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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, September 27, 2001 |
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Pak. 'uncomfortable' with U.S. strategy
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
ISLAMABAD, SEPT. 26. Have differences arisen between the United
States and the military establishment in Pakistan over the
former's strategy in getting at Osama and the Taliban regime?
Yes, if the leading Pakistani English daily, The News, is to be
believed.
In a front page report, the daily said that as the visiting U.S.
defence officials and their Pakistani counterparts explored
possibilities of co-operation for a possible military action in
Afghanistan, the Musharraf Government is getting
``uncomfortable'' on the latest U.S. ``posturing'' on at least
four issues.
These are, U.S. military assistance to the Northern Alliance, its
insistence on action against jehadi groups within Pakistan, U.S.
hesitation in getting a fresh U.N. endorsement for its military
action and non-inclusion of Muslim states in the military
coalition to fight against Afghanistan.
The Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman, Mr. Riaz Mohammad Khan,
refused to answer a question on the subject saying he would not
react to speculative reports. In the last few days, as a matter
of policy, the U.S. Embassy here has been avoiding any reaction
to press reports.
``While the specifics of Pakistani defence co-operation to the
U.S. forces are being debated, the military leadership in
Rawalpindi is being forced to reconsider its options following
credible reports that the India-backed Northern Alliance was
getting extensive military support from an international
coalition headed by the U.S.,'' the paper said.
``It is unnatural to expect the Pakistan Army to support a
military action that may drive the Northern Alliance from their
present hideouts in Panjshir Valley to the seat of power in
Kabul,'' it quoted a high-ranking military official as saying.
The newspaper said Pakistan, instead of propping up Afghan
groups, wants the U.S. to focus its military action on training
camps in Afghanistan. It said differences between the U.S. and
Pakistan also developed over the former naming a Pakistani
religious trust along with a jehad group in the list of 26
organisations to be targeted for financial crackdown.
The naming of the two ``multiplied doubts'' in Pakistan
officials' minds about the ultimate objectives of the U.S.
mission, it said. Pakistani officials fear that if the U.S. anti-
terrorist campaign ultimately demanded that Pakistan enforce an
effective ban on all Pakistan-based jehadi organisations, it
would lead to a grave law and order situation in Pakistan and
deal a major blow to the Kashmiri freedom struggle.
It said the Al-Rashid Trust, a charitable organisation which
supplied daily bread to 125,000 people inside Afghanistan, is
believed to be associated with the Lashkar-e-Taiba, one of the
major jehadi organisations fighting Indian troops in Kashmir.
The Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, the second Pakistani organisation to
figure in the U.S. list of targets, is a four-year-old
organisation that had been founded after the U.S. had declared
its parent organisation, Harkat-ul-Ansar, as a terrorist outfit.
Summing up the situation, the newspaper quoted a high-ranking
official of the Presidential Secretariat as saying that ``It is
now a question of providing assistance to almost an exclusive
American operation that lacks a firm U.N. support. There is a
likelihood that this military action may end up in installing a
staunchly anti-Pakistan Northern Alliance-dominated set-up in
Afghanistan. The situation becomes more difficult for Pakistan
when in the second phase of this operation, Pakistan is asked to
pack up jehadi organisations from its soil.''
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Section : International Next : "Osama is not the end of the story" | |
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