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Convoy attacks expose Achilles' heel of Afghan war

Pakistani police look for evidence beside still smoldering oil trucks in Shikarpur, southern Pakistan on Friday Oct. 1, 2010. (AP Photo / Aaron Favila) A Pakistani fire fighter gestures toward his colleague next to burning oil tankers after militants attacked a terminal in Quetta, Pakistan on Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2010. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt) Pakistani fire fighters struggle to extinguish burning oil tankers after militants attacked a terminal in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, early Monday, Oct. 4, 2010. (AP / Anjum Naveed) A Pakistani driver looks for items inside an oil tanker that was attacked by suspected militants at a terminal in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on Monday, Oct. 4, 2010. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Pakistani police look for evidence beside still smoldering oil trucks in Shikarpur, southern Pakistan on Friday Oct. 1, 2010. (AP Photo / Aaron Favila)

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Date: Sunday Oct. 10, 2010 9:41 PM ET

The imminent reopening of a crucial border crossing in the Khyber Pass has laid bare one of the vulnerabilities NATO forces are grappling with in prosecuting the war in Afghanistan -- the uneasy, love-hate relationship between Pakistan and the United States.

After nearly two weeks, the Foreign Ministry in Islamabad issued a statement Saturday stating that it will soon reopen the Torkham border post, which lies on a busy supply route to Kabul.

The Pakistani government shuttered the border crossing on Sept. 30, after three of its soldiers were mistakenly killed in an attack by a U.S. helicopter.

The American ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, apologized for the incident. But the closure has sparked fresh tensions between Washington and Islamabad, partly due to the indispensable role Pakistan plays in supplying the 142,000 coalition troops stationed in Afghanistan, most of whom are American.

The bulk of NATO's fuel and other non-lethal material crosses Pakistan overland from the port of Karachi. Three-quarters of those goods enter Afghanistan via the Khyber Pass, making the Torkham border crossing logistically vital.

"Afghanistan is a very hard place to fight a war because of its physical geographic location," said Sunil Ram, a security expert and professor of land warfare at American Military University. "This is one of the strategic bottlenecks."

Taliban attacks

Aggravating the situation, groups of armed men have attacked tankers laden with NATO fuel on Pakistani soil. The militants are believed to have torched more than 100 tankers in a string of assaults since Oct. 1.

They have targeted fuel trucks that were backed up waiting to cross the Khyber Pass, as well as those making their way to Pakistan's second border crossing to Afghanistan, near the city of Quetta farther south.

The Pakistani Taliban has claimed responsibility for at least two of the assaults. A spokesperson for the group, Azam Tariq, told CNN the fuel trucks were "logistic support for the NATO forces who killed our innocent sisters and brothers in Afghanistan."

However, Ram said private contractors, who are tasked with transporting the fuel, may have spurred the attacks by failing to keep up on payments to the Taliban after the Torkham border post closed.

"The bottom line is, it's about the payoffs," he said, citing sources in military intelligence on both sides of the border. "In the background, the Taliban are saying, ‘Let's get our payoffs back in place and we'll stop blowing your stuff up.'"

The issue of private contractors paying militants has been well documented in Afghanistan. In the latest reported instance, private security forces linked to the Taliban were hired to guard a U.S. base, according to an investigation by the U.S. Senate.

Kamran Bokhari, South Asia director with the global intelligence firm STRATFOR, described the fuel tankers as "a target of opportunity."

"The supply line is just so long, and it runs through several areas where militants are active, that it's not hard for them to hit these trucks," he said. "All you need is a bunch of guys and the ability to torch stuff."

Uneasy allies

The wayward helicopter attack, the subsequent border-crossing closure and fuel tanker attacks have strained already troubled relations between Islamabad and Washington.

Pakistan's high commissioner to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, said Friday that U.S. authorities were acting on "internal political dynamics" relating to the upcoming midterm elections when they issued a travel alert about militants in Pakistan planning to attack European cities.

On Thursday, the Foreign Ministry in Islamabad criticized the U.S. for what it believes is an increase in the frequency of drone attacks. The Pakistani government has also forbidden cross-border raids by foreign forces, seeing them as violations of the country's sovereignty.

For its part, Washington has accused Islamabad of failing to take action against elements of the Taliban who are keen to fight in Afghanistan but are not hostile to the Pakistani state.

Earlier in the week, a White House report to the Congress warned that Pakistan's military had made a "political choice" to "avoid military engagements that would put it in direct conflict with Afghan Taliban or al Qaeda forces in North Waziristan," according to an unclassified version of the report obtained by Agence France-Presse.

Some officials in Washington suspect the recent fuel tanker attacks were encouraged by elements within Pakistan's intelligence service "to put pressure on the United States not to make incursions into Pakistan," Bokhari said.

He called the current state of U.S.-Pakistan relations "the most tense period between the two sides since this war began."

"But that doesn't mean there will be a breach," he added. "It's kind of like a love-hate relationship."

