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US Rejects Plea on Changing Aid
for Pakistan's anti-Terror Efforts
By
Khalida Mazhar 'Pakistan Times' US Bureau Chief
NEW YORK (US): The Bush
administration has brushed aside some suggestions for cutting off money that
the United States pays Pakistan for conducting counter-terrorism efforts or
even linking it to performance, The New York Times reported Sunday.
Such a course would further destabilize President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, who
is is already under pressure at home, the newspaper said, citing unnamed
current and former officials.In a front page dispatch, based on a team
effort, The Times said the payment involved is roughly $1 billion a year
that Pakistan calls reimbursements to its military for the cost of the
operations along the border with Afghanistan.
So far, it said, Pakistan has received more than $5.6 billion under the
programme over five years, more than half of the total aid the United States
has sent to Islamabad since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Asked why Pakistan was being paid even the after publicly declaring that it
is significantly cutting back on its patrols in the most important border
area, a spokesman for Stephen Hadley, the national security adviser,
emphasized Pakistan's strategic importance in the region.
'Pakistan's cooperation is very important in the global war on terror and
for our operations in Afghanistan," Spokesman Gordon Johndroe said. "Our
investments in that partnership have paid off over time, from increased
information sharing to kills and captures of key terrorist operatives. There
is more work to be done, the Pakistanis know that, and we are engaged with
the Musharraf government to ramp up the fight."
Pakistan's Ambassador to Washington, Mahmud Ali Durrani, who was interviewed
by the Times, said that the agreements with tribal elders were working and
that Pakistani military activities on the border itself were increasing.
He said that Pakistan was being properly reimbursed for fuel, munitions and
wear and tear on military equipment. "There are multiple small and big
operations going on, we have deployed troops along the border," he was
quoted as saying. "There is a lot of coordination."
The Pakistani ambassador, denied allegations that Pakistani troops were
failing to stop Taliban fighters at the border. He said the troops were
carrying out joint operations with American forces based inside Afghanistan.
The ambassador called the reports of direct Pakistani military support for
the Taliban "preposterous." He said the Pakistani military, which has lost
700 soldiers fighting militants in the tribal areas, would never tolerate
such activity from its soldiers.
"If even once this happens," he said, "the whole system will come down like
a ton of bricks on this person."●
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