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Published 25 Mar, 2012 11:38pm

US unlikely to punish Salala attackers

WASHINGTON, March 25: The US military is not planning to discipline any of its forces over a cross-border skirmish last year that left 24 Pakistani soldiers dead and plunged Washington-Islamabad ties to their lowest point in years, an American military official said on Saturday.    

A US military investigation last year had already exonerated American troops operating in Afghanistan from inappropriate use of force against the Pakistani forces – even as the US military acknowledged some of the blame in the incident.

That investigation concluded that American troops, given what information they had available to them at the time, acted in self-defence and with appropriate force after being fired upon by the Pakistanis just across the border.

The US military official, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, did not offer further details about the decision not to discipline the US forces.

The US investigation also conceded a critical error by US troops, who, due to a mapping error, told Pakistan the cross-border shooting was taking place about 14km from the actual location.

Pakistan responded by saying it had no troops there, which led Americans to conclude there was no danger to Pakistani military personnel.

Pakistan’s military roundly rejected the US findings, saying that apportioning any blame on Pakistani forces was “unjustified andunacceptable”.

Pakistan admitted its posts engaged in “speculative fire,” including the use of mortar bombs, which the US forces interpreted as hostile fire.

But Pakistan denied that it fired in the direction of Afghan and Nato forces and was instead firing at suspected militant movement.—Reuters

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