Language:
Home Features Terms of Service Privacy Content Policy

Register

Lost your password?

Arts (205)
Business & Economy (3901)
Busted (61)
Computer (395)
Current Events (142)
Education (49)
Entertainment (254)
Games (111)
Government (135)
Health (133)
Latest Technologies (225)
Life Styles (134)
Live Video Steams (1)
News (664)
Real Tiger's Blogs (25)
Recreation (72)
Reference (22)
Regional (36)
Science (133)
serious threat (48)
Shopping (269)
Society (62)
Sports (162)

Posting tweet...

Youare
Bebo
Vox
Feedbuner
tumblr
livejournal
plurk
identi.ca
brightkite
jaiku
imeem
jaiku
twitxr
utterli
multiply
streetmavens
twitter
plaxo
present.ly
friendster
friendster
Window Live
typepad
yearbook

Posts Tagged ‘anti american sentiment’

Naggie

Soldier Deaths Draw Focus to U.S. in Pakistan

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

The deaths of three American soldiers in a Taliban suicide attack on Wednesday lifted the veil on United States military assistance to Pakistan that the authorities here would like to keep quiet and the Americans, as the donors, chafe at not receiving credit for.

The soldiers were among at least 60 to 100 members of a Special Operations team that trains Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps in counterinsurgency techniques, including intelligence gathering and development assistance. The American service members are from the Special Operations Command of Adm. Eric T. Olson.

At least 12 other American service members have been killed in Pakistan since Sept. 11, 2001, in hotel bombings and a plane crash, according to the United States Central Command, but these were the first killed as part of the Special Operations training, which has been under way for 18 months.

That training has been acknowledged only gingerly by both the Americans and the Pakistanis, but has deliberately been kept low-key so as not to trespass onto Pakistani sensitivities about sovereignty, and not to further inflame high anti-American sentiment.

Even though the United States calls Pakistan an ally, the country, unlike Afghanistan and Iraq, has not allowed American combat forces to operate here, a point that is stressed by the Pentagon and the Pakistani Army, the most powerful institution in Pakistan.

The American soldiers were probably made targets as a result of the drone strikes, said Syed Rifaat Hussain, professor of international relations at Islamabad University. “The attack seems a payback for the mounting frequency of the drone attacks,” Professor Hussain said.
If the American soldiers were the targets, the attack raised the question of whether the Taliban had received intelligence or cooperation from within the Frontier Corps.

The three soldiers were killed, and two other service members wounded, in the region of Lower Dir, which is close to the tribal areas. According to police officials in the region, the armored vehicle in which they were traveling was hit by a suicide bomber driving a car. Earlier reports from Pakistani security officials said the soldiers had been killed by a roadside explosive device.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com

RSSFEEDSNOW.COM:- http://www.rssfeedsnow.com

Related posts

    Naggie

    Pakistan says 3 US soldiers killed in NW blast

    Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

    Three U.S. soldiers traveling with Pakistan security force members were killed Wednesday and one wounded in a roadside bombing in northwest Pakistan that also injured dozens of schoolgirls, officials said.

    The soldiers were in the region as part of a small, little-publicized U.S. mission to train members of the paramilitary Frontier Corps to better fight al-Qaida and Taliban militants, Pakistan’s army said.

    The U.S. Embassy declined to comment. If the deaths are confirmed by American authorities, they would represent a major victory for militants close to the Afghan border who have been hit hard in recent months by a surge in U.S. missile strikes and a major Pakistani army offensive.

    The attack, which killed at least four other people and wounded 70, will draw attention to the presence of U.S. troops on Pakistan soil at a time when anti-American sentiment over perceived violations of sovereignty is running high. U.S. and Pakistani authorities rarely talk about the training program out of fear it could generate a backlash.
    The blast hit a convoy close to a girls’ school celebrating its opening in the Shahi Koto area of Lower Dir district, which like much of the northwest is home to al-Qaida and Taliban militants. It was unclear where the convoy was heading.

    One of the dead was a Pakistani soldier, officials said. Around 70 people were wounded, among them many schoolgirls, said an army statement and police chief Mumtaz Zarin Khan. Some officials said three schoolchildren also were among the dead.

    Pakistan army spokesman Maj. Gen Athar Abbas said three Americans soldiers training the Frontier Corp were killed and one was wounded in the attack.

    Lower Dir shares a border with Afghanistan and with the Swat Valley, a region the army last year retook from militant control in an offensive that included operations in Lower Dir. The army had claimed both regions were now clear of insurgents.

    The bomb flattened much of the Koto Girls High School, leaving books, bags and pens strewn around.

    “What was the fault of these innocent students?” said Mohammed Dawood, a resident who helped police dig the injured from the rubble.
    Later, the bodies of three foreigners and two injured were flown by helicopter to Islamabad and then taken to the city’s Al-Shifa hospital, said a doctor there who asked his name not be used citing the sensitivity of the case. One of the injured had minor head wounds and the other had multiple fractures.

    U.S. troops have been training Pakistan’s Frontier Corps since at least 2008. The corps is a major force in the northwest, but they have long been under-equipped and under-trained, making them a feeble front line against militants.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com

    RSSFEEDSNOW.COM:- http://www.rssfeedsnow.com

    Related posts