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Pakistan Invades America --
"Without Permission"
By M.
Junaid Levesque-Alam
17/09/08 "MRZine"
-- -- The U.S. State Department lodged a sharp protest over
ongoing Pakistani missile strikes and ground raids today, saying
the Islamic Republic was violating American sovereignty.
"We will try to convince
Pakistan . . . to respect [the] sovereignty of the United States
-- and God willing, we will convince," State Department
Spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.1
The controversy stems from the
Pakistan Army's recent decision, leaked in a prominent Pakistani
newspaper, to mount intensifying air attacks and new ground
assaults against extremists hiding in American safe havens
across the ocean.
American papers reported that
under the new policy, the Pakistani military will no longer seek
America's permission in killing Americans, but will inform
American diplomats about these killings as a friendly gesture
between close allies.2
Pakistan Army General Ashfaq
Kayani told reporters outside Islamabad late last night that the
new strategy was justified. "We are working to prevent more
attacks on the Pakistani people," he said.3
The general's stance signified
strong Pakistani dissatisfaction with America's reluctance to
crack down on religious fundamentalists and neoconservatives,
who, experts note, have deep ties to American intelligence
services and military leaders. The largely unchecked
extremists, experts observe, have used America to bolster the
agenda of their ideological counterparts across the ocean in
Israel, and to strike directly against Pakistan and other parts
of the Muslim world.
"We have to strike them over
there so that they cannot order strikes against us here at
home," General Kayani said, referring to American firepower that
has terrorized hundreds of thousands of civilians on either side
of the Pak-Afghan border and in the Middle East.
As Kayani spoke, new precision
attacks and commando raids were being conducted against ranches
in Texas, small towns in Alaska, the offices of AIPAC and
energy-related lobbying firms in Washington, D.C. Commandos
were also dispatched to America's unruly federally-administered
Bible Belt, where resentment of government authority runs high.
Several high-value targets were
killed in the attacks. Local media outlets claimed 50 civilians
were also killed, but these assertions could not be
independently verified. Pakistani officials said they would
send in their own team to investigate the claims, time
permitting.
Seeking to assuage domestic
concerns, American officials downplayed the actions of their
staunch ally. "The nation should not be upset by the statement
of Pakistani General Kayani," White House Press Secretary Dana
Perino said in an official statement.4
"Pakistan respect U.S. sovereignty and looks at us as partners,"
she added.5
U.S. officials also insisted no
secret deal had been reached beforehand allowing Pakistanis to
strike inside American territory. "Media reports about
authorization for Pakistani raids into the U.S. are incorrect,"
the American ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, told Fox
News last night. She added that the South Asian country had "no
aggressive designs or postures" toward America.6
Regimes allied to Pakistan,
including those in Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Venezuela, Bolivia, and
Palestine, expressed support for the new Pakistani strategy,
citing the need to "remove and destroy" strongholds where key
militants have masterminded attacks against their countries.7
Informed of this, Ambassador
Patterson appeared unfazed, saying, "Pakistan respects American
sovereignty." She insisted that Pakistani officials provided
her with assurances that "no such order had been given" for new
rules of engagement.8
Finally, the ambassador explained, America had already carried
out its own recent military offensive that left hundreds of
rural Americans dead, relieving the need for further Pakistani
intervention.
But in Islamabad, Pakistani
corps commanders said their new strategy would see continued
implementation in the coming weeks. Speaking on condition of
anonymity, one commander said that as far as Pakistan was
concerned, "most things have been settled in terms of how we're
going to proceed."9
Notes
Except for note 2, all the
above-quoted statements are real quotes; only the roles have
been switched.
1 Quote actually taken from Pakistani PM Yousaf Gilani.
Reuters, Sept. 12, 2008. (http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=343756)
2 It was actually the Pakistan daily,
Dawn, which reported on the U.S. policy shift as
follows: "Under this new policy, the US military will notify
Pakistan's government when it conducts raids, but will not seek
its permission." Sept. 12, 2008.
3 Quote actually taken from US Joint Chiefs of Staff
Admiral Mike Mullen.
Dawn (Pakistan Daily), Sept. 12, 2008.
4 Quote actually taken from PM Gilani. (Source: note 3)
5 Quote actually taken from Pakistani Ambassador Husain
Haqqani. (Source: note 3)
6 Quotes actually taken from Ambassador Haqqani. (Source:
note 3)
7 Quote actually taken from U.S. ally and Afghan President
Hamid Karzai.
Washington Post, Sept. 12, 2008. ()
8 Quotes actually taken from Ambassador Haqqani. (Source:
note 7)
9 Quote actually taken from anonymous U.S. official.
(Source: note 7)
M. Junaid
Levesque-Alam is a Pakistani-American who blogs about America
and Islam at
Crossing the Crescent (www.crossingthecrescent.com).
He writes about American Muslim identity for WireTap
magazine and has been published in CounterPunch,
Dissident Voice, The Nation (online), and The
American Muslim. He works as a communications coordinator
for an anti-domestic violence agency in the NYC area and
obtained his undergraduate degree in journalism from
Northeastern University. He can be reached at: junaidalam1 AT
gmail.comClick on
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