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Pakistan's Supreme Court on Monday delayed its decision



Pakistan's Supreme Court on Monday delayed its decision on whether or not to investigate the "Memogate" scandal, after Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry continued to pressure Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to give the court a statement in the case (NYTPost). Zardari and his aides are said to be considering a reply to the court about the charges that Zardari hatched the purported plan to remove Pakistan's military and intelligence leadership in the aftermath of the May raid that killed Osama bin Laden (ETWSJ). And Jameel Ahmed, the head of Pakistan's Communist Party, filed a petition with the court Monday seeking the removal of intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha following allegations in the press that Pasha solicited approval in unnamed Arab countries for removing Zardari from office (DawnET). 


BBC Urdu said Monday that a Pakistani investigation into last month's deadly NATO airstrike against Pakistani troops in Mohmand has allegedly concluded that an Afghan army unit, in collaboration with India's Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), sought to draw Pakistani fire in order to be able to call in an airstrike against the border checkpoint (ETDawn). The incident prompted Pakistan to close its border to NATO supplies going into Afghanistan, as a new Senate Foreign Relations Committee report looked into how the U.S. military has diversified its supply routes into the country (ET). And the Tribune reveals that since the May raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan has stopped asking the United States to reimburse it for anti-terrorism operations, costing the country nearly $600 million in the last six months (ET). 

The Post's Karen DeYoung has a major piece Monday chronicling the escalation, internal legal debates, and secrecy that have marked the Obama administration's policy towards drone strikesin Pakistan and elsewhere (Post). DeYoung reports that the State Department has led a push for the administration to publicize some information about its legal justifications and targeting procedures for the strikes, especially those operated by the CIA in Pakistan; she writes that tensions reached their peak in March, after a strike in the country's tribal areas is believed to have killed more than 20 civilians, prompting ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter to reportedly complain to Washington that the program had spiraled "out of control."

Five stories wrap up the Pakistan news: Protests against gas prices have partially shut down routes between the "twin cities" of Islamabad and Rawalpindi (Dawn). At least 55 members of Quetta's Hazara community are believed to be missing after an Indonesian ship bound for Australia packed with illegal immigrants sunk in stormy waters on Saturday (ET). Pakistan's Election Commission has begun enforcing a law barring all holders of dual nationality from running for office in the country's National Assembly (Dawn). Pakistan's Human Rights Commission told the AFP Tuesday that as many as 675 Pakistani women were victims of so-called "honor killings" in the first nine months of 2011 (AFP). And Reuters looks at the increase in exorcisms performed in Pakistan's Sufi shrines (Reuters). 

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Pasha, one of the most powerful men in the South Asian nation, told the all-party gathering that US military action against insurgents in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s intelligence chief on Thursday denied US accusations that the country supports the Haqqani network, an Afghan militant group blamed for an attack on the American embassy in Kabul. “There are other intelligence networks supporting groups who operate inside Afghanistan. We have never paid a penny or provided even a single bullet to the Haqqani network,” Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shuja Pasha told Reuters after meeting political leaders over heavily strained US-Pakistani ties. Pasha, one of the most powerful men in the South Asian nation, told the all-party gathering that US military action against insurgents in Pakistan would be unacceptable and the army would be capable of responding, local media said. But he later said the reports were “baseless”. Pakistan has long faced US demands to attack militants on its side of the border with Afghanistan, but pressure has grown since the top US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, accused Pasha’s Inter-Services Intelligence

Drone Wars: The rationale.The Drone Wars are the new black.

The Drone Wars are the new black. The once covert, highly-secretive and little talked about strategy of using unmanned aerial vehicles to target suspected terrorists in Pakistan and elsewhere has gone mainstream. And now everyone is talking about it. Even Leon Panetta, the former C.I.A. director, whose old agency doesn't officially admit that its drone program exists, is talking about it. Twice in a matter of hours last week he joked about the C.I.A.'s pension for deploying the ominously-named Predator drones. “Obviously I have a hell of a lot more weapons available to me here than I had at the C.I.A.,” he said, referring to his new post as secretary of defense. “Although the Predators aren’t bad.” Complete coverage: The Drone Wars Later that same day, on the tarmac of a naval air base, he said, coyly, that the use of Predators are “something I was very familiar with in my old job.” Soon after, a Predator armed with hellfire missiles took flight from the runway, bound for Libya