Feinstein’s Blurt Leads to U.S. Confirmation That It Uses Pakistani Air Base
February 19, 2009 by national
Filed under Homeland Security News

Nothing quite like exposing a military advantage.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s blurt during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing last week forced the U.S. intelligence and military community to acknowledge on Thursday that the U.S. is targeting Al Qaeda and Taliban operatives using unmanned drones based in Pakistan.
The senator’s slip sent reporters into overdrive and led to the discovery of a 2006 picture provided by Google Earth that appears to show Predator drones at Shamsi air base 200 miles southwest of Quetta.
A senior U.S. official confirmed to FOX News that Pakistani leaders — despite their public protests and denials — have been giving the U.S. some targets in the tribal areas of their own enemies, and have given the U.S. blanket permission to go after any “Arabs” in those areas because they are assumed to be Al Qaeda operatives.
The Pakistanis themselves are still officially denying the arrangement, a decision predicated on the weak federal government and extreme anti-Americanism in tribal communities, particularly the Federally Administered Tribal Area in the Northwest, where Taliban and Al Qaeda support is strongest.
Feinstein’s remarks, which were characterized as “foolish” by U.S. officials, were unusual for the experienced chairwoman of the intelligence panel.
According to intelligence sources, Feinstein’s statement, at a hearing on the threat assessment with new Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair, appears to be the first time a member of the U.S. government has publicly acknowledged that Predator vehicles are operating from a base inside Pakistan.
via Source
Pakistan Troops and Tribesmen Fire At US Helicopters
September 23, 2008 by national
Filed under Stories of Interest
Pakistani troops and tribesmen opened fire on two United States helicopters that crossed from Afghanistan into a north-western tribal region, intelligence officials said yesterday.
The helicopters did not return fire and re-entered Afghan airspace without landing, the officials said.
They said informants in the field told them of the incursion about a mile inside the disputed and poorly demarcated border in the Alwara Mandi area in North Waziristan.
Pakistan’s army and the US military in Afghanistan said they had no information on the reported incursion.
The number of missile attacks by US drone aircraft in the remote tribal areas has multiplied in recent weeks.
A week ago, US helicopters reportedly landed near Angoor Ada, a border village in South Waziristan, but returned towards Afghanistan after troops fired warning shots. The US action prompted General Ashfaq Kayani to issue a statement saying that foreign troops would not be allowed on Pakistani soil and Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity would be defended at all costs.
The latest alleged incident will add to tensions between Islamabad and Washington

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=28ffd27e-d565-4ef3-92a3-937ef05b3baa)