[Although
he declined to provide details, Panetta told reporters at the Pentagon on
Tuesday that “we are going to take whatever steps are necessary to protect our
forces” in Afghanistan from attacks by the Haqqani network,
which has had a long relationship with Pakistan ’s intelligence service.]
By Karen DeYoung
AAAn Afghan security guard keeps watch at the memorial of
Ahmad Shah Massoud, who helped repel the 1980s
Soviet
invasion.Omar Sohbani / AP
|
The Obama administration
has sharply warned Pakistan that it must cut ties with a leading Taliban group based
in the tribal region along the Afghan border and help eliminate its leaders,
according to officials from both countries. In what amounts to an ultimatum,
administration officials have indicated that the United States will act unilaterally if Pakistan does not comply.
The message, delivered
in high-level meetings and public statements over the past several days,
reflects the belief of a growing number of senior administration officials that
a years-long strategy of using persuasion and military assistance to influence
Pakistani behavior has been ineffective.
White House officials
and Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta are said to be adamant in their determination
to change the approach, according to officials who spoke on the condition of
anonymity about internal administration deliberations.
Although he declined to
provide details, Panetta told reporters at the Pentagon on Tuesday that “we are
going to take whatever steps are necessary to protect our forces” in Afghanistan from attacks by the Haqqani network, which has had a long
relationship with Pakistan ’s intelligence service.
“We’ve continued to
state that this cannot happen,” Panetta said of the Haqqani strikes, including
a Sept. 13 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Kabul .
As Panetta spoke, new
CIA Director David H. Petraeus was holding an unpublicized private meeting in Washington with his Pakistani counterpart, Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who met with Pakistan ’s army chief in Madrid on Friday, said that the “proxy connection” between
Pakistani intelligence and the Haqqani network was the focus of those
discussions.
Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton is among a minority of administration officials still
willing to express public sympathy for Pakistan ’s weak civilian leaders as they face a growing threat from
domestic terrorism and the politically powerful military.
But during a 31 / 2-hour
meeting in New York on Sunday with her Pakistani counterpart, she warned that
Pakistan is fast losing friends in Washington, according to one official
closely familiar with the session.
Clinton left the
meeting with Pakistan’s assurance that “they recognize that these people are
threats to Pakistan as well, and that no one should think that their
relationship with the Haqqanis was more important than their relationship with
the United States,” a senior administration official said.
But another
administration official emphasized the severity of the U.S. officials’ warning. “We are expressing the firm conviction
that things have to change . . . in Miranshah and in Islamabad , as well,” this official said. Miranshah is the main
population center in Pakistan ’s North Waziristan region, where the Haqqani leadership is based. CIA drone
attacks elsewhere in the region have avoided the city for fear of civilian
casualties.
“It’s a reality that
they’re not living in tents in the open,” the official acknowledged. But with
Pakistani cooperation, “we know that there are ways to get at extremist leaders
anywhere,” the official said, citing the past capture of senior al-Qaeda
leaders during joint intelligence operations in the far larger cities of Karachi and Quetta .
As U.S. commanders have claimed progress against the Taliban in
southern Afghanistan , the allied Haqqani group has stepped up its efforts in
the eastern part of the country and is now considered the principal threat
against U.S. forces.
The organization was
formed by Jalaluddin Haqqani as one of the resistance groups fighting the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s, with U.S. and Pakistani assistance. In the Afghan civil war that
followed, Haqqani sided with the Taliban forces that took power in Kabul in 1996. His fighters fled after the Taliban overthrow in
late 2001 to Pakistan , where U.S. intelligence officials think they are in close
coordination with al-Qaeda forces.
Pakistani intelligence
maintained close connections to the network, now operationally led by
Sirajuddin Haqqani, the founder’s son, as a hedge against the future in Afghanistan .
Two years ago,
President Obama, in a letter to Pakistani President Alif Asif Zardari, warned
that Pakistan ’s intelligence ties to extremist groups, including the
Haqqanis, could “not continue.” At the time, Obama promised an expanded
strategic relationship with Pakistan in exchange for action.
