Dawn – Pakistan has role in Afghan solution: retired US general

Anwar Iqbal

Washington, 11 February 2012. Pakistan would have a role in any lasting solution in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, the former commander of US and Nato forces in Kabul, wrote in his book, “My Share of the Task”.

While discussing his role in the Afghan war, the general also explained why he believed it was important to have close working relations with the Pakistani army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

General McChrystal had to retire in 2010 after his aides made disparaging remarks about US President Barack Obama.

“Although my mandate as a Nato commander was limited to inside Afghanistan, it was clear to me that Pakistan would have a role in any lasting solution,” he wrote.

“At the minimum Isaf needed access to Pakistani lines of communications for the flow of logistics to our forces.

Optimally, for our counter-insurgency campaign inside Afghanistan, the Afghan Taliban could not enjoy support and sanctuaries across the border in Pakistan.”

Ideally, joint Isaf and Pakistani efforts would convince Afghan Taliban leaders that their sanctuaries in Pakistan were no longer secure and thus their insurgency could not succeed, he added.

He noted that effective Pakistani army operations in Fata along with increased levels of coordination with Isaf forces were necessary in order to produce this kind of rethink inside Mullah Omar’s organisation.

But the Pakistani army had its limitations as Fata was a region where the Pakistani military had traditionally struggled, he wrote.

In the book, General McChrystal also emphasised the need to reduce “the oft-discussed deficit of trust” between the US and Pakistan but warned that it could only be reduced “over time and personal relationships would be essential to that process”.

By building as much trust as possible between General Kayani and him, General McChrystal hoped that confidence between the two armies would “cascade to some extent” down through to their subordinates.

“I believed slow but steady progress was possible. It might not work but there was no rational alternative,” he wrote.

Tracing the root of trust deficit between the two countries, the former Nato commander, noted that after the Soviet withdrawal the United States no longer needed Pakistan to help arm the rebels.

Frustrated with Islamabad’s persistent nuclear ambitions, the United States refused to vouch that Pakistan was not seeking to gain nuclear weapons, although it had given Pakistan a pass when the United States needed its assistance in its proxy war, the general wrote.

Two decades after the US imposed nuclear-related sanctions on Pakistan, the Pakistani army had again become important for the United States, and General Kayani, in his new role as head of the army, “wielded tremendous power”, he added.

As a member of the US Joint Staff, General McChrystal had watched his boss, Admiral Mike Mullen make a significant
effort to build rapport with General Kayani.

The US general also described in his book how the November 2008 Mumbai attacks affected America’s attitude towards Pakistan. “Clear evidence that (the) … attacks conducted by Pakistani terrorists of Lashkar were orchestrated from inside Pakistan caused Americans deep frustration.

And ongoing accusations that Pakistan’s military and intelligence service supported the Afghan Taliban complicated Admiral Mullen’s and my efforts,” he wrote.

“Pakistanis were quick to respond with concerns over American violations of their sovereignty, primarily through drone strikes, ever perceived US tilt toward India, and lack of appreciation for the significant Pakistani sacrifices in the war on terror,” he added.

On July 3, 2009, when a Pakistan Mi-17 helicopter went down in the Orakzai agency, killing at least 26 Pakistani soldiers, he called General Kayani to express his condolences and followed with a hand-written letter.

“It was a reminder of continuing Pakistani sacrifices in the fight — by early 2010; some 2,000 Pakistani soldiers had died fighting in the border regions,” General McChrystal wrote. “I know what it meant to lose soldiers and wanted him to know I shared his sense of loss.”

General McChrystal recalled how over the coming months, he spent significant time with General Kayani and grew to like and respect him. “His perspectives and priorities were, of course, those of a Pakistani army officer but I found our discussions on the war and our respective strategies to be helpful,” he wrote.

“Much of our time together was spent alone, simply drinking tea and talking. The talk was substantive but never combative.”

http://dawn.com/2013/02/11/pakistan-has-role-in-afghan-solution-retired-us-general/

The Tribune – Worried over US’ defence focus on Asia, India tells Panetta to re-calibrate strategy

Ajay Banerjee, Tribune News Service

New Delhi, June 6. Worried over United States’ new defence focus on Asia, New Delhi today told Washington to re-calibrate its strategy, as India fears that it could lead to increased militarisation of its neighbourhood.

The two sides also reached an understanding that will enable transfer of cutting edge defence technology to India. At a bilateral meeting, Defence Minister AK Antony today told his US counterpart, Secretary Defence Leon Panetta “to move at a pace (in implementing the new military strategy) which is comfortable to all countries concerned.” India was concerned at the eastward swing of the US, officials said.

Under its new strategy, termed as ‘re-balancing’, the US wants 60 per cent of its naval assets, including six sea-borne aircraft carriers, under its Pacific Area Command (PACOM). India is under the area of influence of the PACOM, the US perceives.

China has already termed the new US policy as “untimely.”

Sources explained that India’s worry is Bay of Bengal turning into a volatile zone. China already has a naval base in Hangyyi Myanmar, the US is seeking berthing right at Chittagong port in Bangladesh while India is based in good numbers at Port Blair (Andaman Nicobar Islands).

