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Meeting with Biden high point of Pakistan's COAS visit

The visit of RS was already mentioned by NS to the entire US l



:rofl: :angel: :rofl: :angel: :crazy::rofl: :crazy::rofl: :yahoo:!!! "Biden runs the "show" behind Obama" ..... enough said!!

Dick Chaney and Bush had different goals. But those two, were probably five times smarter than Biden IMO.

But Biden is a great guy and he's very awesome in dealing with internal American issues. Obama runs the foreign policy with the dept. of State, as he is THE Commander In-chief!!

Obama only runs his mouth. Individual don't make policies, it's the office and or the dept that holds the power. Biden is like the executive officer (XO) of his "THE" Commander In-cheap. XO's are always the right hand man of any commander. US Defence, foreign, State or any critical future policy is set by DIA. Politician come and go, they are only beriefed when in office and given choices to get general public onboard.
About DIA



DIA runs the show, they gets 90% of the US intelligence budget. CIA is a just show-off civilian bitch of a branch in IC.
 
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There is no doubt that the Pk Mil Chief had a superb 5 days inside the beltway. It was quite well executed by his team. Just the right amount of PR exposure and no ‘gotcha’ comments-stupendous as it may be ‘tis just a single visit in a continuum. Nevertheless it was helpful in getting all DC protagonists onboard. Let the games begin…

I do however would like to point out a couple of discordant notes:

The visit has to be put in proper perspective. Such visits are prosecuted in the ‘shadows’ at least partly because American power centers tend to deal with ‘shadow’ powers away from the limelight; if and when such ‘shadow’ actors become a liability there is plausible deniability and attenuation of risk.

The takeaway from that is US will from hereon in be dealing with public embrace of democratic, high-growth Indian PM Narendra, while doing business with Pak Mil in the side alley while maintaining a ‘pariah-ish’ stance on Pakistan. This can change if Pakistan continues to grow as a democracy and achieves 6+ growth rate-and the CPEC thing takes off.

Another glaring omission seems to have been on forward-gazing during this trip. No serious effort was made to see past Obama Administration which leaves office in 13 months. The understandings reached must transfer across White House transition that is coming. RS ought to have met with policy people from team Hillary, team Trump, team Bush, team Rubio and Team Cruz.

The risk here is that near term deliverables RS committed to may not receive the expected proportionate response post-Jan 2017! People tend to forget after inaugurations and transitions. Just look at your General Ayub-he thought Johnson administration would follow on Kennedy assurances in 1962!!!! Big mistake…..

As far as Afghan situation (recon-ciliation) is concerned, I would have the request for next round Afghan peace talks come from Kabul first; before Rawalpindi eagerly throws another party. There are people in Kabul that will not be your friends come what may. You just have to work around them. Reach out to Tajik, Uzbek and Turkmen leaders. Have them nudge Kabul into giving you northward access. Remember economics will always triumph over petty gunslingers. My very best regards to RS and his team on this Thanksgiving Day! Enjoying the turkey!


P.S. DIA is more techy while CIA is still the top analysis agency-though such comparisons are useless.
 
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Army Chief Raheel Sharif crowned his five-day visit to the United States with a meeting with Vice President Joe Biden at the White House on Thursday.

The two leaders met in the Roosevelt Room and discussed “bilateral relations and the security situation” in South Asia, a senior official told journalists.

Although little has so far been disclosed about the nature of discussion, an army chief’s visit to the White House for a meeting with the vice president has its own symbolic importance.

Foreign military chiefs visit Washington regularly, often two or three a week, but not everyone meets the vice president or the secretary of state. Most generals return home after meeting their counterparts. Some also see the defence secretary but meetings with senior political leaders of the US administration are rare.

Sometimes, the visiting generals do go to Capitol Hill to meet US lawmakers but it is also unusual for an army chief to address congressional committees. Yet, Gen Sharif was invited to the Hill on Wednesday afternoon to address two Senate committees, intelligence and armed services.

The two committees issued no statement after these meetings, but DG Inter Services Public Relations Asim Bajwa did send out a series of tweets, giving his version of the proceedings.

According to these tweets, two key members of the Intelligence Committee, Senators Richard Burr and Dianne Feinstein noted that Pakistan Army’s “perseverance and commitment had degraded militancy” in the tribal areas.

They acknowledged that Pakistan had “turned the tide of terrorism’ and assured Gen Sharif of US support and cooperation in eradicating terrorism and extremism.

In his remarks at the committee meeting, Gen Sharif said that terrorism was a global threat, which warranted coordinated global response.

At the Senate Armed Services Committee, he received full protocol and was welcomed by Chairman John McCain, the ranking Democrat, Senator Jack Reed and other senior members.

“Appreciating longstanding Pakistan-US defence cooperation, Senator McCain underlined the need to further reinforce this partnership in view of emerging developments,” Mr Bajwa tweeted.

Senator McCain “appreciated efforts, sacrifices and steadfastness of Pakistani armed forces, especially the army chief’s leadership in fighting terrorists along the Pakistan-Afghan border”, he added.

In his remarks, Gen Sharif explained Pakistan’s perspective on regional security issues and highlighted the need for stepped-up Pakistan-Afghan border management and sustained cooperation to deal with emerging threats, Mr Bajwa said.

In a separate statement, Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook said that at Wednesday’s meeting with the army chief, US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter also talked about the Haqqani Network, telling the Pakistani general that the United States ‘feels strongly about the need to go after groups like the Haqqani Network that threaten the United States, threaten, certainly, US forces operating in Afghanistan”.

They both talked about “the need to address that and other groups that posed a threat not only to Afghanistan, but to Pakistan itself”, Mr Cook said.

He said there was no discussion in this meeting on military hardware that Pakistan might need to fight extremists.

Meeting with Biden high point of COAS visit - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

Ah!! Now it all makes sense!! Why your eastern neighbors were up in flames & belittling his visit, on another thread.

This is no small feat, by any measure of any yard stick. Let haters burn, I say :cheers:
 
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