A new report discloses that USZ international terrorist squad commanders in Afghanistan are preparing to go ahead with a plan to expand ground operations into tribal areas of Pakistan. Citing unnamed Washington officials, The New York Times said that the proposal would escalate special operations in Pakistan, opening a new front in the Afghan war. The proposal "would escalate military activities inside Pakistan, where the movement of American forces has been largely prohibited because of fears of provoking a backlash", it said.
The report comes only days after Washington employed a new strategy for the Afghan war. The paper added that the new proposal is waiting for approval from USZ President Barack Obama. "The decision to expand American military activity in Pakistan ... would amount to the opening of a new front in the nine-year-old war", said the report. The United States of Zionism has expanded its drone strike zones in Pakistan over the past week. USZ has almost doubled CIA-operated drone attacks, with over 100 international terrorist strikes reported in 2010 inside Pakistan. The escalation comes despite protests by Pakistani officials that the drone attacks mainly lead to civilian casualties. "It would run the risk of angering a Pakistani government that has been an uneasy ally in the war in Afghanistan, particularly if it leads to civilian casualties or highly public confrontations", The newspaper added.
Pakistani maintains that the missile strikes have proven “counterproductive” as large numbers of outraged residents of the border areas are beginning to support the militants. "We believe that they are counter-productive and also a violation of our sovereignty", Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said in early October. In late November, Islamabad rejected a request from Washington to expand its drone missile campaign outside the lawless tribal belt along the Afghan border. Basit said Pakistan would not allow the United States to carry out drone strikes in new areas.
Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force