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* CIA pays tribesmen to plant devices that guide drones to Al Qaeda, Taliban shelters

LAHORE: The CIA is giving Pakistani tribesmen electronic transmitters to help it target and kill Al Qaeda leaders, a tactic it suggests Pakistani military can also use.

Over the last 18 months, US officials claim, nine of the top 20 Al Qaeda figures have been killed in drone strikes. That success is reportedly in part thanks to the ‘chips’ that have become a source of fear.

“Everyone is talking about it,” said Taj Muhammad Wazir. “People are scared that if a pathrai [chip] comes into your house, a drone will attack it.” CIA pays tribesmen to plant the electronic devices at Al Qaeda and Taliban commanders’ shelters. Guided by the signal from the chip, a drone destroys the building with a salvo of missiles.

According to newspaper estimates, the campaign approved by President Barack Obama, has killed 700 people since 2006 all except 14 of them unintended victims.

Last month the Taliban issued a video confession by Habibur Rehman, 19, who said he was paid Rs 20,000 to drop microchips hidden in a cigarette wrapper at the home of a target. He said his handler promised more money if the strike was successful, and protection if he was caught. A former CIA officer who served in Waziristan in 2006 said that small American teams comprising CIA agents, radio experts and special forces soldiers are stationed inside Pakistani military bases across the tribal belt. From there, the CIA recruits a network of informers – known as “cut-outs” – to help identify targets. In most cases they are poor local men. Support for the drone strikes is strongest among security officials in the NWFP. “They are very precise, very effective, and the Taliban and Al Qaeda dread them,” said the provincial police chief, Malik Naveed Khan. The NWFP authorities are currently preparing for up to 500,000 more internally displaced persons to be forced to flee by a South Waziristan operation. daily times monitor
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp...009_pg7_26

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Mysterious ‘chip’ is CIA’s latest weapon against al-Qaeda




Tuesday, June 02, 2009

News Desk

WASHINGTON: The CIA is equipping Pakistani tribesmen with secret electronic transmitters to help target and kill al-Qaeda leaders in the tribal belt, in a tactic that could aid the Pakistan’s Army as it takes the battle against extremism to the Taliban heartland, the Guardian reported.

As the Army mops up Taliban resistance in the Swat valley, where a defence official predicted fighting would be over within days, the focus is shifting to Waziristan and the Taliban warlord Baitullah Mehsud.

But a deadly war of wits is already under way in the region, where tribesmen say the US is using advanced technology and old-fashioned cash to target the enemy.Over the last 18 months, the US has launched more than 50 drone attacks, mostly in South and North Waziristan. US officials claim nine of the top 20 al-Qaeda figures have been killed.

That success is reportedly in part thanks to the mysterious electronic devices, dubbed “chips” or “Pathrai” (the Pashto word for a metal device), which have become a source of fear, intrigue and fascination.

“Everyone is talking about it,” said Taj Muhammad Wazir, a student from South Waziristan. “People are scared that if a Pathrai comes into your house, a drone will attack it.” According to residents and Taliban propaganda, the CIA pays tribesmen to plant the electronic devices near farmhouses sheltering al-Qaeda and Taliban commanders.

Hours or days later, a drone, guided by the signal from the chip, destroys the building with a salvo of missiles. “There are body parts everywhere,” said Wazir, who witnessed the aftermath of a strike.

Until now the drone strikes were the only threat to the militants in Waziristan, where the Pakistani Army had, in effect, abandoned the fight. But now, emboldened by a successful campaign to drive the militants out of Swat, the Army is preparing to regain lost ground in the more remote tribal belt.

It will be a much tougher campaign than in Swat, with the Army pitched against a formidable, battle-hardened opponent. On Sunday, Taliban fighters ambushed a military position in what could be a prelude to much more intense combat.

For the US military, drones have proved to be an effective weapon against al-Qaeda targets, and they are becoming increasingly accurate. On Jan 1, a drone-fired missile killed Usama al-Kimi, a Kenyan militant, who orchestrated last year’s Marriott hotel bombing in Islamabad, a senior official with Pakistan’s ISI spy agency said.

It is a high-tech assassination operation for one of the world’s most remote areas. The pilotless aircraft, Predators or more sophisticated Reapers, take off from a base in Balochistan. But they are guided by a joystick-wielding operator half a world away, at a US air force base 35 miles north of Las Vegas.

Barack Obama has approved the drone campaign, which is cheap and limits the danger posed to US troops. But the strikes have many unintended victims. A Pakistani newspaper estimated that 700 people had been killed since 2006, most of them civilians, as a result of drone attacks.

For the tribesmen who plant the microchips and get it wrong, the consequences can be terrible. Last month the Taliban issued a video confession by Habibur Rehman, 19. “The money was good,” he said in a quavering voice, describing how he was paid 20,000 rupees (£166) to drop microchips hidden in a cigarette wrapper at the home of a target.

Rehman said his handler promised thousands of pounds if the strike was successful and protection if he was caught. The end of the video showed Rehman being shot dead with three other alleged spies. Residents say such executions ñ there have been at least 100 ñ indicate how much the drone strikes have worried the Taliban.

In Wana, foreign fighters are shunning the bazaars and shops, and locals are shunning the fighters. “Before, the common people used to sit with the militants,” said Wazir. “Now they are also afraid.”

Paranoid militant commanders are closely monitoring cross-border traffic with Afghanistan, from where they suspect the chip-carrying CIA spies are coming, said Imtiaz Wazir, a resident of Spin Wam village in North Waziristan. “If I go to Afghanistan without any purpose, the militants come to ask why,” he said.

A local transporter named Haji Hamid who gave the wrong answer, he said, was found shot dead two months ago, his legs and fingers broken. A former CIA officer who served in Waziristan in 2006 said small American teams comprising CIA agents, radio experts and special forces soldiers are stationed inside Pakistani military bases across the tribal belt.

From there, the CIA recruits a network of paid, and sometimes unwitting, informers ñ known as “cut-outs” ñ to help identify targets, he added. In most cases they are poor local men. Ironically, support for the drone strikes is strongest in the frontier, especially among embattled security officials. “They are very precise, very effective, and the Taliban and al-Qaeda dread them,” said the provincial police chief, Malik Naveed Khan. “The problem with the Americans is that the only instrument up their sleeve is the hammer, and they see everything as a nail,” said a senior official.

The ISI resents the US for failing to target Mehsud, whose deputy claimed for last week’s Lahore attack that killed at least 24 people, including an ISI colonel. But as the Army prepares to attack South Waziristan, with broad public support, the warlord’s luck may be running out. Authorities in NWFP are preparing for up to 500,000 refugees, added to 2.5 million displaced by operations in Swat.

Mehsud faces other challenges, too. Rival militant groups, with Army support, are challenging his dominance in South Waziristan. And he faces the ever-present danger that some visitor could drop a “Pathrai” at his doorstep, and bring an American drone with it.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/top_story_detail.asp?Id=22483
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