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Pakistan’s parliament condemns US Bin Laden raid

Online Desk by Online Desk
May 14, 2011
in World
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s parliament condemned on Saturday the US raid that killed Al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden, calling for a review of ties and warning that Pakistan could cut supply lines to American forces in Afghanistan if there were more such attacks.
“Parliament … condemned the unilateral action in Abbottabad which constitutes a violation of Pakistan’s sovereign,” it said in a resolution issued after security chiefs briefed legislators.
Pakistan has dismissed as absurd any suggestion that authorities knew Bin Laden was holed up in a high-walled compound near the country’s top military academy.
The resolution, however, also demanded that an independent commission probe the debacle instead of one led by the country’s powerful armed forces.
The parliamentary resolution followed a rare, private session with top military officials that began Friday and ran past midnight. During the session, Pakistani intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha indicated he’d be willing to resign if lawmakers demanded it, but no one did.
In fact, it appeared lawmakers from the weak civilian government and the opposition essentially closed ranks behind a military establishment humiliated by the May 2 US Navy SEALs attack on Bin Laden’s compound in the northwest garrison city of Abbottabad. Pakistani leaders have insisted they had no idea Bin Laden was staying in the city.
Few lawmakers were willing to discuss details of the confidential session, but the hours it covered suggested that the generals were questioned extensively — a rarity in a country where the military operates largely beyond civilian control and has staged multiple coups.
Intelligence chief Pasha spoke at length, and defended the military’s record in fighting Islamist extremist movements, some of which have staged numerous deadly attacks on Pakistani soil.
Pasha admitted negligence in tracing Bin Laden, but also noted that Pakistan had cooperated with the US in helping kill or capture numerous Bin Laden allies, severely diminishing Al-Qaeda’s terrorist infrastructure.
Bin Laden was like a “dead person despite being alive,” federal Information Minister Firdous Ashiq Awan quoted the intelligence chief as saying.
Pasha rarely talks to media on the record. The army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, was present, but there were no accounts of him speaking.
According to Awan, an air force official said the military learned “American planes were loaded with bombs” and in the air in Afghanistan, ready to retaliate if Pakistani planes went after the US helicopters sent after Bin Laden.
The US has said it sent extra helicopters into Pakistani airspace to provide backup for the Navy SEALs.
The military leaders assured lawmakers that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenals are safe and promised to improve the country’s air defenses, Awan said.
The parliamentary resolution that emerged from the gathering termed the US raid as an attack on Pakistan’s sovereignty. It also criticized American drone strikes in Pakistan’s militant-riddled tribal areas, which many suspect Pakistan secretly allows while publicly denouncing.
The resolution also called for an independent body to look into the Bin Laden raid. Earlier in the week, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the military would lead the probe, but that upset opposition leaders.
Awan told state-run Pakistan TV that lawmakers had expressed full confidence in the country’s security forces.
Pakistan became an ally of the US in the fight against Islamist militants after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, but the relationship has long been an uneasy one, with mutual distrust that has only deepened since the Bin Laden killing.
Although American officials have said so far they have seen no evidence the top Pakistani military officials knew of Bin Laden’s whereabouts, the US has long harbored suspicions that elements of Pakistan’s armed and intelligence services provide assistance to some militant groups battling Western troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistani officials deny any links to such groups, including the feared Haqqani network in eastern Afghanistan.
But analysts say Pakistan may be maintaining ties to some insurgents, including the Haqqanis and Afghan Taleban leaders, because it wants leverage in Afghanistan — and a wedge against archrival India — once the US pulls out. By AGENCIES

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