Lockheed F-16
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Saturday, May 16, 2009
WASHINGTON: The Pentagon is looking at plans to significantly accelerate and expand the training of Pakistans military to improve its ability to confront insurgents along the Afghanistan border, The Associated Press has learned.
US officials are in early talks with Pakistani leaders to develop a programme that could increase the number of US special operations trainers in that country, with a goal of cutting the training time by as much as half for more than 9,000 members of the Frontier Corps, said a senior defence official.
Training the 14 battalion-size units of the Frontier Corps is expected to take at least four years, but officials would like to speed up their counterinsurgency training and expand the schooling to the Pakistani Army, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions are preliminary and no decisions on the sensitive issue have been made.
Among the issues yet to be resolved are how many US trainers will be needed, and whether all the courses will be given at the single existing training camp or broadened to several more camps.
Officials also have not settled on a timetable, because it will depend on how the US and Pakistan officials decide they want the new programme structured, how much funding is available, and what the security situation is in the border region.
US special operations forces have been training the Pakistani special forces for some time, and the programme was expanded to the Frontier Corps last October. On Thursday, Marine Commandant James T Conway told members of Congress it will be difficult to make progress in Afghanistan if forces in Pakistan are not having parallel success.
Pentagon wants faster training of Pakistan Army
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WASHINGTON: The Pentagon is looking at plans to significantly accelerate and expand the training of Pakistans military to improve its ability to confront insurgents along the Afghanistan border, The Associated Press has learned.
US officials are in early talks with Pakistani leaders to develop a programme that could increase the number of US special operations trainers in that country, with a goal of cutting the training time by as much as half for more than 9,000 members of the Frontier Corps, said a senior defence official.
Training the 14 battalion-size units of the Frontier Corps is expected to take at least four years, but officials would like to speed up their counterinsurgency training and expand the schooling to the Pakistani Army, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions are preliminary and no decisions on the sensitive issue have been made.
Among the issues yet to be resolved are how many US trainers will be needed, and whether all the courses will be given at the single existing training camp or broadened to several more camps.
Officials also have not settled on a timetable, because it will depend on how the US and Pakistan officials decide they want the new programme structured, how much funding is available, and what the security situation is in the border region.
US special operations forces have been training the Pakistani special forces for some time, and the programme was expanded to the Frontier Corps last October. On Thursday, Marine Commandant James T Conway told members of Congress it will be difficult to make progress in Afghanistan if forces in Pakistan are not having parallel success.
Pentagon wants faster training of Pakistan Army
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