 Source: KHQ via StratRisks
Source: KHQ via StratRisks
Pakistan will shoot down any U.S. drone that intrudes its air space 
per new directives, a senior Pakistani official told NBC News on 
Saturday.
According to the new Pakistani defense policy, “Any 
object entering into our air space, including U.S. drones, will be 
treated as hostile and be shot down,” a senior Pakistani military 
official told NBC News.
The policy change comes just weeks after a
 deadly NATO attack on Pakistani military checkpoints accidentally 
killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, prompting Pakistani officials to order all
 U.S. personnel out of a remote airfield in Pakistan.
Pakistan told the U.S. to vacate Shamsi Air Base by December 11.
A
 senior military official from Quetta, Pakistan, confirmed to NBC News 
on Saturday that the evacuation of the base, used for staging classified
 drone flights directed against militants, “will be completed tomorrow,”
 according to NBC’s Fakhar ur Rehman.
Pakistan’s Frontier Corps 
security forces took control of the base Saturday evening after most 
U.S. military personnel left, Xinhua news agency reported. Civil 
aviation officials also moved in Saturday, Xinhua said.
Pakistani 
Military Chief Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kayani had issued multiple directives 
since the Nov. 26 NATO attack, which included orders to shoot down U.S. 
drones, senior military officials confirmed to NBC News on Saturday.
It was unclear Saturday whether orders to fire upon incoming U.S. drones was part of the initial orders.
The
 Pakistani airbase had been used by U.S. forces, including the CIA, to 
stage elements of a clandestine U.S. counter-terrorism operation to 
attack militants linked to al-Qaida, the Taliban and Pakistan’s 
home-grown Haqqani network, using unmanned drone aircraft armed with 
missiles.
President Barack Obama stepped up the drone campaign 
after he took office. U.S. officials say it has produced major successes
 in decimating the central leadership of al-Qaida and putting associated
 militant groups on the defensive.
Pakistani
 authorities started threatening U.S. personnel with eviction from the 
Shamsi base in the wake of the raid last May in which U.S. commandos 
killed Osama bin Laden at his hide-out near Islamabad without notifying 
Pakistani officials in advance.

