AP/ July 27, 2012, 11:01 PM

Pakistan official slams drones ahead of CIA talks

Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's new ambassador to the US, talks to media representatives in Islamabad on November 23, 2011.

Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's new ambassador to the US, talks to media representatives in Islamabad on November 23, 2011. / AAMIR QURESHI/AFP/Getty Images

(AP) ASPEN, Colo. - Pakistan's ambassador to the United States is calling for an end to CIA drone strikes ahead of an intelligence summit in Washington between the two countries expected next week.

In a frank debate Friday with White House war adviser Douglas Lute, Ambassador Sherry Rehman said the drone attacks have already succeeded in damaging al Qaeda but are now only serving to recruit new militants. The two were speaking to an audience at the Aspen Security Forum.

"I am not saying drones have not assisted in the war against terror, but they have diminishing rate of returns," Rehman said, speaking by video teleconference from Washington.

"We will seek an end to drone strikes and there will be no compromise on that," she added.

Pakistan's spy chief, Lt. Gen. Zaheerul Islam, is expected to reiterate the demand in his first meeting with CIA Director David Petraeus, at CIA headquarters in Virginia, next week.

Lute would not comment on the drone program, but U.S. officials have said privately that the program will continue because Pakistan has proved incapable or unwilling to target militants the U.S. considers dangerous.

A long-sought U.S. apology to Pakistan over a deadly border incident cleared the way to restart counterterrorism talks, in which Pakistani officials say the U.S. also will be asked to feed intelligence gathered by the pilotless aircraft to Pakistani jets and ground forces so they can target militants. While neither side expects much progress, officials from both countries see the return to dialogue as a chance to repair a relationship dented by a series of incidents that damaged trust on both sides. U.S. officials remain angry over what they say is Pakistan's support of Taliban groups, including the militant Haqqani network, who shelter in Pakistan's tribal areas and attack troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

A key insult for Pakistan remains last year's U.S. Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil, conducted without Pakistan's permission.

Rehman defended Pakistan's arrest of Dr. Shakil Afridi, who has been sentenced to more than three decades in prison for aiding the CIA in tracking down bin Laden by conducting a vaccine program in the military town where the terrorist mastermind turned out to be hiding. U.S. lawmakers have threatened to halt millions of dollars in aid to Pakistan if Afridi is not released, in recognition of his contribution to helping track down bin Laden. Afridi is appealing his sentence.

"He had no clue he was looking for Osama bin Laden," Rehman countered. "He was contracting with a foreign intelligence agency."

She added that Afridi's actions put thousands of children at risk because some vaccine programs had to be ended after Pakistani aid workers were targeted by the Taliban.

She also dismissed as "outrageous" a claim by some lawmakers that Pakistan is harboring al Qaeda or other militants who intend to harm the U.S.

She said Pakistan's army was working hard to combat the militants, including reporting 52 times to NATO in recent months when militants were spotted crossing into Afghan territory.

"Pakistan is maxed out on the international border with Afghanistan," she said of Pakistani efforts.

"Sovereignty has privileges but also comes with responsibilities," countered Lute who called for Pakistan to step up its efforts and to cease "hedging its bets" by supporting the Afghan Taliban.

The two did agree, however, that Pakistan could help broker an eventual peace deal with the Taliban.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
14 Comments Add a Comment
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GTR5 says:
We need to stop all aid money to Pakistan and stop issuing Visas to the Pakis to come here. The Pakis here are all a national security threat anyway and they should have their Visas revoked and be sent home. No more money, no more Visas and no apologies.
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hajimuhammud replies:
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You americans are so arrogant,buly,ignorant and fed by your so called free media with wrong information about other countries of the world.You think you are god's gift to the world and you are never do any wrong.The reality is this kind of your attitude makes other people of the world hate you.Unless your country changes its ways of domination,you will left with no friends in the world.Remember what happend to the great nations in the past history.It may happen to you as well.
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GTR5 says:
We need to stop all aid money to Pakistan and stop issuing Visas to the Pakis to come here. The Pakis here are all a national security threat anyway and they should have their Visas revoked and be sent home. No more money, no more Visas and no apologies.
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audemus says:
Whether Pakistan realizes it or not, when they got in bed with the United States they kissed their autonomy goodbye. Time and time again, they've demonstrated their ineptitude and actual collusion with what the U.S. considers to be "The Enemy", if they weren't so vital to the continued war effort, they'd probably be under attack by us by now.
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formerlyluvnut says:
Boy, for a rag top rep she ain't half bad.
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pcfogarty says:
Pakistan is as Pakistan does . Our relationship with that country will not in the nearest future be anything more than what it has been. That country is so splintered socially and economically that anything that requires consensus would be impossible . We need to be prepared for " On again Off again relationship" with that country and conduct our activities ,in the part of the world accordingly.
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jmn122736 says:
This is a very informative and interesting article.

Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's new ambassador to the US is either naive or inept, or both.

" In defending Pakistan's arrest of Dr. Shakil Afridi: "He had no clue he was looking for Osama bin Laden," Rehman countered. "He was contracting with a foreign intelligence agency.">>>>>>>>>>
This begs the question: Was Dr. Shakil Afridi sentenced to 3 decades in prison because "He was contracting with a foreign intelligence agency" But that he would not even have been arrested if he had actually known he was looking for Osama Bin Laden?

I also like these two exerts:

One; "A key insult for Pakistan remains last year's U.S. Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil, conducted without Pakistan's permission"

Two; "Pakistani officials say the U.S. also will be asked to feed intelligence gathered by the pilotless aircraft to Pakistani jets and ground forces so they can target militants.

The world knows that if Pakistan had known in advance of the Navy SEAL raid, Bin laden would simply not have been there and the Seals may well have been the ones killed and BTW; since Bin Laden remained free and safe inside Pakistan for so many years it is obvious this arrangement was in effect throughout the last administration.

If U.S. intelligence is fed to Pakistan they will simply CONTINUE to aid and protect the militants.

Evidently, it is acceptable to continue using the pilotless drone; but no more of that Bin Laden stuff.
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breedum says:
We should send them another 4 billion, so we can further arm the enemy.
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breedum says:
We should send them another 4 billion, so we can further arm the enemy.
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Bush-cheney-R-Terrorists says:
We need to stop letting Pakistan think that it is a real country. It is a totally corrupt, uneducated halfway house of amoral selfish hypocritical individuals lacking personal hygiene habits, for the most part. Launch the drones.
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UForgotPoland says:
Maybe Pakistan should stop supporting terrorist organizations before they complain about the drone strikes?
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