Drone Strike Killing Taliban Leader, Served CIA Revenge, Blocked Pakistan’s Strategy

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After a drone strike had reportedly killed Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud Nov. 1, the spokesperson for the U.S. National Security Council declared that, if true, it would be “a serious loss” for the terrorist organization.

That reaction accurately reflected the Central Intelligence Agency’s argument for the strike. But the back story of the episode is how President Barack Obama supported the parochial interests of the CIA in the drone war over the Pakistani government’s effort to try a new political approach to that country’s terrorism crisis.

The failure of both drone strikes and Pakistani military operations in the FATA tribal areas to stem the tide of terrorism had led to a decision by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to try a political dialogue with the Taliban.

But the drone strike that killed Mehsud stopped the peace talks before they could begin.

Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan immediately denounced the drone strike that killed Mehsud as “a conspiracy to sabotage the peace talks.” He charged that the United States had “scuttled” the initiative “on the eve, 18 hours before a formal delegation of respected ulema [Islamic clerics] was to fly to Miranshah and hand over this formal invitation.”

An unidentified State Department official refused to address the Pakistani minister’s criticism, declaring coolly that the issue was “an internal matter for Pakistan”.

Three different Taliban commanders told Reuters Nov. 3 they had been preparing for the talks but after the killing of Mehsud, they now felt betrayed and vowed a wave of revenge attacks.

The strategy of engaging the Taliban in peace talks, which was supported by the unanimous agreement of an “All Parties Conference” on Sept. 9, was not simply an expression of naïveté about the Taliban as was suggested by a Nov. 3 New York Times article on the Pakistani reaction to the drone strike.

A major weakness of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) lies in the fact that it is a coalition of as many as 50 groups, some of whose commanders are less committed to the terrorist campaign against the Pakistani government than others. In the aftermath of the Mehsud killing, several Taliban militants told Reuters that some Taliban commanders were still in favor of talks with the government.

The most important success achieved by Pakistan in countering Taliban violence in the past several years has been to reach accommodations with several militant leaders who had been allied with the Taliban but agreed to oppose Taliban attacks on government officials and security forces.

Sharif and other Pakistani officials were well aware that the United States could unilaterally prevent such talks from taking place by killing Mehsud or other Taliban leaders with a drone strike.

The government lobbied the United States in September and October to end its drone war in Pakistan – or at least to give the government a period of time to try its political strategy.

Obama had already suggested in a May 23 speech at National Defense University that the need for the strikes was fast diminishing and would soon end, because there were very few high value targets left to hit, and because the US would be withdrawing troops from Afghanistan. In August, Secretary of State John Kerry had said the end might come “very, very soon.”

After the meeting with Sharif on Oct. 23, Obama said they had agreed to cooperate in “ways that respect Pakistan’s sovereignty, that respect the concerns of both countries” and referred favorably to Sharif’s efforts to “reduce these incidents of terrorism.”

Shortly after the meeting, Sharif’s adviser on national security and foreign affairs, Sartaj Aziz, said in an interview with Al Jazeera that the Obama administration had promised to “consider” the prime minister’s request to restrain drone attacks while the government carried out a political dialogue.

A “senior Pakistani official” told the Express Tribune that Obama had “assured Premier Nawaz that drone strikes would only be used as a last option” and that he was planning to end the drone war once “a few remaining targets” had been eliminated.

The official said the Pakistani government now believed the unilateral strikes would end in “a matter of months.”

But Obama’s meeting with Sharif evidently occurred before the CIA went to Obama with specific intelligence about Mehsud, and proposed to carry out a strike to kill him.

The CIA had an institutional grudge to settle with Mehsud after he had circulated a video with Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, the Jordanian suicide bomber who had talked the CIA into inviting him to its compound at Camp Chapman in Khost province, where he killed seven CIA officials and contractors on Dec. 30, 2009.

The CIA had already carried out at least two drone strikes aimed at killing Mehsud in January 2010 and January 2012.

Killing Mehsud would not reduce the larger threat of terrorism and would certainly trigger another round of TTP suicide bombings in Pakistan’s largest cities in retaliation.

