09.28.08

Pakistani troops fire on US helicopters

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Agence France Presse September 25, 2008
Pakistan military fires at US choppers
Kabul — Pakistani troops fired at two US helicopters from the NATO-led force
in Afghanistan Thursday, causing no damage but accusing them of crossing the border amid escalating tensions in the area.

The Pakistani military said the troops had fired warning shots at two
helicopters which were “well within Pakistani territory.”

NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and US government
insisted however that the choppers had not entered Pakistani air space.

“ISAF helicopters received small-arms fire from a Pakistan military
checkpoint along the border near Tanai district, Khost, September 25 while
conducting routine operations in Afghanistan,” ISAF said in a statement.

“There are no reports of any damages to the helicopters or any casualties.”

The statement added: “ISAF forces and the Pakistani military are working
together to resolve the matter.”

The district borders Pakistan’s North Waziristan, one of the areas where
Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants are said to have bases.

The Pakistani military said the choppers had crossed into Pakistan at the
Ghulam Khan area of North Waziristan.

“They passed over our checkpost so our troops fired warning shots,” chief
Pakistani military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told AFP.

“The helicopters returned fire but there was no damage on the ground.”

A separate military statement said the helicopters were “well within
Pakistani territory” when the incident happened.

Abbas said the matter was being taken up with ISAF.

Pakistan’s army is also currently investigating the crash of a suspected
unmanned US spy plane 24 hours earlier near the Afghan border. Residents
said it was shot down by tribesmen, but the military said it malfunctioned.

And Pakistani troops fired warning shots to repel two US helicopter gunships
on Sunday, security officials said.

In New York, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari said Pakistan’s military
was firing “flares” so helicopter pilots “know that they have crossed the
border line.”

It was not immediately clear if this was an explanation of Thursday’s
incident, which ISAF said involved gunfire.

With tensions high, the Pentagon quickly called Thursday’s events “an
unfortunate misunderstanding” and confirmed US helicopters were involved.

“They are confident that they were in Afghan air space the whole time,” said
Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman.

A State Department spokesman said Washington wanted an explanation from
Pakistan, commenting that “the Taliban are not flying helicopters.”

“We have been in touch with the Pakistanis about this and we certainly want
to have an explanation,” the spokesman said.

“These ISAF helicopters were operating inside Afghan territory, and as far
as I know, the Taliban are not flying helicopters. So we want to find out
what happened and the Pakistanis are trying to give us an explanation.”

Tensions across the porous frontier soared after a series of US missile
strikes on Islamic militants and an incursion by US soldiers into Pakistani
tribal areas adjoining Afghanistan.

The mandate of the NATO force in Afghanistan, where it is helping fight a
growing insurgency led by the Al-Qaeda-linked Taliban, ends at the border
although it reserves the right to self-defence.

The US-led coalition also operating in Afghanistan also denies carrying out
operations across the frontier.

Pakistan’s tribal regions have been wracked by violence since thousands of
Taliban and Al-Qaeda rebels fled to the country after the US-led invasion of
Afghanistan in late 2001.

Afghanistan has long been calling for international troops to pay more
attention to militant bases across the border, which it says supply
extremists who are staging attacks on Afghan and international forces.

But Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani Wednesday reiterated that
his country would not tolerate violations of its sovereignty and territorial
integrity “by anyone in the name of combating terrorism.”

Under growing pressure to crack down on the militants, the country has
stepped up its own offensives.

At least 16 Al-Qaeda-linked militants and two civilians were killed Thursday
when Pakistani helicopter gunships shelled rebel hideouts in the tribal
Bajaur region, which is north of Waziristan.

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