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Pakistan to get $600mn under US program: Pentagon

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Pakistan to get $600mn under US program: Pentagon

Thursday, 29 Apr, 2010



WASHINGTON: The United States plans to quickly transfer $600 million to Pakistan to reimburse the government for military operations over the last year, the Pentagon said on Thursday.

“There has been some concern on the Pakistani's part about the rate at which they are reimbursed for Coalition Support Funds for their efforts in the war on terror on our behalf within their borders,” Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said at a news conference.

“We have made great strides over the past few weeks to try to accelerate reimbursement payments to the Pakistanis. ... We have, I think, in total about $600 million that is in route or will soon be in route in the next few weeks to Pakistan to reimburse them for their operations over the past year.”

The payment delay has been a source of friction and has contributed to Pakistan's economic woes. The United States is in arrears in paying about $2 billion in military aid to Pakistan under the so-called Coalition Support Fund.

Last month, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said a “substantial” amount of the money would be paid by the end of April, with Washington promising the remainder by the end of June. -Reuters

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/world/pakistan+to+get+600mn+under+us+program+pentagon
 
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we most probably going in NW........


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Pakistani military, long reluctant to heed American urging that it attack Pakistani militant groups in their main base in North Waziristan, is coming around to the idea that it must do so

Western officials have long believed that North Waziristan is the single most important haven for militants with Al Qaeda and the Taliban fighting American and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

The developing shift in thinking — described in recent interviews with Western diplomats and Pakistani security officials — represents a significant change for Pakistan’s military, which has moved against Taliban militants who attack the Pakistani state, but largely left those fighting in Afghanistan alone.

That distinction is becoming harder to maintain, Pakistani and Western officials say, as the area becomes an alphabet soup of dangerous militant groups that have joined forces to extend their reach deeper inside Pakistan.

“This is a scary phenomenon,” one Western diplomat said. “All these groups are beginning to morph together.”

The consensus is gathering against a background of improved United States-Pakistan relations. The Obama administration’s efforts with Pakistan are beginning to bear fruit, officials said, while the countries’ armies have begun working together more closely, particularly since Pakistan stepped up its military efforts, according to a Pentagon report to Congress released this week.

Even so, any operation in North Waziristan by Pakistan’s badly stretched military would still be months away, Pakistani and Western officials said. And even if it is undertaken, the offensive may not completely sever Pakistan’s relationship with the militants, like Sirajuddin Haqqani, who serve its interests in Afghanistan.

The area has long been a sanctuary for Mr. Haqqani, a longtime asset of Pakistan’s military and intelligence services who is also one of the most dangerous figures in the insurgency against American forces.

In recent months, however, it has also become home to Hakimullah Mehsud, Pakistan’s enemy No. 1, who is now believed to have survived an American drone strike in January, according to the Western diplomat and Pakistani intelligence officials.

He and his supporters fled a Pakistani military operation in South Waziristan that began last October. Though Pakistan’s military said the operation was completed last month, its soldiers are still dying there in rising numbers, as Mr. Mehsud and his forces strike at them from their new base. In recent weeks, at least 19 soldiers have been killed in areas where the military had all but claimed victory.

To make matters worse, families who left during the operation are reluctant to return to their homes, saying they are afraid of vengeful leaders still at large.

“They know a lot of these guys have fled to North Waziristan,” said a Western diplomat in Islamabad. “That’s patently obvious. And sooner or later,” the diplomat continued, “they’re going to have to go in there.”

In a separate interview, a senior Pakistani official concurred. “The source of the problem is in North Waziristan, and it will have to be addressed,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, because he was not allowed to speak publicly.

The growing consensus on North Waziristan comes after a year in which the Pakistani military has opened several fronts against the Taliban in Pakistan, beginning with a campaign in the Swat Valley last spring.

The fighting has cost Pakistan about 2,700 soldiers since 2001, nearly triple the total number of Americans killed in Afghanistan in the same period.

Militants struck back, hitting the military’s headquarters in Rawalpindi, a mosque where military families prayed, and the offices of Pakistan’s intelligence agencies in three cities. The number of Pakistani civilians killed last year in Taliban attacks exceeded civilian deaths even in Afghanistan, helping shift public opinion against the militants.

“I think it has become very dramatic that these people are out after them,” the diplomat said.

The fighting — coupled with intense American drone strikes in the western tribal region — has splintered the militant groups, which are now a poisonous mix of Pashtun tribesmen, Arabs, Uzbeks and ethnic Punjabis, known for their brutality against Shiites and their close links to Al Qaeda.

The fracturing is so profound that one Pakistani government official in the tribal region said that the Pakistani Taliban now consisted of several parts operating independently, and that the groups “do not necessarily take orders from Hakimullah Mehsud.” But the widening military campaign has also given them common cause. Operations by the militants have become more fluid. “All these groups are helping each other out and selling their services to the highest bidder,” the diplomat said.

Pakistani officials recognize that the evolving nature of the militants has made them more dangerous — and made the necessity of going after them in North Waziristan increasingly unavoidable. ]“Their nexus with the Punjabi Taliban have given them greater reach,” a Pakistani law enforcement official said.

But even as there is a growing consensus that North Waziristan is now the source of the problem, there is a continuing debate in the military over when and how to tackle it. Publicly the Pakistani military is saying that it is already fighting on several fronts, and that it does not have the resources to push into North Waziristan for at least several months. Western officials say they believe that the Pakistani military is doing as much as it can under the circumstances.

There is also an understanding that opening a new front in North Waziristan — with its tangle of tribes, Qaeda militants, antistate groups and Haqqani supporters, thought to be in the thousands — will be a formidable task. “To go after Haqqani, it takes a very sizable military operation,” the diplomat said.

