Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty
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Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty
UK backs new US strategy on Pakistan border
Thursday, September 11, 2008
LONDON: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown says he'll discuss a new approach to policing the Afghan-Pakistan border in talks with U.S. President George W. Bush.
Brown said the two leaders were holding a video conference on Thursday to assess the work of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
Brown says a new strategy is needed to halt the flow of Taliban and militant fighters between Pakistan and its neighbor.
He told reporters that he'll soon meet in London with Pakistan's new president Asif Ali Zardari to discuss authorization for cross-border raids.
Some Pakistani officials have criticized the U.S. over raids in Pakistan's South Waziristan region. Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said the operations risked stoking militancy in the region.
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Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty
NATO says won't take part in Pakistan raids
Thursday, September 11, 2008
BRUSSELS: NATO will not take part in a proposed U.S. strategy of conducting raids into Pakistan from Afghanistan against Taliban and al Qaeda militants, a spokesman said on Thursday.
"The NATO policy, that is our mandate, ends at the border," James Appathurai told a regular news briefing. "There are no ground or air incursions by NATO forces into Pakistani territory."
Appathurai said he was sure the issue would be discussed when 26 NATO defence ministers debate Afghan strategy at a Sept. 18-19 meeting in London. But he added: "Let me stress, it is not NATO that will be sending its forces across the border."
The spokesman said a solution needed to be found to growing extremism in tribal areas of Pakistan bordering Afghanistan.
"Pakistan needs to take effective action in cooperation with the rest of the international community and the Afghans to address the problem that is increasingly threatening Pakistan's stability as well as Afghanistan's," he said.
NATO leads a force of some 53,000 troops in Afghanistan. A separate U.S. force is also battling militants in the country.
On Wednesday, the U.S. military conceded to Congress that it was not winning the fight against the Taliban insurgency and said it would revise its strategy to target militant safe havens in Pakistan.
U.S. Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the House of Representatives Armed Services Committee he was "looking at a new, more comprehensive strategy" that would cover both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border.
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