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US wants Govt writ in tribal areas
WASHINGTON—The United States wants Pakistan to extend its control to
tribal areas in the country so as to deny Al-Qaeda, the Taliban and
other terrorist groups safe havens to plan and launch terrorist attacks
against Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"It is in the interest of Pakistan and the Pakistani people that the
government be able to exercise its sovereignty throughout all of
Pakistan," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters in
response to a question about a reported peace agreement with pro-Taliban
militants in the North Waziristan region.
He was unaware of the agreement, he said but noted, "This is an area
that traditionally has not been under the control of the central
government, so this is a historical problem, I think, in Pakistan.
"Certainly everybody understands the importance of not having safe
havens where you can have these ungoverned areas where Al-Qaeda, the
Taliban, other terrorist groups can plan and launch terrorist attacks
not only against Afghans and international forces in Afghanistan but
against Pakistanis and Pakistan."
"President Pervez Musharraf has a healthy appreciation for that.
Certainly we want to be as supportive as we can in his efforts to build
up those democratic political institutions in Pakistan," he said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had talked to President Musharraf
about his approach in the tribal areas during their last meeting.
He then told her how he was going to bring about an integrated civilian
military-political approach to the tribal areas to try to work with
them, work on development in the tribal areas as well as on the security
aspect. So, it was a Pakistani proposal.
"Afghanistan and Pakistan have a shared interest in seeing that that
border is controlled. Like I said, it's in everybody's interest if
they're not being safe havens along that border.
So I know that has been a source of tension in the past between
Afghanistan and Pakistan," McCormack said.
"What we have done -- what we have tried to do is encourage them to talk
and to work together and to solve problems as opposed to -- and solve
them privately as opposed to trying to do it in public, which is
sometimes a little bit harder," he added.—SANA |