But some officials say an operation could come sooner, not least because officers on the ground are calling for it. More frequent attacks emanating from North Waziristan “are likely to lead to a reaction sooner rather than later as field commanders feel the pressure to protect their troops,” said Shuja Nawaz, director of the South Asia program at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

Others argue that Pakistan should wait and see how the American-led military offensive in southern Afghanistan plays out this summer. One senior military officer who favors Pakistani military action sooner derisively called that option “sitzkrieg,” Mr. Nawaz said.

Whatever the case, the military would most likely avoid a frontal invasion, some officials suggested, and instead bolster the forces it already maintains in the area, about 10,000 soldiers. Pakistani forces in North Waziristan, which include the paramilitary Frontier Corps, are mostly confined to their barracks.

Despite the prospect of a shift on North Waziristan, there is no apparent change in Pakistan’s attitude toward the leadership council of the Afghan Taliban, which manages the insurgency from in and around the city of Quetta, in southwest Pakistan, several diplomats said.

The Afghan Taliban, under Mullah Muhammad Omar, remains Pakistan’s main tool for leverage in Afghanistan. The arrest of the Taliban’s top operational commander, Abdul Ghani Baradar, in January has not led to a broader crackdown against the Afghan insurgents. “Does it indicate a shift in policy?” the Western diplomat said, referring to the arrest of Mr. Baradar. “No. But it’s still a good thing.”
 
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F-16 and 600 mn en route to Pakistan: Pentagon​

Washington, DC: Asserting that the sale of F-16 to Pakistan is a sign of burgeoning relationship between the two countries, the Pentagon today said that another $600 million is en route to Islamabad in the next few weeks.

At the same time, the Pentagon official observed that sending more US personal to the country and their visa continues to be a major bottleneck.

"The F-16 sale is a sign of this burgeoning relationship between us and increased defence cooperation between our two countries. So the personnel that are going there in advance of the arrival of those planes is to assist the Pakistanis so that they can operate these sophisticated warplanes," said Pentagon spokesperson Geoff Morrell.

The United States is sending some 50 additional personnel to Pakistan in June, accompanying for new F-16 fighter jets; thus increasing the number of American boots on the ground by 25%. At present there are about 200 US military personnel in Pakistan.

As another sign of progress in the relationship, Morrell said the Pentagon has made great strides over the past few weeks to try to accelerate reimbursement payments to the Pakistanis.

"I think, in total about $600 million that is en route or will soon be en route in the next few weeks to Pakistan to reimburse them for their operations over the past year," he said.

"There are still outstanding receipts that need to be reimbursed, and those will take place hopefully on a quicker timetable than they traditionally had," he said, adding that there has been some concern on the Pakistanis' part about the rate at which they are reimbursed for coalition support funds.

"One of the things that's been problematic in the past is sort of trying to get enough of our personnel in country to assist them with this so that we can move this more quickly.

And so we've been urging the Pakistanis to provide more visas for our personnel to work in the embassy there," Morrell said.

"I think we've seen some progress on that count, but there probably is still more that could be done so that we could be more helpful to them with regards to getting money back -- which they clearly, given the fiscal situation that they're in, are in need of as well," he said.

F-16 and 600 mn en route to Pakistan: Pentagon - dnaindia.com
 
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so, now we are given the salary, now its time to serve the masters by killing, killing and killing more?
 
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we most probably going in NW........

there is no other way - the job has to be completed now!

Pakistan should do whatever its in her own best interest not the interest of other countries. In this world, everyone cares about their own interests only.


These days we see peace in our cities in Pakistan, we dont want to ruin that by fighting a bigger stronger force. Enough with this killing our own people and killing our own army.

TTP is basically all destroyed, mission accomplished !!!


We Pakistanis should start thinking like other nations, our people's lives are far too precious. Enough with this war OF terror. Its sickening to see Pakistanis killing each other :hitwall:
 
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Much like the russains and India, they threw the money the Indians danced.

indira gandhi kgb money - Google Search

IS this part of the of Kerry the Lugar bill or different.

your source is a from a author who is trying to sell his book ..The Mitrokhin Archive.
While you govt is officially asking for dole to fight thier own enemies aka.. Taliban
 
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This looks very bad from a publicity sense if PA suddenly went into NW after getting a cheque from the USA. It's almost like they are giving us the marching orders.
 
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So what does this development mean? A realisation that a battle started must not be such that the enemy is allowed to regroup or a simple instance US pressure? Probably both. Hopefully this will make Afghanistan more stable. Good luck to Pakistan.
 
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This looks very bad from a publicity sense if PA suddenly went into NW after getting a cheque from the USA. It's almost like they are giving us the marching orders.

Not sure why would this be a surprise....I know there were lot of chest thumping after a succesful visit by Pakistani Delegation to US where lot of goodies were promised.. I myself had discussion with some Pakistani friends that there would a price tag associated with those goodies...If i am not wrong price tag is becoming apparent...US has a long history of Carrot and Stick approach....

However i was shocked to find out that around 2700 Pakistani soldiers have lost their life in this war on terror which is nearly tripple the amount of US soldiers...Had that been the case with US this operation would have been called off way back...Sad but true life has little value in South Asia...and if you are a soldier then there is no value :(
 
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oh yes the guys in the Military sure put up a nice effort to get a reasonable price of the Blood we trade ...!!!
The powerpoint presentations and strategic dialogue did earned some dollars..!!!
Nice work though.
 
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there is no other way - the job has to be completed now!

sir jee last week i lost one of my jigs fighting in NW, Personally attended his funeral prayer. The time he was laid to the grave i asked my self a question that what price we are paying and what would we get in return . I felt so sad for lossing one of my best friends. Just dont have words to explain the sorrow ...
Just need to know how much blood would it cost to go into NW, and all those dollars are worth of it ??
 
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