US training Pakistani forces to fight Taliban
ISLAMABAD,
Pakistan (AP)
U.S. special forces have begun teaching a Pakistani paramilitary unit
how to fight the Taliban and al-Qaida, hoping to strengthen a key
front-line force as violence surges on both sides of the border with
Afghanistan.
The sensitive mission puts rare American boots on the ground in a key
theater in the war against extremist groups, but it risks fanning anti-U.S.
sentiment among Pakistani Muslims already angry over suspected CIA
missile attacks on militants in the same frontier region.
"The American special forces failed in Afghanistan and Iraq," said
Ameerul Azim, an official in the hard-line Islamic party Jamaat-e-Islami.
"Those who failed everywhere cannot train our people."
Despite such complaints, the training program comes as some tribes in
the frontier zone are setting up militias to help the Pakistani
government combat extremist movements. The new forces have been compared
to the Sunni Arab militias in Iraq that helped beat back the insurgency
there.
Still, the U.S. training program is reportedly smaller than
originally proposed and was delayed, apparently reflecting misgivings in
Pakistan's government about allowing U.S. troops on its territory.
Its start has not been officially announced, but a Pakistani military
officer and a U.S. defense official told The Associated Press that two
to three dozen trainers arrived earlier this month.
The Pakistani said the Americans had already begun training senior
personnel of the paramilitary Frontier Corps at an undisclosed location
in Pakistan's restive northwest, adjacent to Afghanistan. He said the
course included classroom and field exercises.
The Pentagon official said the Americans would stay for a few months.
He said that it would likely be a one-time effort and that there were no
plans to send more trainers.
Both officials agreed to discuss the program only if granted
anonymity, because details had not been made public.
Asked about the program Thursday, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman
declined to give any specifics. But he contrasted the mission with much
larger U.S. training efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, where U.S.
soldiers are embedded with local units on the battlefield.
"It is a train-the-trainer type of concept," Whitman said. "They are
not actually conducting operations."
The Frontier Corps is a relic of British rule that was long a poorly
armed, untrained police force that the government hopes can be remade
into a potent unit capable of confronting Taliban militants.
Its troopers are local men, in contrast to the army, which is
dominated by ethnic Punjabis and is viewed as an occupying force by the
Pashtun tribes living on both sides of the border. U.S. and Pakistani
officials argue that the corps' local knowledge and cultural
sensitivities make it the best tool in a battle where winning hearts and
minds is crucial.
The goal is that a strong Frontier Corps can take on most combat
duties, allowing a gradual pullback of the army that is hoped will ease
tensions in the northwest.
The U.S. has poured some US$10 billion into Pakistan since the
then-president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, turned against his former Taliban
allies in Afghanistan after the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Most of the
money has gone to the army, including the US$70 million earmarked for
the Frontier Corps program.
U.S. forces already trained Pakistan's Special Services Group, a
commando unit that crushed militants holding Islamabad's Red Mosque last
year. Washington also has supplied the helicopter gunships that are
seeing heavy use in army offensives in several Pakistani border regions.
But with the war dragging in Afghanistan, U.S. lawmakers and
commentators have questioned why Pakistan still seems unable to
eradicate militant sanctuaries on its side of the border.
"This thought has come pretty late in the day," Rasul Bakhsh Rais, a
professor of political sciences, said of Pakistan's decision to let the
trainers in. "But still, I don't think it is too late, given the fact
that this is going to be a very long war."
With many Pakistanis accusing their army of fighting a proxy war
against its own citizens at Washington's behest, U.S. officials have
said Pakistan was reluctant to accept foreign training, but softened its
stance in the light of mounting losses.
Musharraf, who was forced out of office earlier this year, announced
a plan in 2007 to build up the Frontier Corps so it could confront
Taliban fighters.
At the time, its troops had no body armor, few vehicles and an
arsenal of only aging rifles. With U.S. help, the corps has received
several more battalions, been armed with tanks and artillery and is now
heavily involved in fighting in the Bajur and Swat areas.
American officials have said they are also supplying equipment such
as helmets, flak vests and night-vision goggles.
"The hope is that the more trainers we train, the more effective they
will be in training their forces and the more capable forces will then
be able to take the fight to the militants in the tribal areas where
they operate," Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said.
The training program has begun despite strains in Pakistani-U.S.
relations.
Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, who replaced Musharraf as army chief, and
the former leader's successor as president, Asif Ali Zardari, have
maintained close ties with Washington. But they have condemned the
recent U.S. missile strikes, the latest of which killed nine people
Thursday.
Cooperation has also been chilled by an incident in June when U.S.
warplanes killed 11 Frontier Corps troopers at a border post. U.S.
officials said the action during a skirmish with militants was
justified. Pakistan's army insists no shots were fired from the post.
U.S. officials suspect some Frontier Corps troops sympathize with the
Taliban and ignore militants sneaking though mountain passes into
Afghanistan to attack U.S. and NATO troops.
Pakistani officials agree the corps has problems, but analysts say a
better trained force is more likely to have the confidence to take on
the militants.
American officials also hope it will become a better partner for
cross-border cooperation.
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