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10/26/08 10:57 PM

#8182 RE: fuagf #8172

U.S. Drone Strikes in Pakistan Bolster Terrorists, Gilani Says
By Khaleeq Ahmed and Michael Heath

Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. drone strikes on Pakistani territory are undermining the government's efforts to isolate terrorists from the local population in tribal regions bordering Afghanistan, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said.

``Such acts are counterproductive and help terrorists to strengthen their position,'' Gilani told reporters late yesterday after returning from a regional summit in China, where he reaffirmed that no nation has the right to attack Pakistan.

A suspected U.S. drone fired missiles into the South Waziristan region early today, killing 20 militants, Reuters reported, citing unidentified Pakistani intelligence agency officials. The Pentagon said it had no information on the strike, according to the report. The region is a stronghold of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud.

U.S. forces in Afghanistan have stepped up cross-border raids into Pakistan, where American security forces say Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters shelter between attacks on international troops. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said last month the Pentagon has permission from President George W. Bush to attack Taliban and al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan.

Gilani's government ordered the military to attack extremists in the northwest in August and more than 1,000 have been killed in the Bajaur district. The army has also brought most of the Swat Valley, located north of the capital, Islamabad, under its control, according to the government.

Kidnapping Thwarted

Pakistani tribesmen prevented Taliban insurgents from seizing a militia chief in Swat yesterday and the two sides engaged in a firefight that left as many as 30 people dead, the Associated Press reported, citing regional police chief Dilawar Bangash.

Hundreds of Taliban fighters later returned to the scene, where they seized three members of the militia and beheaded one as a warning against opposing the movement, AP said, citing Bangash.

Gilani's government is pursuing a program of selective military action targeting militants and wooing tribal leaders to encourage them to expel foreign fighters from the Afghan border region. The Pakistani prime minister says the tribal areas need investment and development as raising living standards is the best method of cutting support for extremists.

Thousands of Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters sought shelter in Pakistan's northwestern tribal region after the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001.

Pakistan and Afghanistan have agreed to ``regular contacts'' between their governments, military, security and intelligence agencies to ``eliminate the scourge of extremism,'' according to a statement released after their foreign ministers met in Islamabad Afghanistan last week.

Tribal leaders from both countries will meet in Islamabad today, the official Associated Press of Pakistan reported. Lawmakers will also attend the meeting that is likely to be addressed by the foreign ministers of both countries, APP said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aN69TMr9nYsw&refer=us
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fuagf

10/29/08 2:06 AM

#8186 RE: fuagf #8172

Cleric to Iraqis: Oppose U.S.-Iraq security pact
HAMZA HENDAWI .. A.P .. October 18, 2008

BAGHDAD — Shi'ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr today called on Iraq's parliament to reject a U.S.-
Iraqi security pact as tens of thousands of his followers rallied in Baghdad against the deal.

The mass public show of opposition came as U.S. and Iraqi leaders face a Dec. 31 deadline to reach agreement
on the deal, which would replace an expiring United Nations mandate authorizing the U.S.-led forces in Iraq.

Al-Sadr's message was addressed to the crowd as well as Iraqi lawmakers and read by his aide
Sheik Abdul-Hadi al-Mohammadawi before a huge crowd of mostly young men waving Iraqi and
green Shi'ite flags and chanting slogans including "no, no to the agreement" and "yes to Iraq."

"The Iraqi government has abandoned its duty before God and its people and referred the agreement
to you knowing that ratifying it will stigmatize Iraq and its government for years to come," he said.

"I am with every Sunni, Shi'ite or Christian who is opposed to the agreement ... and I reject, condemn
and renounce the presence of occupying forces and basis on our beloved land,"
the message added.

Al-Sadr, who is living in Iran, also cast doubt on the Iraqi government's argument that
the security pact is a step toward ending the U.S. presence in Iraq. The deal would
require U.S. forces to leave by Dec. 31, 2011, unless Iraq asked some of them to stay.

"If they tell you that the agreement ends the presence of the occupation, let me tell you that the occupier will
retain its bases. And whoever tells you that it gives us sovereignty is a liar," al-Sadr said. "I am confident
that you brothers in parliament will champion the will of the people over that of the occupier ... Do not betray the people."

The demonstrators marched from the main Shi'ite district of Sadr
City to the more central Mustansiriyah Square in eastern Baghdad.

"No, no to America," shouted one man, wearing a white Islamic robe as he sat in a
wheelchair and clutched a poster of the Iraqi flag. "We prefer death to giving concessions."

Security was tight with Iraqi security forces manning checkpoints on sidestreets and snipers on
rooftops. Iraqi Humvees controlled all the roads leading to the square. Giant Iraqi flags covered nearby buildings.

One banner in English said: "We refuse the existence of the U.S. in Iraq."

Organizers insisted the turnout for the demonstrations exceeded 1 million, but Associated Press reporters and
photographers at the scene said the crowd was in the tens of thousands. Police had no estimates of their own.

"This demonstration is our response to the agreement," said Nasser al-Saadi, one of
30 Sadrist lawmakers. "It is also meant to demand a popular referendum on the agreement."

The three-hour gathering ended without trouble except for a brief incident when several young
demonstrators pelted army troops manning a checkpoint with rocks. There were no injuries and no arrests.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government and the Bush administration have hammered out a draft
agreement after months of bitter negotiations. But the Iraqi parliament must ratify the deal, and Iraq's
pre-eminent cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has said any accord must have national consensus.

Al-Maliki, a Shi'ite, could be politically isolated if he tries to win
parliament's backing in the face of widespread opposition.

Several Sunni and Shi'ite clerics, who wield considerable influence in shaping public opinion, also spoke
out during Friday prayer services against the draft, saying the Iraqi public knows little about the terms.

A copy of the draft accord obtained by the Associated Press specifies that U.S. troops must leave Iraqi cities by the end
of June and be gone by 2012. It gives Iraq limited authority over off-duty, off-base U.S. soldiers who commit crimes.

U.S. Congressional approval is not required for the pact to take effect,
but the administration is trying to build maximum political support anyway.

"This agreement poses a serious danger to the Iraqi people," said Nassar al-Rubaie,
another Sadrist lawmaker. "It will replace Iraq's occupation with foreign protection."

Al-Sadr's loyalists quit al-Maliki's government last year in protest against the prime
minister's failure to announce a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops from
Iraq. They also quit the United Iraqi Alliance, the Shi'ite bloc in parliament.

They boycotted a meeting Friday night between al-Maliki and leaders of parliamentary blocs to discuss
a draft of the agreement and plan to vote against it when it comes up for a vote in the 275-seat parliament.

Also today, Iraqi officials said the leader of a U.S.-allied Sunni group that
turned against Al Qaeda was killed in a drive-by shooting south of Baghdad.

Abdul-Hadi Obais al-Janabi was a local leader in the Sons of Iraq group, which the U.S.
credits with helping improve security in former insurgent strongholds. Such U.S.-backed
Sunni groups have recently come under the authority of the Iraqi government
.

A police spokesman said al-Janabi was walking today in the village of Jurf al-Sakhr when
he was killed. Dr. Zuhair al Khafaji at al-Musayyib hospital in Hillah confirmed the death.

Meanwhile, Bahrain's foreign minister arrived in Iraq's capital today for a one-day visit aimed at
improving bilateral relations between the countries, the latest high-level visit by a senior Arab dignitary.

http://www.freep.com/article/20081018/NEWS07/81018011