Although it would satisfy the CIA’s thirst for revenge and make the CIA and his administration look good on terrorism to the US public, it would also make it impossible for the elected Pakistani government to try a political approach to TTP terrorism.

Obama appears to have been sympathetic to Sharif’s argument on terrorism and had no illusions that one or a few more drone strikes against leading Taliban officials would prevent the organization from continuing to mobilize its followers to carry out terror attacks, including suicide bombers.

But the history of the drone war in Pakistan shows that the CIA has prevailed even when its proposed targets were highly questionable. In March 2011, US Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter had opposed a CIA proposal for a drone strike just as CIA contractor Raymond Davis was about to be released from a jail in Lahore.

Munter had learned that the CIA wanted the strike because it was angry at Pakistan’s ISI, which regarded the Haqqani group as an ally, over Davis’s incarceration, according to an AP story on Aug. 2, 2011. The Haqqani group was heavily involved in fighting US and NATO troops in Afghanistan but was opposed to the TTP’s terror attacks in Pakistan.

CIA Director Leon Panetta rejected Munter’s objection to the strike, however, and Obama had supported Panetta. It was later revealed that the strike had been based on faulty intelligence. It was not a meeting of Haqqani network that was hit but a conference of tribal leaders from all over the province on an economic issue.

But the CIA simply refused to acknowledge its mistake and continued to claim to journalists that only terrorists had attended the meeting.

After the strike, Obama had formalized the ambassador’s authority to oppose a proposed drone strike, giving Munter what he called a “yellow card.” But despite the evidence that the CIA had carried out a drone strike for parochial reasons rather then an objective assessment of evidence, Obama gave the CIA director the power to override an ambassadorial dissent, even if the secretary of state supported the ambassador.

The extraordinary power of the CIA director over the drone strike policy, which was formalized by Obama after that strike, was evident in Obama’s decision to approve the CIA’s proposal for the Mehsud strike. The director was now John Brennan, who had shaped public opinion in favor of drone strikes through a series of statements, interviews and leaks as Obama’s deputy national security adviser from 2009 to 2013.

Even though Obama was determined to phase the out drone war in Pakistan and apparently sympathized with the need for the Pakistani government to end it within a matter of months, he was unwilling to reject the CIA’s demand for a strike that once again involved the agency’s parochial interests.

A late July 2013 survey had shown that 61 percent of US citizens still supported the use of drones. Having already shaped public perceptions on the issue of terrorism, Obama allowed the interests of the CIA to trump the interests of Pakistan and the United States in trying a different approach to Pakistan’s otherwise intractable terrorism problem.

Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and journalist specializing in US national security policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism for 2011 for articles on the US war in Afghanistan

http://original.antiwar.com/porter/...erved-cia-revenge-blocked-pakistans-strategy/
 
The CIA had an institutional grudge to settle with Mehsud after he had circulated a video with Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, the Jordanian suicide bomber who had talked the CIA into inviting him to its compound at Camp Chapman in Khost province, where he killed seven CIA officials and contractors on Dec. 30, 2009.

The CIA had already carried out at least two drone strikes aimed at killing Mehsud in January 2010 and January 2012.

The extraordinary power of the CIA director over the drone strike policy, which was formalized by Obama after that strike, was evident in Obama’s decision to approve the CIA’s proposal for the Mehsud strike. The director was now John Brennan, who had shaped public opinion in favor of drone strikes through a series of statements, interviews and leaks as Obama’s deputy national security adviser from 2009 to 2013.

Even though Obama was determined to phase the out drone war in Pakistan and apparently sympathized with the need for the Pakistani government to end it within a matter of months, he was unwilling to reject the CIA’s demand for a strike that once again involved the agency’s parochial interests
John Brennan again -he of the infamous "kill list" broguht each day to Obama when he was National Security Director.

Panetta (another Clinton cast off running dog) apparently had faulty INTEL. Doesn't matter to Brennan, whom is an instituionalist on the Global War on Terror (GWOT)
whom thinks the US has the right to strike anywhere in the world..

