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Afghanistan
Leaks reveal US doubts on Karzai
2010-12-04
[Al Jazeera] US diplomats were concerned about the competence of Hamid Maybe I'll join the Taliban Karzai, the Afghan president, and widespread corruption within his government, according to cables released by WikiLeaks.

Karzai's character as well as ability are questioned in US embassy memos obtained by the whistleblower website and published by the Guardian, a UK newspaper, late on Thursday.

Karl Eikenberry, the current US ambassador to Afghanistan, in a 2009 cable describes Karzai as "insecure" and a "paranoid and weak individual".

"Indeed his inability to grasp the most rudimentary principles of state-building and his deep seated insecurity as a leader combine to make any admission of fault unlikely, in turn confounding our best efforts to find in Karzai a responsible partner," Eikenberry said.

Eikenberry added that Karzai continually blames the US and its allies for Afghanistan's problems rather than looking at the problems of his leadership, and that his attitude was unlikely to change.

'Semi-modern aristocracy'
The cables state that Karzai's own ministers accused him of going along with criminal activity. One case cites Karzai's ordering of the physical intimidation of the official heading a team negotiating with the Taliban.

US officials in the memos view Ahmed Wali Karzai, the half-brother of the president and bigwig in Kandahar, as corrupt and call the Karzai family a "semi-modern aristocracy".

"As the kingpin of Kandahar, Ahmed Wali Karzai (AWK) dominates access to economic resources, patronage, and protection.

"Much of the real business of running Kandahar takes place out of public sight, where AWK operates, parallel to formal government structures, through a network of political clans that use state institutions to protect and enable licit and illicit enterprises."

Al Jizz's James Bays, in Kabul, said that the documents showed a declining confidence in Karzai's presidency.

"Certainly there is criticism of some of the things he has done, like releasing some prisoners from jail ... said to be for tribal, political reasons.

"The cables show a progression of when Karzai has been in power - from total confidence in him to now when they are deeply concerned."

The leaked cables reveal mounting US worries over corruption in Afghanistan and the flight of "vast amounts" of money from the country.

One memo from October 2009 stated that Ahmed Zia Massoud, the then vice-president, had been found with $52m in a suitcase when stopped at Dubai airport.

Massoud has denied the claim.

UK criticism
US diplomats also criticised the role of UK troops in Afghanistan, saying their effort was "not up to standard" in southern Helmand province, a stronghold of the Taliban.

"We and Karzai agree the British are not up to the task of securing Helmand," US diplomats from the Kabul embassy said in a 2008 cable.

In a separate cable sent in February 2009, Karzai complains that UK forces had allowed law and order to breakdown in Helmand.

"When I first returned to Afghanistan, I had only 14 American soldiers with me," the cable quoted Karzai as having said.

"Helmand was safe for girls to go to school. Now ... British soldiers are in Helmand, and the people are not safe.

"We must stand on a higher moral platform than the bad guys."

General Dan McNeill, the commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan from 2007-2008, was reported to have said to a US drug-control officer in April 2007 that the British "had made a mess of things in Helmand, their tactics were wrong".

Gulab Mangal, Helmand's governor, was also quoted in a cable sent from the US embassy in Kabul as telling a US team led by Joe Foreign Policy Whiz Kid Biden
... an example of the kind of top-notch Washington intellect to be found in the World's Greatest Deliberative Body ...
, the vice-president, that US forces were needed urgently due to British security in the town of Sangin failing to extend even to the main bazaar.

'Increasing security'
"I do not have anything against them [the British] but they must leave their bases and engage with the people," Mangal said.

"Stop calling it the Sangin district and start calling it the Sangin base - all you have done here is build a military camp next to the city."

The UK has reacted to the leaked memos, stating that their troops had performed well and that safety in Sangin - which the US now maintains responsibility for - was improved by their presence.

"British forces did an excellent job in Sangin, delivering progress by increasing security and taking the fight to the insurgency," the UK's ministry of defence said in a statement.

"Both Afghan leaders, including the governor of Sangin and the US Marines, have publicly recognised and paid tribute to the sacrifice and achievements of British forces in that area," a front man added.

Nato forces have been in Afghanistan since 2001, following a US invasion of the country to remove the Taliban, whom they accused of harbouring al-Qaeda operatives connected to the September 11 attacks, from power.

This year has been the most violent since the campaign began.

