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Editorial from the Dawn, one of the more centrist newspapers in Pakistan:
Karzai of Afghanistan
DOES President Hamid Karzai realise the harm he is causing to the war on terror by spewing venom against Pakistan? The threat to send Afghan troops into Pakistan, coming on the heels of the Mohmand incident, will surely vitiate the geopolitical atmosphere in the region and play into the hands of those who stand to profit from such a scenario. What is shocking is the scurrilous nature of Mr Karzai’s harangue at his Sunday’s press conference. He should know that it is not Afghan blood alone that is being shed; Pakistan has suffered no less at the Taliban’s hands. If he is angry at ‘Mullah Omar of Pakistan’, Pakistanis are angrier with him. Karzai has been at the helm now for nearly eight years but has done pretty little to give peace and security to his people and improve their wretched economic lot. In fact he himself has had to depend on the US-backed international forces for his personal security and to sustain himself in office. In such circumstances it does not pay to blame Pakistan and rely on blind force rather than develop an internal consensus to end the war and focus on Afghanistan’s economic reconstruction.
Things are not going to improve by mutual mudslinging. Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s response to the Karzai tirade, while showing restraint in spite of the vitriol in the Afghan chief’s tone, made clear Pakistan would not tolerate any violation of its territorial sovereignty. Pakistan is doing its level best to check the militants operating on its side of the Durand Line. True, Pakistan has had a history of close cooperation with the Taliban. But that is a thing of the past. Now the Pakistan Army has been waging a war against them and has suffered heavy casualties in the process. If its strategy has not proved to be effective, it must be given a chance to work out a new carrot and stick approach that might work this time since an elected government is in office and carries more credibility with the people living in the border regions. But for Pakistan’s policy to have a minimum chance of success it is important that Afghanistan and the United States should work in tandem with Islamabad.
Unfortunately, this is not happening. On Sunday a US helicopter intruded into the Khyber Agency, though mercifully neither side opened fire. To avoid such incidents, the tripartite commission ought to do its job more thoroughly. Given the tone and tenor of Mr Karzai’s language, it appears unlikely that the two sides will reach a level of cooperation where President Bush will have the satisfaction of declaring a successful close to the war on terror.
DAWN - Editorial; June 17, 2008