Anyways..the whole fiasco is sure to sabotage any (miniscule) chance for reconcilliation of the Afgan Taliban with that gov't.

In effect the CIA runs the war policy, as Obama is a limp dick on checking them.

Obama is a neo-con nebbish, more hands off style running his own executive branch .
 
John Brennan again -he of the infamous "kill list" broguht each day to Obama when he was National Security Director.

Panetta (another Clinton cast off running dog) apparently had faulty INTEL. Doesn't matter to Brennan, whom is an instituionalist on the Global War on Terror (GWOT)
whom thinks the US has the right to strike anywhere in the world..

Anyways..the whole fiasco is sure to sabotage any (miniscule) chance for reconcilliation of the Afgan Taliban with that gov't.

In effect the CIA runs the war policy, as Obama is a limp dick on checking them.

Obama is a neo-con nebbish, more hands off style running his own executive branch .

As if Obama or any president has any control over the CIA.LOL Bush might have a little more pull with his daddy being CIA director. But even Bush sr. has superiors...

Did you hear about the ex-CIA agent that stated that the CIA was arming and supporting uprising terrorists?lol It's all part of the plan to build up the enemy and thus the fear.
 
As if Obama or any president has any control over the CIA.LOL Bush might have a little more pull with his daddy being CIA director. But even Bush sr. has superiors...

Did you hear about the ex-CIA agent that stated that the CIA was arming and supporting uprising terrorists?lol It's all part of the plan to build up the enemy and thus the fear.
missed that one, but I had thought Obama had to approve drone strikes still??
Also had thought the CIA wasn't running the drone wars...it's all so hush, hush ;black box ops, I have to dig out even the basic info.
 
missed that one, but I had thought Obama had to approve drone strikes still??
Also had thought the CIA wasn't running the drone wars...it's all so hush, hush ;black box ops, I have to dig out even the basic info.

The president of America is just a rubber stamper. The super wealthy run America.
 
Pakistan is now threating to close NATO supply routes (think the Kyber Pass), and Karzai is condeming this. (surprise - not).

Afg's loya jirga ( assembly's of elders for decisions) will prolly turn down the SOFA agreement (State of Forces Agr.),
that would allow ISAF troops to stay in Afganistan - but under immunity.

Maybe we'll get lucky and they'll kick us out... Don't let the door hit us in the ass on the way out.
 
Pretty much. He does what he is told or they have ways to ruin his career. At worst, assassinate him. The two presidents in history that tried to mint their own money and Squeeze the European bankers out were assassinated.

http://www.prolognet.qc.ca/clyde/pres.htm

The European bankers own America.
No. No;. No. I'll be doing some posting about the Kennedy assassination soon -I was alive, and remember that day like it was yesterday.
Frame by frame like a bad movie

Oswald had the means/method/motive/opportunity. Our minds cannot fathom a schmuck alone like him could kill a great , good man like Kennedy.
But he did.

I don't wan; to de-rail my own thread, but will get back to this soon.
 
No. No;. No. I'll be doing some posting about the Kennedy assassination soon -I was alive, and remember that day like it was yesterday.
Frame by frame like a bad movie

Oswald had the means/method/motive/opportunity. Our minds cannot fathom a schmuck alone like him could kill a great , good man like Kennedy.
But he did.

I don't wan; to de-rail my own thread, but will get back to this soon.

Really? Please tell me what motive Oswald ha for killing Kennedy and even more what motive did Jack Ruby have for killing Oswald!!!
 
I was five years old and in my first year of school. I walked home and entered my homes back door to see the TV blaring. My Mother looked at me and told me Kenendy was shot dead. I was pround of myself for know that was the president. I sat down in front of the TV and watched. My mother was a goldwater supporter. My dad likely voted for kenendy.My introduction to politics was that right leaning people will kill people if they dont get what they want.
.
 
Always nice to hear that a Talibarbarian has gone on to his eternal punishment. I don't give a fuck what Pakistan wants. They should have better handled the Taliban back in the 80s and 90s (and their sheltering of Bin Laden gives them zero credibility).
 
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