive and is being more aggressive moving forces" to troublespots.
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A man mourns in the rubble outside the Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, after it reopened to the public for prayers in Pakistan's capital Islamabad on July 27, 2007. Pakistani police fired tear gas on Friday to disperse protesting radical Islamists who had spoiled government plans for activities to resume smoothly at the mosque complex hit this month by a deadly commando raid, which the government said left 102 people dead.



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