Pakistan depends on the $2 billion in aid money that flows into its economy from Washington every year. The U.S., in addition to relying on ground supply routes in Pakistan to fuel the NATO war effort, has become increasingly focused on crushing Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan's tribal areas.

At the heart of the problem, the two governments have failed to agree on "which Taliban groups can be accommodated and which have to be militarily dealt with," Bokhari said.

"That's the clash," he added. "They need to find a middle path, but so far that's not happening."

Comments are now closed for this story

Hans Müller
said

The US, Canada, Germany etc must understand that THEY are the invaders. Got it ?


Norm in Calgary
said

The only problem with withdrawing from Afghanistan is what happens then? The Taliban will over run the country and they will be free to establish Osama HQ and anti-US training sites all over the place. That can't be good for us. Either way the war continues in Afghanistan or in our cities over here.


Goldens
said

You got that right Tom! This loss should be taken out of the Aid to Pakistan. Jonh W Bridgetown NS


CraigW
said

Maybe if the U.S. killed more innocent civilians in Pakistan by accident, the people will start to see that the U.S. is only doing this for their own good and start to embrace the invasion instead of resisting. I am always amazed at how the U.S. thinks that such deaths are just a "by product" of war and figures that the families of those innocent victims should get and just accept that as well.


Bjorndor
said

If your logistical support is under attack, maybe it would be a good idea to get rid of the private security firms that pay off the Taliban and get a few soldiers with some LAVs to guard them!


CD from AB
said

Pye Chartt is on the nose. Pakistan has been using clandestine third party militia for years (the Taliban). This is to distance their own troops to act as a means of inciting issues with India in the Kyber pass. If India and Pakistan have issues, the US has come to the aid of Pakistan - especially in terms of military aid and support. Pakistan frequently provides the Taliban with refuge (in the FATA areas) and military equipment/funding in return for not turning on the government itself. Hence, Musharraf came to be victim of his own internal terror group. Now the Pakistanis are using the Taliban to threaten the fuel supplies of ISAF in order to call for more funding.To use foreign military aid as a primary source of maintaining an oligarchy is untenable. The one thing that Pakistan could learn from India is that participating in honest commerce, not funded bloodshed is a way to operate in the 21st century.


JJ in Vancouver
said

That supply lines are the achilles heel of a war effort is NOT new information. Neither is it news that Pakistan is playing both sides against the middle. Isn't it amazing how these attacks only happen when Pakistan is displeased? Pakistan is the enemy. They need to be treated accordingly.


Prof. Pye Chartt
said

Perhaps America needs to rethink its $2B in aid, as Pakistan continues to operate more like a passive and frustrating enemy than a dedicated ally. When people in that part of the world need to be bribed to adopt your cause, you're destined for lasting trouble and counterproductive conflict. There's no sense of "right" or "wrong" amongst those who cannot appreciate the difference. Corruption is at the heart of most business, including military dealings. How does all of this relate to our ultimate objective and overall goal in Afghanistan? Who knows, for our mission has become too logistically complicated, politically fuzzy, militarily ill-defined, and internationally disjointed. It is gradually becoming a farce, where minimal progress is touted as significant achievement. As a supporter of the original cause, I can only now view Canada's scheduled plan to quit the mission as a sad but necessary one. "Victory" has been too elusive for too long. (Military efforts that are less than all-or-nothing, and fought with political correctness, are seldom successful.) When the news informs us that plotting terrorists hatched from our soil enjoy "training" in that part of the world, it registers the overriding reality of it all. Time to reassess the encompassing strategy.


Richard in New Brunswick
said

I sure hope no living things in outer space are monitoring the goings on here on Earth.It's so embarassing. Have you ever in your life witnessed so many millions involved in such profound stupidity? There is so much to say but what's the use? Those making huge amounts of money from "war" will completely ignore complaints from the "peanut gallery" and will continue to ensure that conflict continues. The Afghan people and the Canadian people have no conflict. It's our leadership and big business that are 100% responsible. All we get to do is PAY FOR IT. It makes me sick.


KJ in Kingston Ontario
said

Never any good news from this campaign is there.

charlie
said

When Pakistan stops playing the western nations for suckers, and starts working co-operatively with us, perhaps they will get a better response to their various problems. I cannot imagine the gaul - set up the Taliban through their ISI group, create the atmosphere for these goofs to create no end of problems for the western nations, give both aid and succor to these low-lifes, give the back of their hand to co-operation with the west, while making supportive sounds every so often to deflect the real conclusion that they are a bunch of duplicitious bast***s, - have a flood - oops, help us - money only, please - or we will deal with the Taliban who will (as if the Taliban even could) - oh, and while you help us out we will set up your supply lines for attack. Anyone stupid enough to donate money will see it go down the bottomless abyss of corruption, naturally. Great bunch of reliable allies - not! And on top of this, they have nukes! As the old saying goes "with friends like this, who needs enemies".


Tom
said

And they can't figure out why donations for their flood relief are down.


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