NEW DELHI (Agencies) The United States may mount special operations to strike Taliban and Al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan and also step up drone attacks against them in the near future, according to an American intelligence think-tank, reports Indian Express. Contending that the bulk of Al-Qaeda leadership is now in Pakistan and not in Afghanistan, the Stratfor in its annual security forecast said, this could prompt increased cross-border US military activity - mostly drone strikes, but also Special Forces Operations - will be a defining characteristic of the conflict in the area in 2010. Pakistan is near breakpoint, it said as both jihadist and Americans were now operating on its soil, and thus it is here, not Afghanistan, where the nature of war is shifting. Pakistan is depending on US sponsorship and aid to maintain balance of power with India, Stratfor said, and this would put pressure on Islamabad to find ways to meet the expectations of the Obama Administration. Pakistan needs to find a way to manage US expectations that does not rupture bilateral relations. Allowing or encouraging limited attacks on Nato supply lines running through Pakistan to Afghanistan is one option, as it sends Washington a message that too much pressure on Islamabad will lead to problems for the effort in Afghanistan, Stratfor said. It said a better tool for Pakistan is to share intelligence on groups Americans want to target. The trick is how to share that information in a way that will not set Pakistan on fire and that will not lead the Americans to demand such intelligence in ever-greater amounts, the global intelligence company said in its South Asia section of the annual forecast. US actions will force Pakistans military to expand the scope of its counterinsurgency offensive, which will turn heretofore neutral militants against the Pakistani state. The consequence will be a sharp escalation in militant attacks across Pakistan, including deep into the Punjabi core, the global intelligence think-tank claimed. Even a moderate increase in US action, it said, will be notable to the Pakistanis among whom the US efforts in Afghanistan are already deeply unpopular. Stratfor said as a result of the increased US military presence and increased proclivity to operate in Pakistan, it must find a means of containing the military fallout.