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India-Pakistan | ||||
Ex-ISI chief sheds light on Blackwater role in Pakistan | ||||
2010-01-11 | ||||
![]() "They certainly have had a role to play," said Asad Durani, former head of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), in an interview with Press TV on Sunday. He was commenting on the missile raids that the United States carries out on the Pakistani tribal region using unmanned aerial vehicles. "I learned somewhere that these people are employed certainly for...the logistic support at the drone bases. That is understandable," Durani said. "They may not be directing in that sense the drone attacks," he said, claiming that the fire is directed by, among others, "people who can merge with the background who go to certain areas, carry out or find out where the possible targets are."
Two former Blackwater mercenaries have also been charged with the 2009 murder of two Afghan civilians in Kabul. Pakistan's Wattan Party's Punjab President Hashim Shaukat Khan has accused the country's Interior Ministry of buckling "under American pressure" by letting 200 Blackwater staffers enter Pakistan without clearing the customs. The former ISI chief implicated the contractor in festering violence across Pakistan, saying "the main role of these security agencies in the deteriorating situation is their presence in the country amongst other things to provide security to the US personnel, but very importantly also for espionage." "They are looking for what they call the remnants of al-Qaeda and some sympathizers of Taliban," Durani added, referring to the US excuse for taking the border areas under relentless missile attacks. The attacks, launched by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in cooperation with the Pentagon, reportedly killed more than 700 civilians in Pakistan in 2009.
The Long War Journal, a US website tracking the strikes, however, says the assaults have killed mostly civilians and have failed to target top militant leaders.
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Posted by:Fred |