The UK has 10,000 troops in the country, now costing more than £5bn ($7.7bn) a year, of about 150,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan.

The WikiLeaks website began releasing a trove of classified US diplomatic cables on Sunday, infuriating Washington, which called the leak an "attack on the international community".
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Afghanistan
Taliban flee U.S. Marines onslaught in Afghanistan
2008-06-03
Taliban insurgents are running away fleeing south towards the Afghan border with Pakistan in the face of a U.S. Marines offensive in volatile Helmand province, the NATO commander in Afghanistan said on Monday.

U.S. Marines have been pushing south from the former Taliban stronghold of Garmsir in Helmand for a month in an operation meant to cut off insurgent infiltration routes from Pakistan. "They have shown under some amount of pressure they flee to their sanctuaries," General Dan McNeill told a news conference. "In the last two days we have had many reports ... that the insurgents after experiencing these several weeks of pressure below Garmsir are trying to flee to the south perhaps to go back to sanctuaries in another country," he said.

While McNeill was careful not to name any country, the only nation with which Helmand shares a border is Pakistan.
So he didn't have to be careful at all ...
Mainly British troops have been battling the Taliban in Helmand since March 2006, capturing a string of towns in the fertile strip along the Helmand River cutting through the desert. But Garmsir, the southermost town of any size in Helmand, and its surrounding villages had previously evaded capture.

Washington dispatched 3,200 U.S. Marines to Afghanistan in March to bolster mainly British, Canadian and Dutch troops in southern Afghanistan after other NATO allies failed to come up with reinforcements.
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India-Pakistan
'Pakistani havens can sustain Afghan insurgency'
2008-05-31
The American commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan has said Islamic insurgents would pose a challenge to the country for years if safe havens continued to exist in Pakistan. “If there are going to be sanctuaries where these terrorists, these extremists, these insurgents can train, can recruit, can regenerate, there’s still going to be a challenge there,” said General Dan McNeill, when asked if he agreed with Senator John McCain’s forecast that the Taliban threat in Afghanistan would be ‘greatly reduced’ by 2013. However, he said efforts to strengthen the Afghan army and police had put them on course to reduce the size of the coalition force in 2011. McNeill, who leaves his post next week, also said peace deals on the other side of the border (Pakistan) were behind a recent spike in violence in Afghanistan.
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India-Pakistan
Defeat of militancy still years away: US
2008-05-26
The Pentagon has warned that Pakistan needs several eons centuries decades years to defeat “Al Qaeda-linked terrorists operating in its tribal region along the Afghan border”.

Also, the commander of US forces in Afghanistan has said that peace talks between militants and Islamabad will make it easier for militants to cross the border. “We are troubled by the negotiations and the possibility of yet another peace deal in the northwest,” US Army General Dan McNeill said. “We keep our eyes on Pakistan. It seems to me to be very dysfunctional right now.”

In a report sent to Congress on Friday, the US Department of Defence acknowledged that last year Pakistan deployed 30,000 additional troops to the Fata and made significant efforts to eliminate the so-called Al Qaeda safe havens in the region. But “it is troubling” that despite these efforts, safe havens in the Fata “have grown in recent years”.

The Pentagon report made no reference to Pakistan’s negotiations with militants but noted that Al Qaeda and other extremists continued to hide in the Fata, where they were able to recruit, train, and target US and western interests.

The report also claimed that seminaries in Pakistan continued to promote jihad and martyrdom and provided potential operatives for acts of violence in Afghanistan. The report warned that it might take several years before Pakistan succeeded in implementing a comprehensive strategy to render the tribal areas permanently inhospitable to terrorists.

The report noted that 700 Pakistanis had been killed in suicide attacks since July 2007.

The report noted that the US was working with Pakistan on a six-year programme to help strengthen the Pakistani military and security forces but cautioned that it would take time to implement the plan. “It may be several years before Pakistan’s comprehensive strategy to render the remote tribal areas permanently inhospitable to terrorists, insurgents and other violent extremists can be measured for success.”

Besides building new training facilities for the Frontier Corps, the United States was also providing anti-insurgency training to Pakistani commandos, the report said. The US was also funding the creation of a 700-member special force of Pashtun tribesmen that would act as a rapid response force for dealing with emergencies. The Pentagon had provided $150 million this year for these programmes and was seeking another $200 million for next year, said the report.

