Fears prompted blunt US warnings
US official counters suggestions that tougher approach is driven by need to show progress ahead of Afghan talks.
WASHINGTON:
Washington’s push on Pakistan to get tough on militants on its territory is prompted by worries about an attack on US soil, a concern the United States will press in talks with Islamabad later this month. A US official last week countered suggestions that the tougher approach is driven by the need to show progress ahead of the October 22 talks by an Obama administration strategy review of the war in Afghanistan in December.
The failed Times Square bombing in May and the recent terrorism alert for Europe fueled fears of an attack, prompting the stepped up drone attacks in Pakistan’s rugged northwest and pointed US comments pressing Islamabad’s to pursue militants more aggressively.
“There is really mounting concern that we are extremely vulnerable to an attack from a group in Pakistan that could occur,” the US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Such an attack would trigger a critical change in ties with Islamabad, the official warned. “(An attack) will change the nature of the relationship, not because necessarily it makes sense to, but because the congressional outcry and the public outcry will be such that you will have to dramatically do things quite differently,” the official added.
Blunt words in Washington about Pakistan’s failure to aggressively go after insurgents coincided with a cross-border incursion by Nato which ignited public outrage and prompted officials to close a key border crossing to Nato supply convoys for days.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 11th, 2010.
Washington’s push on Pakistan to get tough on militants on its territory is prompted by worries about an attack on US soil, a concern the United States will press in talks with Islamabad later this month. A US official last week countered suggestions that the tougher approach is driven by the need to show progress ahead of the October 22 talks by an Obama administration strategy review of the war in Afghanistan in December.
The failed Times Square bombing in May and the recent terrorism alert for Europe fueled fears of an attack, prompting the stepped up drone attacks in Pakistan’s rugged northwest and pointed US comments pressing Islamabad’s to pursue militants more aggressively.
“There is really mounting concern that we are extremely vulnerable to an attack from a group in Pakistan that could occur,” the US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Such an attack would trigger a critical change in ties with Islamabad, the official warned. “(An attack) will change the nature of the relationship, not because necessarily it makes sense to, but because the congressional outcry and the public outcry will be such that you will have to dramatically do things quite differently,” the official added.
Blunt words in Washington about Pakistan’s failure to aggressively go after insurgents coincided with a cross-border incursion by Nato which ignited public outrage and prompted officials to close a key border crossing to Nato supply convoys for days.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 11th, 2010.