Since then, U.S. military and civilian aid to Pakistan has increased significantly, and the administration has
repeatedly described Pakistan as a crucial partner in the fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan . U.S. diplomats have tried to foster working relationships
between the often-estranged Afghan and Pakistani governments, as well as
between Pakistan and India , its historical adversary.
Intelligence and
counterterrorism cooperation between the two governments has ebbed and flowed
over that period, reaching a low point this year with several events, including
the shooting death of two Pakistanis by a CIA contractor in January and the
unilateral U.S. military raid that killed Osama bin Laden in his suburban
Pakistani hideout in May.
Several months of open
estrangement were followed by a slow climb back to cooperation — although not
against the Haqqanis — by late August. CIA officials noted some improvement in
the intelligence relationship, although Pakistan has continued to refuse entreaties for long-term,
multiple-entry CIA visas. Even as they have traded public barbs, U.S. and Pakistani military officials reached a tentative agreement
this week to return at least 100 of about 200 U.S. military trainers that Pakistan expelled earlier in the year.
But recent attacks
attributed to Haqqani in eastern Afghanistan , culminating in the embassy assault last week, appear to
have abruptly changed attitudes within the senior levels of the administration.
On Saturday, in a
message approved at senior levels in Washington, Cameron Munter, the U.S.
Ambassador to Pakistan , told a radio interviewer in Islamabad that the United States had evidence “linking the Haqqani network to the Pakistan government.”
Although U.S. officials said they are continuing to look for a way
forward with Pakistan , at least two factors are likely to narrow the
administration’s options. As the conflict continues, Pakistan has fewer friends in Congress, where budget-cutting zeal
increasingly coincides with pressure to stop funding assistance to Pakistan .
At the same time, the
administration has grown increasingly determined to ease its way out of the Afghanistan conflict, and has diminishing patience for what it views
as Pakistani impediments.
“What’s different is
that we have begun a transition” in Afghanistan , one administration official said. “We’ve got a credible
program to build an effective Afghan security force, and transition is
happening, whether people like it or not.”
“For those who are
wedded to the past — past relationships, past support structures — and for
those who would destablize Afghanistan,” the official said, “they’ve got to
take account of the fact that things are different.”
@ The Washington Post
DOZENS OF
PILGRIMS ON BUS IN
ISLAMABAD ,
Pakistan — Gunmen in the southwestern province of Baluchistan attacked a bus carrying Shiite pilgrims
to Iran on Tuesday, killing at least 25 people
and wounding 6 more, local police officials said.
DOZENS OF
PILGRIMS ON BUS IN PAKISTAN ARE SHOT TO DEATH
[Hours later, the extremist Sunni group Lashkar-e-Jangvi claimed responsibility for the attack. The group, which the authorities say carried out previous attacks against Shiites in Baluchistan , is believed to be affiliated with Al Qaeda.]
By Jane Perlez
The bus driver said that 8 to 10 attackers ordered the pilgrims off the
bus and opened fire on them, the police said.
Hours later, the extremist Sunni group Lashkar-e-Jangvi claimed
responsibility for the attack. The group, which the authorities say carried out
previous attacks against Shiites in Baluchistan , is believed to be affiliated with Al Qaeda.
The attack occurred at Mastung, about 30 miles south of Quetta , the provincial capital, along the road
to the Iran-Pakistan border crossing at Taftan. About 50 passengers were on the
bus when it was attacked, said Saeed Imrani, the local deputy police
commissioner.
Attacks on Shiite pilgrims traveling to Iran through Baluchistan have been frequent over the last decade.
Two such attacks occurred last month. A year ago, 57 people at a Shiite rally
in Quetta were killed by a suicide bomber.
Shiites are a minority in mainly Sunni Pakistan. Most of the Shiites in Baluchistan belong to the Hazara ethnic group,
whose members are also numerous in Afghanistan and Iran . Shiites in Quetta complain that the local authorities have
failed to provide adequate protection for them.