Pakistan Senator says Obama pressure on militants hurts Afghanistan

October 7, 2011 by  
Filed under World News

ISLAMABAD: President Barack Obama’s warning to Islamabad over suspected ties to militants will only fuel anti-Americanism and make it harder for Pakistan to support U.S. efforts to stabilise Afghanistan, a senior senator said on Friday.

Pakistan is seen as critical to bringing peace to neighbouring Afghanistan, but the United States has failed to persuade it to go after militant groups it says cross the border to attack Western forces in Afghanistan.

“This is not helping either the United States, Afghanistan or Pakistan,” Salim Saifullah, chairman of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, told Reuters.

“There will be pressure on the (Pakistan) government to get out of this war,” he said, referring to the U.S. war on militancy.

Obama warned Pakistan on Thursday that its ties with “unsavory characters” had put relations with the United States at risk, as he ratcheted up pressure on Islamabad to cut links with militants mounting attacks in Afghanistan.

His comments are likely to deepen a crisis in the strategic alliance between the United States and Pakistan.

Obama accused Pakistan’s leaders of “hedging their bets” on Afghanistan’s future, but stopped short of threatening to cut off U.S. aid, despite calls from lawmakers for a tougher line over accusations that Pakistani intelligence supported strikes on U.S. targets in Afghanistan.

Pakistan says it has sacrificed more than any other nation that joined America’s global “war on terror” after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, losing 10,000 soldiers and security forces, and 30,000 civilians.

But its performance against militants operating from its unruly tribal northwest border region is a frequent source of tension between Washington and Islamabad.

Pakistan is often accused of playing a double game, vowing to help the United States fight some militant groups while using others as proxies in Afghanistan.

Ties were heavily damaged after U.S. special forces launched a secret raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in May, which Islamabad saw as a violation of its sovereignty.

On Thursday, a Pakistani commission said a Pakistani doctor accused of running a vaccination programme that helped the CIA track down bin Laden should be tried for high treason, which is punishable by death.

Relations deteriorated further after the top U.S. military official accused Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency of supporting a Sept. 13 attack by the Taliban-allied Haqqani militant group on the U.S. embassy in Kabul.

Saifullah said Washington’s public criticism of Pakistan would only encourage militant groups.

“War in Afghanistan is passing through a critical phase, evolutionary phase,” he said. “At this stage, muddying water is not appropriate. This is exactly what the militants want. They are playing to their tune. This is adding strength to them.”

Some analysts agree with his assessment.

“This will create more tension and what the Americans want is not likely to happen in the near future,” said political analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi.

The United States has long called for a military offensive against the Haqqani network, which it says is based in North Waziristan, a global hub for militants on the Afghan border.

Pakistan sees the Haqqani network — perhaps the most feared insurgents in Afghanistan — as a counterweight to the growing influence of rival India there, analysts say.

Pakistan denies links to the group, which says it no longer operates from sanctuaries in North Waziristan.

Obama made clear that future U.S.-Pakistani relations would depend heavily on whether Islamabad complies with Washington’s demands to sever connections with insurgents.

Mahmud Ali Durrani, a former Pakistani ambassador to Washington, wondered if the two sides could ever repair ties.

“There are too many issues, and too much mistrust to call this a strategic relationship,” he said.

But public demands from Washington will make Islamabad more reluctant to take action because caving in after constant pressure could be political suicide in a country where anti-American sentiment runs high, and the government is unpopular.

Many Pakistanis believe they have been dragged into a war against militancy that only serves American interests.

That sentiment is growing because of an escalation of U.S. drone aircraft missile strikes against militants in Pakistan under the Obama administration.

“Are we owned by the United States? If so, please make our terms of servitude clear, Mr. Obama, so we can just get on with it,” said Mishayl Naek, a bank employee in the city of Karachi, in reaction to the U.S. president’s demands of Pakistan.

For Asad Ali Bangash, 45, Obama’s comments were proof of what he has feared all along.

“America wants an excuse to invade Pakistan. There are difficult times ahead for Pakistan, because America has decided that Pakistan has to be eliminated because it is a fort of Islam,” said Bangash, who runs a medical supply business.

Obama wants to stabilise Afghanistan as U.S. forces are drawn down with the goal of ending their combat mission by 2014.

Instead of public confrontation, Obama should work more closely with Pakistan to help Afghanistan, said Saifullah.

“This is no time for this kind of (allegation) when they are pulling out,” he said. “They should be seriously working on the endgame.”

Even if Pakistan wanted to eliminate the Haqqanis, an assault could be risky. The group, which says it has more than 10,000 fighters, spent years forming alliances with various militant groups seeking to topple the U.S.-backed government.

The Haqqanis’ ties with powerful tribes are another concern. Intelligence officials say Pakistan fears an assault would provoke a larger tribal uprising in North Waziristan. AGENCIES

Bagh: Nullah Mahil, Malwani in flood

August 9, 2011 by  
Filed under Pakistan

AJK district Bagh was, once again, facing brunt of monsoon as Nullah Mahil and Malwani were flooded due to heavy rain. The dyke broke under the pressure of floodwater.

On the other hand, traffic was jammed due to stagnant rainwater on the site of Pidar Glacier, disconnecting the areas of Sadhan Gali, Bair Pani, Chakar, Bani Minhasan and Chikar Muzaffarabad.

Rain continued intermittently in the city.

