Pakistan said yesterday it would never allow any expansion in the campaign of drone strikes by the US on its territory.
The Washington Post reported on Friday that the US was seeking to expand the areas inside Pakistan where CIA unmanned aircraft — used for surveillance and to launch missile strikes — could operate.
“As for the reported suggestion by the US to carry out drone attacks beyond our tribal areas, Pakistan’s position is very clear — we would never allow this to happen,” Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said.
“The Americans should rather revisit their drone attack policy and stop carrying out strikes in our tribal areas,” Basit said.
Washington has massively ramped up its drone campaign against militants in areas near the Afghan border over the past two months and argues they are highly effective in the war against al-Qaeda and its Islamist allies.
But the policy is deeply unpopular among the Pakistani public, who see military action on Pakistani soil as a breach of national sovereignty and say some attacks have killed innocent civilians.
Citing unnamed US and Pakistani officials, the Washington Post said that US officials were eyeing areas surrounding the Pakistani city of Quetta, where the leadership of the Afghan Taliban is believed to be hiding.
The request also sought to expand the boundaries for drone strikes in the tribal areas, the report said.
“We already have issues with American drone strikes, which are known to Washington,” Basit said. “These strikes violate our sovereignty, cause collateral damage and above all are producing [a] drone-hardened generation.”
Pakistan has repeatedly said there is no justification for the drone strikes, describing them as “counterproductive” and a violation of the country’s sovereignty.
More than 240 people have been killed in 45 strikes since Sept. 3, angering the government, which is facing criticism for acquiescing to the attacks and reprisals from rebel groups based in the area.
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