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NATO official confirms 'unwritten agreement' with Pak for operating drones

Lahore, Feb 20 (ANI): Even though Pakistan has categorically denied the use of its airbases for carrying out attacks on tribal areas, Islamabad, the US, and other NATO member countries have had an "unwritten agreement" for the past three to five years to allow the CIA to fly unmanned drones out of airstrips located in the Pak-Afghan region.

"In the past week, speculation has mounted over the extent to which Pakistan was aware of such flights, amid evidence that at least some of the drones were being launched from airstrips in remote Pakistani regions," a senior NATO military official told CBS News.

On Tuesday, The Times, London, had claimed the CIA had been using the Shamsi airfield in Balochistan to launch the Predator drones that attack al Qaeda and Taliban targets in Pakistan for at least a year.

Another newspaper printed what it called were images of the site showing three predator drones parked on a runway. But the NATO official told CBS news "there is no single site you can name".

"We are looking at different locations both in Pakistan and Afghanistan. If the Shamsi base has been found to be a home for the drones, that is not the only location," said the official.

"The locations keep on changing in both countries (Pakistan and Afghanistan). But yes, there are drones flying from locations in both these countries," a NATO country diplomat stationed in Islamabad said.

According to a Wall Street Journal report, Pakistan's intelligence and military are secretly supporting the US-led unmanned predator attacks on militant hideouts in the tribal regions.

Islamabad has been regularly opposing the attacks saying they are proving "counter-productive" in the 'War on Terror', but Pakistani military and intelligence officials see the strikes as a success.

"The Predator strikes are more and more precise," a Pakistani official said.

There have been 30 missile attacks by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) since August 2008, and security forces have claimed to have sanitized more than 50 suspected militants in the last two attacks which targeted the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), and North West Frontier Province (NWFP). (ANI)

NATO reviews Afghan tactics to cut civilian deaths

Washington, May 19: NATO is looking at its tactics in Afghanistan to reduce civilian casualties, which have prompted protests from President Hamid Karzai, the alliance's top commander said today. US Army Gen John Craddock said NATO understood that civilian casualties cost the alliance credibility among local people whose support was vital to defeating Islamist insurgents from the Taliban movement. ''Every time that happens, someone walks away, an Afghan citizen, with a bad feeling.....
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