http://tribune.com.pk/story/202213/the-curious-case-of-the-shamsi-airbase/?print=true
[image: The Express Tribune] <http://tribune.com.pk/>
The curious case of the Shamsi airbase
<http://tribune.com.pk/story/202213/the-curious-case-of-the-shamsi-airbase/>
**
By Ejaz Haider <http://tribune.com.pk/author/1344/ejaz-haider/>

Published: July 4, 2011********
The writer was a Ford Scholar at the Programme in Arms Control, Disarmament
and International Security at UIUC (1997) and a visiting fellow at the
Brookings Institution’s Foreign Policy Studies Programme

Shamsi airbase: A Reuters story calls it a mystery wrapped in a riddle. Is
it <http://tribune.com.pk/story/201053/confusion-over-shamsi-base/>?

There are three state actors involved in the issue — Pakistan, the United
Arab Emirates and the United States. One can be sure that none is likely to
tell the truth. But, as Bacon said, if something “be thought secret, it
inviteth discovery; as the more close air sucketh in the more open”. So,
let’s begin with what is known.

In his book *In the Line of
Fire<http://books.google.com/books/about/In_the_line_of_fire.html?id=7igVvi3aO-8C>
*, this is what former general-president Pervez Musharraf wrote in detailing
the US demands after 9/11:

“How could we allow the US ‘blanket overflight and landing rights’ without
jeopardising our strategic assets? I offered only a narrow flight corridor
that was far from any sensitive areas. Neither could we give the US ‘use of
Pakistan’s naval ports, air bases, and strategic locations on borders.’ We
refused to give any naval ports or fighter aircraft bases. We allowed the US
only two bases — Shamsi in Balochistan and Jacobabad in Sindh — and only for
logistics and aircraft recovery. No attack could be launched from there. We
gave no ‘blanket permission’ for anything.”
**
*We *gave permission? Fast forward to now. The prime minister and the
defence minister say that we can’t throw out the US equipment and personnel
because the Shamsi base does not belong to Pakistan, having been leased out
to the UAE in 1992. According to this version, the operational control of
the base was handed over to the US by the UAE, not Pakistan.
**
*This *is corroborated apparently by what the Pakistan Air Force
representative told parliament in the in-camera
session<http://tribune.com.pk/story/167947/bin-laden-operation-military-civilian-leadership-meet-behind-closed-doors/>following
the May 2 Abbottabad raid.

Then we have a 2005 US diplomatic cable which says the UAE government is
displeased “at leak of reports about its military cooperation with the
United States inside
Pakistan<http://tribune.com.pk/story/167947/bin-laden-operation-military-civilian-leadership-meet-behind-closed-doors/>”
contained in *American
Soldier<http://books.google.com/books/about/American_Soldier.html?id=ubxqze8ksmYC>
*, a book by General Tommy Franks, former commander of US central command.
Franks had written about the use by the US of Sheikh Zayed’s private
airstrip in Balochistan.

The cable read: “UAE government desires to keep details of the UAE
cooperation with the US military in Afghanistan and Pakistan confidential,
because the government is concerned that public acknowledgement of this
assistance could pose risks to the UAE security within the UAE or to UAE
officials in Pakistan.”

Is Musharraf lying about having permitted the US the use of
Shamsi<http://tribune.com.pk/story/201583/shamsi-airbase-was-never-used-for-drone-attacks-pm-gilani/>and
Jacobabad? Perhaps not. But let’s first raise a few more questions.

What is the nature of this lease? Is it a private international law
agreement (PILA) or in the nature of a treaty? If it’s the former, which
means an agreement between a government and a private party, then the
government of the state to which the private party belongs can intervene and
cancel the agreement. This happened in the F-16 case in which the government
of Pakistan had entered into an agreement with the manufacturer of the
aircraft. The US government, when it slapped sanctions on Pakistan,
intervened in that agreement. Reko Diq in Balochistan is another case in
point.

Even if the PILA is between the UAE government and the Balochistan
government, the federal government can override it because Balochistan is a
federating unit. We also don’t know whether the private party, if any, is on
the Pakistani side or whether, in this case, the UAE’s royal family has
entered as a private party into a lease agreement with Pakistan.

If, on the other hand, the lease is governed by a treaty, then it becomes a
sovereign agreement and the nature of the debate changes. It would still be
necessary to see whether such an agreement allows the UAE to sub-lease the
use of the base to a third party. And if that be the case, whether a
sub-lease would also require that the government of Pakistan agree to such
arrangement. Nor do we know what constraints the third party will have to
work with and who would monitor such compliance.

In the absence of any documents, one can only conjecture. But chances are
that any sub-lease by the UAE would need the government of Pakistan’s
permission. This is the only way we can square the contents of the US
government diplomatic cable with the account given by Musharraf in his book.

This still leaves out the issue of whether the use of the base was confined
to recovery of aircraft and logistics. We are now told the US could only
mount surveillance flights but there is much evidence that the US also
mounted attack flights from the base of MQ1-A
Predators<http://tribune.com.pk/story/200944/drone-strikes-from-pakistan-halted-three-months-ago-report/>.
Since when is the question.

The Predator drones had become weapons-capable before 9/11 happened. The
first successful test was conducted in February 2001 at Nellis Air Force
base. That the US had already begun planning taking out Osama bin Laden is
proved by reports that in June 2001 a Hellfire AGM-114C missile was launched
on a replica of bin Laden’s Afghanistan residence built at a Nevada test
site. Flying from a base in Uzbekistan, it was in February 2002 that an
MQ1-A was used to attack a convoy of SUVs inside Afghanistan.

It seems that this is where both the UAEG and the government of Pakistan
have been dissembling. The base was handed over to the Americans and
everyone was looking the other way over its use. One can’t be sure of when
exactly the USG deployed the Predators at Shamsi but it is safe to assume
that the base was primarily used for Predator flights. The story was first
broken by Zahid Hussain in February 2009 for *The Times* of London.

It may be noted that when these birds were flying from Uzbekistan, even
after the Predators had become weapons-capable, the USG could not operate
armed flights until Uzbekistan permitted such flights. So, we can be sure
that in this ménage à trois, all three parties were of age and consenting.

Except that now the situation has changed and the government of Pakistan
wants an end to this arrangement. That is where the nature of the agreement
with UAEG and its politics comes in. There is, of course, the overhang also
of Pakistan-US relations, already at their lowest. It is, therefore, not
just a matter of evicting the Americans but also dealing with the
consequences of doing so vis-a-vis both the USG and the UAEG. Since no
course of action is without its costs, it all depends on what it is that the
actors consider their optimal and suboptimal choices and whether they are
playing a nested game.

Finally, even if we consider Shamsi to be sovereign UAE territory which it
could sub-lease to a third party, does a bird flying from Shamsi enter UAE
airspace or Pakistan’s?**
**
*Published in The Express Tribune, July 5th, 2011.*


****



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With best wishes

S Chander

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