In the hour-long meeting, Panetta appreciated India’s move to maintain ties with Pakistan while terming the India-Pakistan and USA-Pakistan relations as ‘complicated’. “India and the US will need to continue to engage Pakistan, overcoming our respective – and often deep – differences with Pakistan”, Panetta said. Washington made it clear that it does not seek Indian troops in Afghanistan. However, it wants New Delhi to continue supporting the country through “trade investments, reconstruction and help for Afghan security forces” beyond the December 2014 deadline when international forces start withdrawing.

In a major policy shift, the US dropped its demand that India must sign two umbrella defence agreements. The Logistics Support Agreement (LSA) and the Communications, Interoperability and Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA), which had been the irritants, were not discussed today. Panetta made it clear “these are not issues anymore”.

During the discussion, Antony wanted both countries to move beyond the buyer-seller transactions and focus on transfer of technologies and partnerships. Panetta assured the Indian side that the US will facilitate technology access and sharing.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120607/main2.htm

Dawn – Top Pentagon official returning to lead talks with Pakistan

Anwar Iqbal

Washington, 31 May 2012. US Assistant Defence Secretary Peter Levoy is returning to Islamabad next week to lead the American team which is negotiating a resolution to the Nato routes dispute with Pakistan, diplomatic sources told Dawn.

Mr Levoy, who looks after Asia and Pacific security affairs at the Pentagon, led the US contingent at an April 26 meeting with Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar in Islamabad as well. The US media reported later that Mr Levoy and his team left the meeting abruptly because of certain remarks made by the foreign minister.

The remarks, according to the media reports, were linked to Pakistan’s demand for an apology from the United States over the November 26 air raid that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers and prodded Islamabad to close Nato supply routes to Afghanistan.

Since then Pakistan has stopped insisting on an apology as a precondition for reopening the routes. The concession enabled President Asif Ali Zardari to attend the May 20-21 Nato summit in Chicago but his inability to resolve the route dispute further complicated already tense relations between the two countries.

The two sides resumed their contacts after Mr Zardari returned home and because of the bitterness created by the April 26 incident at the Pakistan Foreign Office, this time Islamabad allowed its embassy in Washington to play a lead role in the talks.

The two sides are now working on a compromise formula to resolve the supply routes dispute which will require the United States to rebuild the highways damaged by Nato convoys.

In return, Pakistan will drastically reduce its demand for an increase in charges for overland deliveries of US military supplies to Afghanistan.

http://dawn.com/2012/05/31/top-pentagon-official-returning-to-lead-talks-with-pakistan/

Dawn – Do more mantra doesn’t go down well in Pakistan: Sherry Rehman

Anwar Iqbal

Washington, 9 March 2012. When Pakistan is asked to do more in the war against terror, it does not go well with the Pakistanis because “we are doing what we can”, says Ambassador Sherry Rehman.

“We will respect the time that it takes them” to complete a parliamentary review of Pakistan’s relations with the US and “we look forward to hearing from them when they’re ready,” says State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland.

The two statements coincide with a report by Washington Post’s associate editor, David Ignatius, on Thursday, saying that the United States and Pakistan have now decided to build a “calmer, quieter relationship with lower expectations, greater distance and fewer feuds”.

At a Women’s Day function on Wednesday night, the largest ever at the Pakistan Embassy, Ambassador Rehman noted that “the Pakistan story you hear in Washington is often only about the country that fights the frontlines of terror and extremism”.

This, she said, was a wrong impression.

“We are not just about bombs and bullets, Pakistan is also about women who lead the way forward,” the ambassador said.

“We have had a woman prime minister, women speakers, judges, foreign ministers, and now we have a major general”.

Referring to the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto and others killed in the fight against terrorism, Ambassador Rehman said: “Many better people before me have had to take bullets … so when we are asked to ‘do more’ it doesn’t go down too well.”

“We are doing what we can with a war next door, a war that the combined resources of the US and forty plus nations have not been able to win,” she said.

At the State Department, spokesperson Nuland told journalists that the US understood Pakistan’s need to review the relationship.

“We continue to be in dialogue with them about an appropriate time for us to resume our own discussion,” she said.

Ms Nuland also refused to criticise Pakistan over the Iran gas pipeline project.

The Washington Post report noted that this changed tone indicated a new understanding between the US and Pakistan.

“The two countries, in effect, have taken a step back from their intense partnership and moved toward a more pragmatic framework,” Mr Ignatius wrote.

Both sides seem to have become comfortable with the decision to maintain a distance with each other, he noted.

To complete this reset, the two nations will have to work out “quiet compromises” on three key issues: drone strikes, border access to Afghanistan; and reconciliation talks with the Taliban.

“On each, the trick will be finding a formula that balances Pakistani sovereignty and American security interests,” Mr Ignatius wrote.

The drone attacks, he noted, had already reduced and the US now closely monitors the strikes, preventing the CIA from making unilateral decisions.

http://www.dawn.com/2012/03/09/do-more-mantra-doesnt-go-down-well-in-pakistan-envoy.html

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