Meanwhile, in a conference call from Kabul with defence specialists in Washington, the commander of Nato forces in Afghanistan expressed serious concerns about Pakistan’s latest peace moves in the Fata.

The Pentagon’s news service, which reported Gen McNeill’s remarks, noted that terrorist attacks had killed more than 2,000 people in Pakistan last year. The report also noted that the number of terrorist actions had risen since Pakistan began truce talks last month and April saw 50 per cent more incidents than the same period last year.

“We’ve got good data that shows whenever there is dialogue or a peace deal consummated, our aggregated number of untoward events typically goes up,” Gen McNeill said. “The good news is we have more force in regional command east than we did last year, so I think we can handle what comes.”
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Afghanistan
Peace deals allow the insurgents to launch more attacks
2008-05-19
KABUL, May 19 (Reuters) - NATO has sent in more U.S. reinforced troops along the Afghan border anticipating peace deals between Pakistan and the Taliban will allow the insurgents to launch more attacks into Afghanistan, NATO's commander in Afghanistan said.

Pakistan has begun Re-deploying thinning out troops in parts of its border region and freed Taliban prisoners to try to seal a peace with al Qaeda-linked militants active on both sides of the frontier.

"Our analysis of the previous peace deals ... is that when that dialogue is ongoing or when talks have been consummated in peace deals we see a spike in the untoward events that we experience on our side of the border," said General Dan McNeill, commander of NATO's 47,000-strong International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan.

NATO says there has already been a sharp increase in militant attacks in eastern Afghanistan, the area closest to the parts of Pakistan where peace talks are underway. Mostly U.S. troops are responsible for helping Afghan forces patrol mountainous region.

"We are going to have a bit of a plus-up in the U.S. sector," McNeill told Reuters. "Because we expect more activity there, we attune some of our intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance processes and systems to focus where we anticipate things." The German and some of the other girly boy NATO allies will be safe.

ISAF, some 12,000 troops in a separate U.S.-led coalition force and more than 100,000 Afghan soldiers and police are fighting to contain a Taliban insurgency relaunched two years ago with a guerrilla campaign, backed by suicide and roadside bombs.

More than 6,000 people were killed in the violence last year, some 2,000 of them civilians, NGOs estimate. I thought it was 8,000 with mostly Taliban dead? Those NGOs just love to play with the numbers.

The Taliban are made up of several loosely allied groups which make their own operational plans, but accept guidance from a shura, or council, led by the reclusive Mullah Mohammad Omar.

"I don't know that Mullah Omar is alive. I don't know if he's dead either," said McNeill. "But I do believe there is a shura and I do believe it is located outside Afghanistan. It might possibly be in one of several Pakistani cities."

AL QAEDA HELP

Several Taliban militants have been killed in recent weeks in a series of apparent airstrikes on safe-houses on Pakistan's side of the border. The Taliban and Pakistani officials have said U.S. unmanned aircraft carried out the attacks.

Asked whether his forces would carry out strikes against the Taliban inside Pakistan, McNeill said: "The NATO mandate goes only as far as the border, that's as far as I'll go." The CIA and Spec Op's mandate goes a little further.

Intelligence reports suggested there were fewer foreign fighters with the Taliban this year, he said, but there was evidence of al Qaeda money, weapons and training helping the insurgents, especially in the east.

"In a couple of locations in the U.S. sector we have engaged insurgents and post-engagement we have discovered on some of the dead ones better equipment and in the process of engaging them we have seen better tactics indicating a better level of training," McNeill said.

Afghan forces were also much improved, he said, and "barring any cataclysmic occurrence", should be ready to fully take over security in Afghanistan by 2011 if they continued to make progress at the present rate.

Still, the Taliban are not the biggest threat to security.

"It seems to me there are two big threats out there are neither are the insurgent," McNeill said.

"I don't think this country can continue on its present path and expect reasonable progress if it doesn't take on the scourge of illegal narcotics," he said. "Secondly I think that governance has to improve greatly; the government has to extend its reach and it has to eliminate corruption." If they could discover perpetual motion they would have a Hat Trick of miracles.

Afghanistan produces 93 percent of the world's opium, a drug processed into highly addictive heroin and exported to the West. The lucrative trade is one of the biggest factors making Afghanistan one of the most corrupt countries in the world.

