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Al-Qaeda,
Taliban put under squeeze
KABUL—Al Qaeda and Taliban militants on the Afghan-Pakistani border are
increasingly facing pressure on two fronts and they can be squeezed with
more coordination between the neighbors, a U.S. official said on Monday.
The Taliban have been battling U.S. and other foreign troops in
Afghanistan since 2001. Pakistani forces have also been fighting the
militants, based in semi-autonomous tribal regions along the border, who
have unleashed an unprecedented wave of violence in Pakistan since the
middle of last year.
“To some extent, the extremists in those areas are now fighting on two
fronts,” U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher told a news
conference in Kabul. “They have to deal with pressures from the Pakistan
side and the pressure from the Afghan side. The more we can do that in
concert with each other, the more squeezed the al Qaeda and Taliban
supporters in those areas will feel,” said Boucher who makes regular
trips to both Pakistan and Afghanistan. Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden
is believed to be hiding out somewhere along the mountainous border.
Relations between the neighbors have been dogged by Afghan complaints
Pakistan is not doing enough to wipe out Taliban sanctuaries and stop
the flow of fighters and arms into Afghanistan. But Boucher cited what
he called renewed energy in relations between the two countries. “What I
have found in our discussions is a real commitment to work together, to
coordinate with each other ... more intensely,” he said.
A new Pakistani government, facing widespread opposition to Pakistan’s
alliance with the United States, has called for a reassessment of
efforts against militancy and has said it will try to open negotiations
with militants. That has raised questions about Pakistan’s security
policy, especially with old U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf, who
has overseen security for years, politically weak since his allies were
defeated in a general election in February.—Agencies |