UPDATE Pentagon Says Pakistan Fired On U.S. Aircraft, Expects Explanation - With Video
Still waiting to hear from the Paki Government….
1:00 PM PST
(AP)
Pakistani troops fire on US helicopters at border
KABUL, Afghanistan - Pakistani troops fired at American reconnaissance helicopters near the Afghan-Pakistan border Thursday, and ground troops then exchanged fire, the U.S. military said.
No injuries were reported, but the incident heightened tensions as the U.S. steps up cross-border operations in a volatile region known as a haven for Taliban and al-Qaida militants.
Two American OH-58 reconnaissance helicopters, known as Kiowas, were on a routine afternoon patrol in the eastern province of Khost when they received small-arms fire from a Pakistani border post, said Tech Sgt. Kevin Wallace, a U.S. military spokesman. There was no damage to aircraft or crew, officials said.
U.S. Central Command spokesman Rear Adm. Greg Smith said Pakistan and American ground troops exchanged fire after Pakistani forces shot at the helicopters.
He said a joint patrol of Americans and Afghan border police was moving about a mile and a half inside Afghanistan with the helicopters above them. The ground troops reported that Pakistani forces fired toward the helicopters and when they saw that happen, they fired off suppression rounds toward the hilltop.
They did so, Smith said from Centcom headquarters in Tampa, Fla., “to make certain that they (the Pakistanis) realized they should stop shooting.”
The Pakistani border patrol forces then shot back down on the joint location of the U.S.-Afghan patrol. “The whole thing lasted five minutes,” Smith said.
The Pakistani military, however, said its troops fired warning shots after the helicopters crossed “well within” Pakistani territory.
“On this, the helicopters returned fire and flew back,” the Pakistani military said in an English-language statement.
And in New York, Pakistan’s new president, Asif Ali Zardari, said his military fired only “flares” at foreign helicopters that he claimed strayed across the border from Afghanistan.
Zardari said his forces fired only as a way “to make sure that they know that they crossed the border line.”
“Sometimes the border is so mixed that they don’t realize they have crossed the border,” he told reporters before he began a meeting with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
The Pakistani military said the matter was “being resolved” in consultations between the army and the NATO force in Afghanistan. A NATO statement said the militaries were “working together to resolve the matter.”
The U.S. has stepped up attacks on suspected militants in the frontier area, mostly by missiles fired from unmanned drones operating from Afghanistan. The incursions  especially a ground raid into South Waziristan by American commandos Sept. 3  have angered many Pakistanis.
Pakistani army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said last week that Pakistani field commanders have previously tolerated international forces crossing a short way into Pakistan because of the ill-defined and contested nature of the mountainous frontier.
“But after the (Sept. 3) incident, the orders are clear,” Abbas said. “In case it happens again in this form, that there is a very significant detection, which is very definite, no ambiguity, across the border, on ground or in the air: open fire.”
On Wednesday, Pakistan’s army said it had found the wreckage of a suspected surveillance drone in South Waziristan, but denied claims by Pakistani intelligence officials that troops and local people shot down the aircraft.
In Washington, Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said the coalition immediately requested an explanation from Pakistan for what he described as a “troubling” incident.
“It would be fairly hard to mistake a helicopter flying in that region as anything but ISAF or U.S.,” Whitman said.
He said militants have always tried to exploit the border region.
“It’s a challenge along the border and that’s why we continue to look for ways to improve our coordination,” Whitman said.
Asked how Pakistani forces could mistake U.S. helicopters for enemy forces  especially since Taliban and al-Qaida forces don’t have aircraft  Whitman said: “Only Pakistan can articulate their intent.”
Pakistani civilian leaders have condemned the cross-border operations by U.S. forces, which have been authorized by President Bush, while the army has vowed to defend Pakistan’s territory “at all cost.”
“We will not tolerate any act against our sovereignty and integrity in the name of the war against terrorism,” Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told journalists Wednesday. “We are fighting extremism and terror not for any another country, but our own country. This is our own war.”
Pakistan’s tribal areas have become a breeding ground for Taliban and al-Qaida militants, who are launching attacks inside Pakistan but also across the border into Afghanistan, where the levels of violence have reached record heights since the ouster of the Taliban from power in the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.
More than 4,600 people  mostly militants  have died this year in insurgency-related violence in Afghanistan, and the levels of violence in the eastern Afghanistan are 30 percent higher compared to the same period last year, officials say.
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Just Breaking: The Pentagon is waiting for Pakistan’s Response ASAP! And they fired on troops on the Afghan side of the border.
Pakistani troops fired on U.S. helicopters patrolling easter Afganistan Thursday, The Pentagon reported, saying it expects an explanation.
According to Pakistan, their own troops and foreign helicopters both opened fire in the Afghan border incident.
The Associated Press reported that Pakistani troops fired at NATO helicopters, but no damage was reported.
The Pentagon said U.S. helicopters “at no point” crossed into Pakistan’s airspace and that they were shot at near Tanai district of Khost province.
“ISAF helicopters received small-arms fire from a Pakistan military checkpoint along the border near Tanai district, Khost, September 25 while conducting routine operations in Afghanistan,” the International Security Assistance Force said in a statement, according to AFP.
The shooting follows a number of alleged incursions by U.S. aircraft into Pakistan from Afghanistan in recent days. A drone believed to be operated by the CIA crashed inside Pakistan on Wednesday.
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Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan’s military fired at NATO helicopters along the country’s border with Afghanistan as the aircraft were conducting operations, the alliance said.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization aircraft weren’t hit by the small-arms fire from a military border checkpoint near the Tanai district in Afghanistan’s eastern Khowst province, NATO said in an e-mailed statement. The alliance said it was working with the military in Pakistan “to resolve the matter.”
“At no time did ISAF helicopters cross into Pakistani airspace,” NATO said. The alliance said it would release more information as it became available. NATO heads the International Security and Assistance Force, or ISAF, in Afghanistan.
The incident could add to tension between the West and Pakistan, which has blamed U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan for conducting several cross-border raids. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari declared this month that such activity is a violation of sovereignty and would no longer be tolerated.
Pakistan’s military said Sept. 16 it reserves the right to retaliate in self-defense and ordered army units to bring a halt to cross-border incursions. Yesterday the military said a U.S. spy plane malfunctioned and crashed in the tribal region of South Waziristan while flying over the border area.
Fighters, Weapons
Afghan and NATO forces have struggled to stem the flow of fighters and weapons across the mountainous 2,430-kilometer (1,510-mile) border, which fuels the Taliban-led insurgency aimed at toppling Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told the Senate Armed Services Committee in Washington this week that the Pentagon has presidential permission to strike Taliban and al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan. He said the United Nations charter gives a nation the right of self-defense when a foreign government is unable or unwilling to deal with terrorist activity inside its borders.
Zardari met two days ago with President George W. Bush in New York, where the two leaders attended the UN General Assembly.
“Your words have been very strong about Pakistan’s sovereign right and sovereign duty to protect your country and the United States wants to help,” Bush said before the meeting.
Pakistan has “problems” it is working to resolve, Zardari said. “We should come together in this hard time and we will share the burden and responsibility with the world.”