Both undermine public faith in the Afghan government and threaten to undo military efforts to defeat the insurgency.
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Afghanistan
Poland won’t send troops to Afghan south
2008-02-09
WARSAW - Poland will not send its 1,200 troops in Afghanistan to fight Taleban insurgents in the country’s volatile south, Defence Minister Bogdan Klich said in an interview published Friday.
Disappointing.
Klich told the newspaper Dziennik that Canada had asked the Poles to deploy in Kandahar province, a hotbed of fighting between the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and Taleban and Al Qaeda fighters. ‘I didn’t accept the proposal. This province doesn’t meet our base-line criteria, which hinge on reducing the risks to our contingent,’ Klich said.

In December, Poland pledged to raise its ISAF troop contribution to 1,600 this year. Warsaw had already increased the size of its contingent early last year from around 200 to 1,200. The Polish contingent is currently spread across five different regions of eastern Afghanistan, but from the autumn will be concentrated in the eastern Paktika province, Klich said.

ISAF commander, US General Dan McNeill, confirmed the plan to concentrate the Polish forces in one area. He told Dziennik that ISAF and Warsaw would be able to reach an understanding on the Poles’ role.

Elite Polish troops, who are not part of the ISAF contingent, are deployed in the south alongside the Canadians, but Warsaw does not comment on their operations.
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Afghanistan
Four dozen Talibs banged in Musa Qala area
2007-10-21
The separate US-led coalition, which works alongside ISAF and the Afghan security forces, said it killed around four dozen Taliban fighters in two straight days of fighting elsewhere in Helmand. Nearly three dozen were killed Saturday and more than a dozen on Friday in fighting in the Musa Qala area, an insurgent hotbed. Both battles were sparked by ambushes which Afghan and coalition soldiers beat back with return fire and help from war planes, the force said. The fighting was "part of a larger operation to disrupt terrorist activities in the Helmand province," it said in a statement.

Helmand produces most of Afghanistan's opium which the United Nations says accounts for up 93 percent of world supply. The top US commander in Afghanistan, General Dan McNeill, said this week he estimated up to 40 percent of the Taliban's income comes from opium, the raw ingredient of heroin. The Taliban have been in control of the Musa Qala district centre for months and officials have said the small town has become a headquarters for rebels who are assisted by foreign "jihadists" in their bid to topple the US-backed Kabul government.

In other bloodshed, two policemen were killed and four wounded Saturday when a bomb blew up their pick-up in the eastern province of Paktia, provincial police chief Ismatullah Alizai said, blaming the Taliban. Unknown gunmen meanwhile shot dead a tribal elder in the same province, he said.

A toddler died when she was struck by a gunshot from a NATO soldier while troops killed four dozen Taliban in two days of battles in Afghanistan's top opium-growing area, officials said Saturday. NATO's International Security Assistance Force said it deeply regretted the death of the child in the southern province of Helmand on Friday. Helmand provincial police chief Mohammad Hussain Andiwal said the girl was two years old and the incident had happened outside her home.

An ISAF soldier fired a single shot to stop a vehicle from coming too close to a military patrol, the force said in a statement. The bullet allegedly ricocheted and hit the child although the incident was being investigated, it said. "Sometime later, a family brought a child suffering from a gunshot wound to the head to an ISAF base for medical attention. Unfortunately, the child died," it said.

Several civilians have been killed in Afghanistan this year by warning shots fired to stop people approaching international security force checkpoints and patrols. Troops are the main target of Taliban suicide bombs, often delivered by car or fixed to a person who launches himself at the soldiers.
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Afghanistan
Iranian, Chinese weapons seized in Afghanistan
2007-09-23
Afghan authorities said they had seized dozens of Iranian and Chinese-manufactured weaponry after a brief battle on Saturday with Taliban fighters near the border with Iran. The weapons found in the western province of Herat included about 40 mines and rocket-propelled grenades, the government’s intelligence agency said in a statement. They were found in a vehicle that Taliban fighters abandoned following an exchange of fire in the province’s Ghoryan district on the Iranian border.