Shoaib Akhtar Eyeing Semi Final

March 29, 2011 by  
Filed under Sports

4189d83cnal 225x168 Shoaib Akhtar Eyeing Semi FinalPakistan pace star Shoaib Akhtar is eyeing on the semifinal match between Pakistan and India. It will be great contest and lots of hope is also attached with 2nd semifinal match of world cup 2011. Shoaib Akhtar wants to play the match and perform well for Pakistan.

South Africa Sticks With Bad Knock Out History

March 25, 2011 by  
Filed under Sports

4e56cfffory 225x195 South Africa Sticks With Bad Knock Out HistoryBad luck Sticks with South Africa and it is fifth time they went out after losing in the knock out stage. Previously they were defeated in the knock out stage four times and this time it was fifth exclusion for them. In 1999 they tied a match with Australia but were out from the competition on run rate basis.

New Zealand, Pakistan seek honour in adversity

December 25, 2010 by  
Filed under Sports

WELLINGTON: With New Zealand cricket in turmoil on the field and Pakistan in tumult off it, there is plenty at stake for both sides when they launch a 11-match series with a Twenty20 game in Auckland Sunday.

Over the next seven weeks New Zealand and Pakistan will attempt to turn their fortunes around as they play three Twenty20s, two Tests and six one-dayers before heading to the subcontinent for the one-day World Cup.

Pakistan’s internal turmoil has forced them to field a spare-parts team with several of their stars left at home including alleged spot-fixers Salman Butt, Mohammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif.

To add to the pressure, they were skittled out for a meagre 91 by Auckland in their one-day warm up game and then saw the home side overhaul the target for the loss of only five wickets and with nearly seven overs to spare.

NATO says six troops shot dead in east Afghanistan

November 29, 2010 by  
Filed under World News

KABUL: Six NATO troops were shot dead by a man wearing an Afghan border police uniform during a training exercise in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, the coalition said, the worst apparent “rogue” shooting in more than a year.

The incident appeared to be the latest in a string of recent attacks by renegade police and soldiers, underlining the pressure on NATO-led troops as they try to train Afghan forces rapidly to allow the handover of security responsibility from next year.

However, NATO and Afghan officials were unable to confirm whether the person who carried out the shooting was actually a member of the border police or if it was an insurgent who had infiltrated the Afghan security forces.

Afghan authorities said last year they were tightening vetting procedures for the police and army after a similar incident when a renegade soldier

NATO says six troops shot dead in east Afghanistan

November 29, 2010 by  
Filed under World News

KABUL: Six NATO troops were shot dead by a man wearing an Afghan border police uniform during a training exercise in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, the coalition said, the worst apparent “rogue” shooting in more than a year.

The incident appeared to be the latest in a string of recent attacks by renegade police and soldiers, underlining the pressure on NATO-led troops as they try to train Afghan forces rapidly to allow the handover of security responsibility from next year.

However, NATO and Afghan officials were unable to confirm whether the person who carried out the shooting was actually a member of the border police or if it was an insurgent who had infiltrated the Afghan security forces.

Afghan authorities said last year they were tightening vetting procedures for the police and army after a similar incident when a renegade soldier

Increase in power tariff gradually: Raja

November 4, 2010 by  
Filed under World News

Staff Report

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Water and Power Raja Pervez Ashraf said that his government knows the worries of the common people, adding that the increase in power tariff will be slow.

While talking to the media in the Parliament House on Thursday, he denied that any increase was due to the pressure of the IMF. He said that the government is doing for its own betterment. Raja Pervez Ashraf said that it was in favor of the country’s economy.

The minister said that the government will increase power tariff gradually. Trend Pk

Pakistan seeks to salvage economy as more flee floods

August 26, 2010 by  
Filed under World News

SUKKUR: Pakistan ordered fresh evacuations from southern Sindh on Thursday as the country struggled to bring relief to millions already displaced by flooding and sought international help to rescue its economy.

In northern Sindh, local authorities issued a new evacuation order for Shahdadkot, a town of about 300,000, for the remaining few tens of thousands of people to leave as floodwaters approached the town.

“Shahdadkot is certainly in danger,” said relief commissioner for Sindh Riaz Ahmed Soomro. “People have been asked to evacuate, but its a very big town. People had built an artificial enbankment but the pressure is increasing.”

Downstream in Thatta, the towns of Sujawal, Daro and Mirpur Batoro, with a combined population of 400,000, were ordered evacuated after the swollen Indus river bust through an embankment early Thursday morning.

“The

Strauss is only victim of wet day at Lord’s

August 26, 2010 by  
Filed under World News

Staff Report

LONDON: Pakistan dismissed England captain Andrew Strauss for 13 in the fourth and final test at Lord’s on Thursday in an opening day restricted by rain to just 12.3 overs.

During those 63 minutes seamer Mohammad Asif won a just reward for an excellent display by clean bowling Strauss after Pakistan had spilled their 18th catch of the series.

When play was finally abandoned for the day with steady rain falling, England were 39 for one after Pakistan had won the toss and decided to field first.

A draw would be enough to give England the series 2-1 after Pakistan’s upset win at the Oval last week.

Play began on time in the afternoon session after the teams had taken an early lunch following light rain which had kept the players off the field.

In an unpromising start Mohammad Amir, man-of-the match at the Oval, propelled

Next Page »


Online Newspapers millionRSS BlogCatalog
YouSayToo Revenue Sharing Community

TrendPK.com 24 Hours Breaking News, Trends And Updates, Latest Breaking News, Latest News Updates, Pakistan News, Pak News And Pakistani News 24 Hour News Updates from Pakistan, Latest News from US News, India News and much more news updates in TrendPK.com.

Breaking News, Trends And Updates