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US says officers return to Pakistan

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AFP: US says officers return to Pakistan

US says officers return to Pakistan

By Shaun Tandon (AFP) – 3 hours ago

WASHINGTON — The United States said Thursday that Pakistan has let back in two officers to work with its military after a six-month gap, in what it called a small sign of cooperation after soaring tensions.

The Pentagon said that two liaison officers returned in the past week to the northwestern city of Peshawar after being kicked out by Pakistan in its outrage over a border airstrike that killed 24 of its soldiers.

But the Pentagon said that Pakistan has not let back trainers or reopened its border to NATO supplies, two of the main forms of support for the US-led war effort that have been shut down since the November 26 border incident.

The returning officers are in charge of liaising with the headquarters of Pakistan's 11th Corps, which covers the lawless border region where the US-backed ISAF force believes Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters enjoy a safe haven.

"The tactical and operational coordination between the ISAF and Pakistani military is getting better -- in fits and starts, to be sure, but it is getting better," said Pentagon spokesman Captain John Kirby.

"This is another example of how that coordination is going to continue to improve," Kirby told reporters.

Kirby said that the two officers -- who report to the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan -- returned to Peshawar at the request of Pakistan.

Relations between the United States and Pakistan have severely deteriorated in the past year, particularly after US forces discovered and killed Osama bin Laden in the country's military town of Abbottabad in May 2011.

Pakistan has demanded an apology over the November border killings. President Barack Obama has voiced regret, calling the deaths an accident, but stopped short of an apology amid US concerns that Pakistani intelligence elements are supporting extremists.

The NATO alliance invited Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to Chicago for a May 20-21 summit on Afghanistan's future. But the trip ended in debacle, with Obama snubbing Zardari after talks collapsed on reopening the border to NATO.

US lawmakers have since moved to cut aid to Pakistan -- which was totaled more than $18 billion since the September 11, 2001 attacks -- after a court gave a 33-year prison term to a doctor recruited by the CIA to find bin Laden.

Amid the tensions, the United States has stepped up its covert drone attacks inside Pakistan aimed at extremists deep in the tribal region. Pakistani officials said that two strikes on Monday alone killed at least nine militants.

Pakistan's parliament has demanded an end to drone attacks, saying they violate sovereignty and infuriate civilians. But the strikes enjoy wide support in Washington as they cause no US casualties and are seen as the only way to reach most-wanted militants.

However, at least 10 liberal lawmakers from Obama's Democratic Party have signed a letter to the White House voicing concern about what they see as a lack of oversight and accountability over the drone strikes.

Drones "are faceless ambassadors that cause civilian deaths and are frequently the only direct contact with Americans that the targeted communities have. They can generate powerful and enduring anti-American sentiment," said the letter spearheaded by Representatives Dennis Kucinich and John Conyers.
 
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The two liaison officer's return is okay but no need for the trainers to return. The trainers are spies and once inside they do nothing but try to recruit spies. Keep the trainers out and there will be fewer cases of bombings in Pakistan.
 
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Pakistan denies reports of US military trainers’ return, US concurs


386795-pakistanmilitaryreuters-1338447203-904-640x480.jpg

ISPR spokesperson says reports of US military trainers in Pakistan are incorrect.

Pakistan on Thursday denied reports of the United States sending military trainers back into Pakistan to instruct Frontier Corps (FC) trainers in counter-insurgency warfare. The statement was backed up later by a Pentagon spokesperson.


According to an Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) spokesperson, the report released by the foreign media is “incorrect”.


The report had said that fewer than 10 US special operations soldiers have been sent to a training site near Peshawar.

“It is not true. American trainers have not returned to Pakistan,” a senior Pakistani military official told Reuters.


The Pakistani official declined to comment when asked why he thought a US official was saying US trainers had returned.

The number of American military instructors in Pakistan dropped to zero after an attack on a check post killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in late November. Nato labelled the border incident an accident but it enraged Pakistanis and sent already tense ties with the United States into a tailspin.

A US official on condition of anonymity had said, “There’s a lot more we want to do to improve it, but (the trainers’ return) is an important sign that at least in some areas we’re getting a healthy sense of normalcy.”


Two liaisons to be based in Peshawar

Pentagon spokesperson Captain John F. Kirby told media on Thursday that there are no military trainers currently in Pakistan, but said that two liaison officers have been stationed in Peshawar recently for border coordination.

The Pentagon spokesperson was responding to a story published by Reuters on Wednesday that said US military trainers had returned to Pakistan. He said that the two liaison officers will report to the Regional Command East headquarters in Afghanistan to meet with their counterparts in Peshawar.

The Pentagon spokesperson said that their purpose was to increase co-operation between the two military forces on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. “Tactical and operational co-operation is getting better,” said the Pentagon spokesperson, and cited the recent visit as an example of that. He added that the US does not have an agreement right now with Pakistan to send trainers. “The small number of trainers that were there earlier was at Pakistan’s request.”

In response to a question, Captain Kirby said that there had been no movement on the matter of reopening the NATO supply routes.

Pakistan denies reports of US military trainers
 
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Pakistan denies reports of US military trainers’ return, US concurs


Pakistan denies reports of US military trainers


PPP will do anything for dollars and to remain in power so I don't trust the Pakistan government. Blackwater will be back in Pakistan causing terrorism everywhere in Pakistan like in 2009 and will try to convince Pakistanis its Taliban who are doing it.
 
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Why? What dick were these liasion officer sucking when their attack helis were slaughtering brave Pakistani sons?
 
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Why? What dick were these liasion officer sucking when their attack helis were slaughtering brave Pakistani sons?

Somebody was sucking down something, wasn't our boys though...
 
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