“The weapons were seized after the Taliban escaped and left one of their vehicles behind with the weapons,” it said. An intelligence official told AFP separately and on condition of anonymity that the arms appeared to have been manufactured in Iran and China. Some of the rockets showed to reporters carried Persian writing and the coat of arms of Iran, which reads “Allah”. US and British officials have previously alleged that the Taliban are being supplied by weapons from Iran, although not necessarily from Tehran, which denies involvement. A sizeable convoy carrying explosives was seized early this month by NATO troops in the western province of Farah, which also borders Iran, the top NATO general here, General Dan McNeill, said last week. “The geographic origin of that convoy was clearly Iran but take note that I did not say it’s the Iranian government,” the US general told AFP.
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Afghanistan
Afghans flee town as Taliban dig in for NATO raid
2007-02-07
So they're digging in? Prediction: Pain...
SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan (Reuters) - More than 1,000 villagers have fled a southern Afghan town as Taliban fighters dig in to repel NATO efforts to drive them out, residents and officials said on Wednesday. Helmand provincial governor Haji Assadullah Wafa told Reuters by phone a military operation would soon be launched to recapture Musa Qala, which the Taliban over-ran last week.

British-led NATO forces had struck a deal with tribal elders after months of heavy fighting to withdraw from the town if the Taliban were also kept out. "The Taliban are only in the town to create problems for the people," he said. "They do not have the ability to seize an area and maintain their control over it." It is not uncommon for the Taliban to seize a town or district center, but they do not hold them for long.
Wow. Sounds like a real quagmire.
A large number of Taliban fighters had reinforced the town with heavy weapons, a resident told Reuters by phone, and NATO spy planes could be heard overhead.
A large number of Taliban fighters had reinforced the town with heavy weapons, a resident told Reuters by phone, and NATO spy planes could be heard overhead.
Bring in all the heavy stuff you got. Our toys are bigger and better.
The Taliban have accused foreign troops of violating the truce with an air strike that killed the brother of local Taliban leader Mullah Ghafour. NATO commanders and villager elders say that strike was outside the area covered by the truce. Ghafour was himself killed in an air strike on Sunday.
He got any other brothers?
Cousins? Nephews? Uncles-thrice-removed? We'd like to, er, 'meet' them all. Briefly.
Separately, U.S.-led forces said they arrested two suspected al Qaeda members on Wednesday in eastern Afghanistan, near the border with Pakistan. Both were Afghans, the force said in a statement, but it did not identify them. "The operation was conducted based on information provided about an al Qaeda member known to pass correspondence for al Qaeda senior leaders," the force said. It did not elaborate.

Also on Wednesday, a roadside bomb killed two Afghan guards working for a U.S. security company in the southern province of Kandahar, provincial officials said. Six guards were wounded. Three police officers were killed while defusing a mine planted by the Taliban on a road in the west of the country on Tuesday night, police said.

After the bloodiest year since the Taliban was ousted in 2001, NATO and the insurgents are gearing up for a major offensive when the snow melts in the spring. The new commander of NATO's 33,000-strong International Security Assistance Force, U.S. General Dan McNeill is expected to take a more aggressive approach than his British predecessor, General David Richards, after taking over on Sunday.

NATO's top operational commander wants more troops to help crush the Taliban, but faces widespread reluctance among allies to come forward, alliance officials said in Brussels on Tuesday. U.S. General Bantz Craddock will present a request for 3- extra battalions -- the equivalent of more than 2,000 troops -- at a meeting of national defense ministers in Seville on Thursday and Friday, they said.
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Afghanistan
U.S. General Assumes Command Of NATO Forces In Afghanistan
2007-02-05
(AHN) - United States General Dan McNeill assumed command of NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan replacing British Gen. David Richards. Command of NATO's 35,500 troops in Afghanistan was transferred from the British military to the U.S. military in a 'change-of-command' ceremony on Sunday. According to the Associated Press, McNeill said, the International Security Assistance Force's mission was to facilitate Afghanistan's reconstruction so the Afghan people might enjoy a peaceful atmosphere. "We will quit neither post nor mission until the job is done or we are properly relieved," McNeill said.

Of the 26,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, 14,000 fall under NATO command. The number of U.S. troops there is the highest it has been since the Taliban was ousted from power in 2001 because it had given refuge to Osama bin Laden there. Meanwhile, the Taliban recently issued a new threat. It said that 2,000 suicide bombers were ready to launch attacks during the spring season in Afghanistan. The Taliban warning might make NATO's job difficult in spring.
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Afghanistan
US to retake abandoned Taleban town
2007-02-01
American forces in Afghanistan are poised to attempt to recapture the town of Musa Qala, which was abandoned by British forces in November after more than two months of heavy fighting against the Taleban General Dan McNeill, who is about to take over as commander of Nato’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, is believed to be ready to order US troops into the town — a key spot in the opium smuggling route in northern Helmand — amid fears that it is now back under Taleban control.

