Today, there is a fresh offer from the US military to take action against militant groups in Afghanistan that operate along the border, an offer that will hopefully discourage the Pakistan Army firing across the border in response to raids and incursions carried out by militants operating from Afghanistan. The offer includes a commitment to move on intelligence that Pakistan provides, and if the offer is anything more than another set of smoke and mirrors is worthy of consideration.
It was responded to positively by the director of the Inter-Services Public Relations here, and got an unusually positive response in the US Standing Committee on Defence where our ‘valid and justifiable’ concerns relating to the management of border security were accepted. Thus far this is words only and mechanisms and lines of communication will need to be formalised if anything concrete is to come of it. On paper, the most positive move in many months and to find Pakistan and America on the same page in the same playbook is welcome. Yet this is not the first time that commitments to cooperate have been made only to quickly disappear. The recent release of a Canadian-American couple and their children from the Taliban by our forces may be an indicator that the process of trust restoration is operative. We will not count our chickens before they are hatched, and wait with interest.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 23rd, 2017.
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