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Don't view India as 'mortal enemy': Obama to Pak

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WASHINGTON: In a lengthy pep-talk to Pakistan, US President Barack Obama has asked it not to view India as its "mortal enemy", shed its Afghan-India paranoia and realise that a "peaceful approach" towards New Delhi would be in everybody's interests.

"They see their security interests threatened by an independent Afghanistan in part because they think it will ally itself to India, and Pakistan still considers India their mortal enemy," Obama said on Thursday at a press conference at the East Room of the White House.

"Part of what we want to do is actually get Pakistan to realise that a peaceful approach towards India would be in everybody's interests, and would help Pakistan actually develop...," he said.

Obama's remarks came when he was asked whether he agreed with his former top military commander Mike Mullen's accusations that Pakistan's ISI has used the Haqqani network as a veritable arm.

The US President noted that one of the biggest problems facing Pakistan right now were poverty, illiteracy, a lack of development, civil institutions that are not strong enough to deliver for the Pakistani people.

"And in that environment you've seen extremism grow. You've seen militancy grow that doesn't just threaten our efforts in Afghanistan but also threatens the Pakistani government and the Pakistani people as well," he said.

"So trying to get that reorientation is something that we're continuing to work on; it's not easy," he said.

Obama said his administration will constantly evaluate its ties with Pakistan but warned that he will not be feeling comfortable with a long-term strategic relationship with Islamabad if it was not mindful of American interest as well.

"We will constantly evaluate our relationship with Pakistan based on, is, overall, this helping to protect Americans and our interests. We have a great desire to help the Pakistani people strengthen their own society and their own government," he said.

Obama said he would be hesitant to punish aid for flood victims in Pakistan because of "poor decisions" by Pakistani intelligence services. "But there is no doubt that we're not going to feel comfortable with a long-term strategic relationship with Pakistan if we don't think that they're mindful of our interest as well," he said.

With regard to Pakistan, Obama said that his No 1 goal was to make sure that al-Qaeda would not be able to attack America and its interests worldwide.

"I have said that my number-one goal is to make sure that al-Qaida cannot attack the US homeland and cannot affect US interests around the world. And we have done an outstanding job, I think, in going after, directly, al-Qaida in this border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan," he said.

Though he took note of Pakistan's cooperation on a whole range of issues, he also pointed out the links between Islamabad and "unsavoury characters".

Don't view India as your 'mortal enemy': Obama to Pakistan - The Times of India
 
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So why does bharat have 80% of their military on Pakistani borders?

Where did you get these false numbers from (80%) ????

---------- Post added at 05:30 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:28 PM ----------

WEST POINT, N.Y. — Former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates says he agrees that Pakistan's intelligence agency has ties to a militant group active in neighboring Afghanistan.

Gates: Pakistan spy agency tied to militant group - WSJ.com
 
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Obama must tell that to americans whose enemies changed from Japanese+ nazis to USSR to china now only after america totally decimated them it started friendly relations with them.And btw there is no fun left in life without a mortal enemy:cool:
 
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Pragmatism rules new Obama team's Pakistan policy

(Reuters) -
After a very public falling out between Pakistan and the Pentagon, the U.S. military's new leaders are unlikely to replicate the close bond that the outgoing U.S. military boss had with his Pakistani peer.

As mutual hostility deepens and many U.S. officials resign themselves to a narrow, arms-length alliance with Pakistan, the two men's ability to forge ties with security officials in Islamabad is unlikely to count as much as it once might have.

Pragmatism rules new Obama team's Pakistan policy | Reuters
 
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Ten years into the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, neighboring Pakistan, despite receiving billions of dollars in U.S. military and financial support, continues to be gripped by an economic crisis and persistent terrorist attacks.

Former U.S. and Pakistani diplomats say that Pakistan's decision to support the war has worsened its own security, dampened exports, reduced foreign investment and tourism and slowed the privatization of its heavily state-controlled industries. All that has led to lower tax revenue, bloated security spending, damage to roads and basic infrastructure and huge costs to care for millions of Pakistanis who have fled the volatile tribal areas and become refugees in their own country.

"Result: a broken country," said Rustam Shah Mohmand, formerly Pakistan's ambassador to Afghanistan.



Read more: 10 years into Afghan war, Pakistan gripped by crises | McClatchy

10 years into Afghan war, Pakistan gripped by crises | McClatchy
 
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Obama might as well ask them to not breathe:D He doesn't understand complexities of South Asian conflicts.
 
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Pakistan Pulls Closer to a Reluctant China

Lol @ the word - reluctant.

And while Pakistan’s latest flirtations with Beijing have been received cordially, Pakistani officials have walked away from their junkets with far less in hand than they might have hoped. As Pakistan’s economy continues to decline, and the nation is beset by terrorist attacks, some Pakistanis are asking whether China will prove so helpful after all.

Last month a large Chinese coal mining company, China Kingho Group, canceled a $19 billion contract in Sindh Province, citing concerns about security, in particular employees’ safety.

In August, local authorities in Xinjiang charged that the leader of a Uighur separatist group, held responsible for terrorist attacks that left more than 20 dead in the city of Kashgar, had been trained in Pakistan.

The Chinese rebuke, repeated in the China Daily newspaper, was unusually blunt. The head of Pakistan’s intelligence service, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, in Beijing at the time, returned to deliver reassurances. The Pakistani president, Asif Ali Zardari, a frequent visitor to China in search of business deals, made amends by visiting Xinjiang, pledging to contain terrorism.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/07/world/asia/pakistan-pulls-closer-to-a-reluctant-china.html
 
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It's called protecting the border thanks to all the terrorists crossing over and I doubt it's even 40% let alone 80%.
It's the same source that tells them that 7 lakh IA troops are in Kashmir alone,.............this again,increases by a few hundred thousand each year too:lol:
 
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