About 30 paratroops from 16 Air Assault Brigade Regiment were ordered to withdraw from Musa Qala in November as part of a deal with tribal elders and the governor of Helmand. The American military were said to be “absolutely furious” at what they saw as a pullout by their principal partners, complaining that it left Musa Qala under Taleban control.

Brigadier Jerry Thomas, who took over as commander of the British Task Force in the province after the withdrawal deal was agreed, denied that the Taleban had been involved in the consultations over the future of Musa Qala. The British insist that the deal could point the way for future security arrangements, giving tribal elders a greater role in keeping the Taleban in check.

But the withdrawal caused a rift between the American and British military. The American view is that northern Helmand has become a no-go zone and needs to be dealt with aggressively. There is now every expectation that General McNeill may try to reverse the deal and put even more troops back into the town to expel the Taleban.
Rest at link.
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Afghanistan
Afghanistan Asks Pakistan to Do More in Terror War
2003-01-08
Pakistan should do more to police the Afghan border and capture Taliban and al Qaeda leaders hiding in the country, Afghanistan's foreign minister, Abdullah Abdullah, said Wednesday.
Diplomatspeak follows. Read between the lines.
He said the Pakistani government had cooperated a great deal in the U.S.-led war on terror, but could do more. "Rogue elements" within the Pakistani intelligence network might even be helping the extremists, he said.
Hmmm... Yeah. Might be, at that...

"Some of the leaders of the Taliban are currently in Pakistan, and this is a cause of concern for us," Abdullah told Reuters in an interview, adding: "There is also a belief that some al Qaeda leaders have gone to border areas on Pakistani soil, or perhaps deeper into Pakistan itself. "Of course it is part of their (Pakistan government) policy to focus on those issues, but we expect some more actions in those fields," he said.
"Do something, damm it!"
Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, blamed for the September 11, 2001 airliner attacks on the United States, is believed by many to be hiding in the rugged and remote border area between the two countries.
His DNA, maybe.
Abdullah said the border could be policed more effectively on the Pakistani side to stop militants crossing back and forth to carry out attacks. "Firstly, we have to realize that to control the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan is not an easy task for any country, for any government," he said.
There's a difference between "difficult" and "impossible." The Paks could do more than they're doing, but they're walking on eggs for fear of offending Qazi — and more important than Qazi, his backers who're still in the military and the ISI.

"Secondly, yes I would say there is the need for more focus by our neighboring country on the issue of our borders. "It is a major challenge for the government of Pakistan, for the security forces there, but it is in the interests of peace and stability in the whole region to focus more on that issue."
"You gonna to lock that gate?"
Pakistan says it has stationed 60-70,000 troops on its western border with Afghanistan and captured around 400 suspected al Qaeda militants since U.S.-led military action in Afghanistan began in late 2001 and ousted the fundamentalist Taliban regime.
The way they were swarming back over the border in the wake of the fall of the Talibs, I'm surprised the number's so low. But first you have to believe they're there, before you can go catch 'em. Then, after you believe it, you have to admit it around enough people to carry out the orders to go catch 'em...

Abdullah's comments follow a similar appeal last month from U.S. Lieutenant-General Dan McNeill, commander of coalition forces in Afghanistan, for Pakistan to commit more troops and use different tactics to police the mountainous border area.
"All the neighbors are talking about it..."

Asked if members of Pakistan's intelligence community might be cooperating with extremist groups, Abdullah said: "We are satisfied with the official policy of the government of Pakistan and the line President (Pervez) Musharraf has taken," adding militants had shown they could threaten peace and stability in both countries. "For its own interests as well, Pakistan is dealing with that issue -- but rogue elements perhaps, they have their own agendas," he said.
"Yup"
Abdullah said fugitive Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who has called for a jihad (holy war) against Americans in Afghanistan, was probably hiding on Pakistani soil.
Half the time, anyway. He's best friends with Qazi...

But Abdullah said he did not think Hekmatyar, one of the warlords who destroyed Kabul in the 1990s, represented a significant threat. Hekmatyar used to enjoy strong support from Pakistan, and Abdullah said he had deep-rooted links with elements in the country. "But I do not believe the government of Pakistan would have any sympathy for him," he said.
"He's a dead man walking."
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