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Washington earmarks funds to strengthen Pakistani counter-insurgency capabilities
Trefor Moss JDW Asia-Pacific Editor - London
Key Points
The United States is planning to set up a USD2.8 billion Pakistani Counter-insurgency Capability Fund
Washington's lack of confidence in Pakistan's counter-insurgency capabilities was highlighted by the latest in a string of UAV strikes
The United States is to continue funding the Pakistan Army via a new Pakistani Counter-insurgency Capability Fund (PCCF), CENTCOM commander General David Petraeus has said.
Gen Petraeus revealed plans for the new fund on 30 March, amid US media reports that USD2.8 billion was being earmarked for the PCCF over a five-year period.
A CENTCOM spokesman told Jane's that he was unable to discuss the PCCF as the budgetary request for the programme's funding was still under consideration; however, he confirmed that the amount requested was in the order of USD2.8 billion over five years. A decision on whether to fund the project would be reached within a matter of days, he added.
The lack of an effective counter-insurgency strategy in Pakistan was underlined on 1 April when the latest in a series of suspected US unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) strikes was reported in the Orakzai agency of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The strike, which killed around 12 suspected militants, according to local sources, was the first to have been conducted in Orakzai.
The continuation of UAV strikes under President Barack Obama has demonstrated that, in spite of the administration's top-down reassessment of the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the US has little confidence in Pakistan's ability - or even its willingness - to attack Afghan insurgents inside Pakistan.
Launching the US's new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan on 27 March, Obama discussed proposals - which are subject to Congressional approval - to spend USD7.5 billion over a five-year period on civilian projects to help "strengthen Pakistan's democracy".
However, he did not offer any specific details on future military assistance to Islamabad, saying that "after years of mixed results, we will not provide a blank check" to the Pakistan Army and that the US "must focus [its] military assistance on the tools, training and support that Pakistan needs to root out the terrorists".
US military aid to Pakistan has been highly controversial. Despite handing the regime of former president Pervez Musharraf around USD10 billion in military assistance, Washington has seen the Pakistan Army make little headway in dismantling the safe havens of Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in the country's remote western regions.
US lawmakers have also objected to the funding of big-ticket platforms, notably F-16 fighters, at the expense of more relevant, and often more basic, counter-insurgency equipment and training.
A Pakistani military spokesman told Jane's that the army was continuing to mount operations against Pakistani militant groups in the country - especially in the FATA's Mohmand agency - but that it had no specific plans to retaliate against Tehrik-e-Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, who claimed responsibility for the 30 March attack on police recruits in Lahore that left 11 dead and around 100 injured.
The attack, which followed another spectacular terrorist operation in Lahore against the Sri Lankan cricket team several weeks earlier, highlighted yet again Pakistan's fragile security situation.
© 2009 Jane's Information Group
Trefor Moss JDW Asia-Pacific Editor - London
Key Points
The United States is planning to set up a USD2.8 billion Pakistani Counter-insurgency Capability Fund
Washington's lack of confidence in Pakistan's counter-insurgency capabilities was highlighted by the latest in a string of UAV strikes
The United States is to continue funding the Pakistan Army via a new Pakistani Counter-insurgency Capability Fund (PCCF), CENTCOM commander General David Petraeus has said.
Gen Petraeus revealed plans for the new fund on 30 March, amid US media reports that USD2.8 billion was being earmarked for the PCCF over a five-year period.
A CENTCOM spokesman told Jane's that he was unable to discuss the PCCF as the budgetary request for the programme's funding was still under consideration; however, he confirmed that the amount requested was in the order of USD2.8 billion over five years. A decision on whether to fund the project would be reached within a matter of days, he added.
The lack of an effective counter-insurgency strategy in Pakistan was underlined on 1 April when the latest in a series of suspected US unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) strikes was reported in the Orakzai agency of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The strike, which killed around 12 suspected militants, according to local sources, was the first to have been conducted in Orakzai.
The continuation of UAV strikes under President Barack Obama has demonstrated that, in spite of the administration's top-down reassessment of the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the US has little confidence in Pakistan's ability - or even its willingness - to attack Afghan insurgents inside Pakistan.
Launching the US's new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan on 27 March, Obama discussed proposals - which are subject to Congressional approval - to spend USD7.5 billion over a five-year period on civilian projects to help "strengthen Pakistan's democracy".
However, he did not offer any specific details on future military assistance to Islamabad, saying that "after years of mixed results, we will not provide a blank check" to the Pakistan Army and that the US "must focus [its] military assistance on the tools, training and support that Pakistan needs to root out the terrorists".
US military aid to Pakistan has been highly controversial. Despite handing the regime of former president Pervez Musharraf around USD10 billion in military assistance, Washington has seen the Pakistan Army make little headway in dismantling the safe havens of Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in the country's remote western regions.
US lawmakers have also objected to the funding of big-ticket platforms, notably F-16 fighters, at the expense of more relevant, and often more basic, counter-insurgency equipment and training.
A Pakistani military spokesman told Jane's that the army was continuing to mount operations against Pakistani militant groups in the country - especially in the FATA's Mohmand agency - but that it had no specific plans to retaliate against Tehrik-e-Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, who claimed responsibility for the 30 March attack on police recruits in Lahore that left 11 dead and around 100 injured.
The attack, which followed another spectacular terrorist operation in Lahore against the Sri Lankan cricket team several weeks earlier, highlighted yet again Pakistan's fragile security situation.
© 2009 Jane's Information Group