May 25th Wikileaks: Civil-military tensions over US funding for army

Bilal_Mushi

Minister (2k+ posts)
Civil-military tensions over US funding for army

By Madiha Sattar | From the Newspaper (3 hours ago) Today


shaukat-tarin-reut-500.jpg
“Promising that he would not reduce the military’s budget based on US assistance flows, Tarin said that the finance ministry needs to be kept aware for overall budgeting purposes. Army Chief of Staff General Kayani does not pass on this information.” - Photo by Reuters (Thumbnail illustration by Hasaan Haider/Dawn.com)



KARACHI: The Pakistani government had complained to the US about being unaware of American funding provided directly to the Pakistan military, reveal previously unpublished American diplomatic cables. The reports also disclose tensions between the civilian government and the army over the use funds provided for counterinsurgency operations.

In a November 2009 meeting with former US Ambassador Anne Patterson, then Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin “appealed to the ambassador to keep him informed of funds the US directs to the Pakistani military.

“Promising that he would not reduce the military’s budget based on US assistance flows, Tarin said that the finance ministry needs to be kept aware for overall budgeting purposes. Army Chief of Staff General Kayani does not pass on this information.”

In an earlier meeting in September, “the Ambassador said the USG had purchased $370m in equipment for the military through FY09 Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund (PCCF) supplemental funds. Tarin said he was unaware of this.”

At the time the finance minister added that he “would work to see that the purchases of these items were removed from the army’s capital budget.”
In the November 2009 meeting Tarin also provided numbers to prove that the vast majority of Coalition Support Funds (CSF) given to Gen Pervez Musharraf’s government — money provided as reimbursements for expenses incurred to support America’s efforts against Al Qaeda and the Taliban — had not been used for counterinsurgency purposes, or even for the military.

According to Tarin, the finance ministry “had done a detailed analysis and concluded that, of the total of $6.6bn the US had provided to Pakistan under the Coalition Support Fund, only some $250m had actually gone to the Pakistani army under (then) President Musharraf; the rest had gone into the regular budget, protestations by the then-government to the contrary notwithstanding.”

While previously published cables have revealed US concerns about possibly inflated CSF claims by the army, a new cable reveals that America also feared the civilian government that succeeded Gen Musharraf would continue to use the CSF for budgetary support.

“The temptation for the new coalition government to tap CSF for non-military purposes will be high; if we are going to consider ways to improve the implementing mechanisms of CSF, the time to act is now,” noted a cable from March 2008.

“The new coalition government will be seeking new sources of revenue to pay for social programs promised in the campaign; the large military budget and the CSF payments will be a tempting target to mine.”

The civilian government, in turn, expressed mistrust about the army’s use of CSF funds. “The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) finance expert, Syed Naveed Qamar … expressed skepticism of the military’s CSF claims and asked the US to increase oversight and ensure that ‘claims were not over-inflated or siphoned off into private coffers.’

“The presumptive Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) finance minister also expressed his conviction that the military budget should be more transparent and subject to parliamentary scrutiny.”

These statements only buttress American claims that the army has inflated CSF claims; one previously published cable, for example, has mentioned a $26m claim for barbed wire and a $70m claim for radar maintenance against an enemy that does not pose an air threat.

On the other hand, in another previously published cable Gen Kayani had claimed to then CENTCOM commander Gen David Petraeus in January 2009 that “only 40 per cent of the money had been returned to military coffers in the past. Kayani said the money had mostly supported the federal government’s budget.”

The comment ending the March 2008 took note of this mistrust on both sides. “If CSF is going to be reformed it must be done soon. Delaying much longer threatens to create tension between a civilian government we are eager to support and a military that plays a vital role in the fight against extremism. It is time to manage expectations on both sides.”

Cables referenced: WikiLeaks # 134295, 146991, 188670, 223755, 233602. All cables are available on Dawn.com.






UAE was upset over leak about Balochistan airstrip

By Qurat ul ain Siddiqui | From the Newspaper (4 hours ago) Today


Shamsi-Air-Base-balochistan-500.jpg
Google Earth image of Shamsi Airbase in February 2006. - (Thumbnail illustration by Hasaan Haider/Dawn.com)



KARACHI: The UAE government was extremely concerned, as far back as 2005, that details about its military cooperation with the Americans at a Pakistani airstrip had been leaked. Speaking to a US diplomat in Abu Dhabi, an official from the UAE government “expressed his displeasure…that some details of the UAE`s cooperation with the US military in Pakistan have become public,” a confidential US diplomatic cable obtained by Dawn reveals.

The May 11, 2005 conversation between Ahmed Al Musally, Director of the Asian and African Affairs Department at the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the US Deputy Chief of Mission in the UAE was reported in a cable dated May 14, 2005 written by then Ambassador Michele J. Sison.

Mr Al Musally complained that retired Gen Tommy Franks, former commander of the United States Central Command (CENTCOM), in his memoir “American Soldier” had mentioned that “US forces had made use of Sheikh Zayed`s private airstrip in Balochistan.” Mr Al Musally said that this “leak” was brought to his attention by the then UAE ambassador in Pakistan who sent him an article published in a Pakistani newspaper on April 27, 2005 which “criticises the Pakistani Government for keeping secrets, and… applauds General Frank`s openness in his book about the cooperation between Pakistan, the US, and other allies.”

It should be noted that on May 13, 2011, days after the Abbottabad operation, Pakistan`s deputy chief of air staff in an in-camera briefing reportedly revealed to the parliament that the Shamsi airbase in Balochistan – alleged to be a base for American drones – had been under the control of the UAE – and not the Pakistan Air Force – since the 1990s. Moreover, press reports in the past have also referred to the Shamsi airbase as being in use by US forces.

Mr Al Musally further specified that “the UAEG [UAE government] desires to keep details of the UAE cooperation with the US military in Afghanistan and Pakistan confidential, because the [UAE] government is concerned that public acknowledgement of this assistance could pose risks” to the security of UAE officials within the UAE or in Pakistan.

Mr Musally moreover noted that “members of the UAE`s ruling families frequently visit Pakistan for hunting,” and the information may compromise their security. “He noted that there are 500,000 to 600,000 Pakistanis residing in the UAE…`Maybe they can`t do anything here [in the UAE], but they might try there (i.e. Pakistan), especially when our leaders travel there.`”

The complaint moreover led to a meeting between the American envoy to the UAE and the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Abdullah Rashid Al Noaimi on May 14, 2005. In that meeting, Ambassador Sison assured the Emirati official that “the Embassy would relay the UAEG`s concerns regarding this matter to Washington.”

Cable referenced: WikiLeaks # 32618.
Cable available on Dawn.com.