Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pakistan Terror Groups Pose Threat To Our Interests In India, Afghanistan: US Spy Chiefs

IANS, 29 May, 2017 11:44 AM
    It added that because of this failure, “these (terror) groups will (continue to) present a sustained threat to American interests in the region, and continue to plan and conduct attacks in India and Afghanistan.
     
    According to the Dawn, during a Congressional hearing on Afghanistan and the ongoing war against terror elements there, the intelligence chiefs reportedly gave a candid assessment of the situation in war-torn Afghanistan to the Senate Armed Services Committee.
     
    A transcript, released this weekend, shows that though much of the debate focused on Pakistan, there was a concern expressed that despite increased military efforts to defeat the Taliban, these militants would continue to make gains, especially in the rural areas of Afghanistan.
     
    “Afghan security forces’ performance will probably worsen due to a combination of Taliban operations, combat casualties, desertions, poor logistics support and weak leadership,” warned National Intelligence Director Dan Coats.
     
    Coats leads a team of more than a dozen spy agencies, including the CIA and FBI.
     
    Illinois Republican Senator Joni Kay Ernst asked the intelligence chiefs to spell out the measures that Washington would like Kabul’s neighbours to take to help stabilise the region.
     
    “I think certainly an evaluation of how we work with Pakistan to address the situation of the harbouring of terrorist groups would be essential to a strategy that affects Afghanistan,” Coats replied.
     
     
    “Because that is potentially a very disrupting situation, putting our own troops at risk and undermining the strategy of dealing with the Taliban and local groups that are trying to undermine the (Afghan) government. So it’s a very clear link that I think would have to be addressed in conjunction with whatever’s done in Afghanistan.”
     
    “Besides more troops, which I anticipate might be part of the plan that we see, we need to implement a different strategy on the ground in Afghanistan?” Senator Ernst asked Defence Intelligence director Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart “We’ve got to get a couple of things. One, very clear that Afghanistan’s security and stability is in the interest of all of the parties in the region and does not pose a risk to Pakistan,” Lt. Gen. Stewart replied.
     
    “We’ve got to convince Pakistan that if they’re harbouring any of the Haqqani network members that it is not in their interest to continue to host the Haqqani network.” Lt, Gen. Stewart also urged the Trump administration to work with Afghanistan’s neighbours to go after the 20 terrorist organisations that were still active in the region.
     
    “They undermine not just Afghanistan, not just Pakistan, but all of the region,” he added.
     
    Lt. Gen. Stewart also suggested “pushing” Pakistan to do more against the Haqqani network and urged US policymakers to “separate the Taliban from the Pashtun”, because Pakistan wanted a Pashtun-dominated Afghanistan.
     
     
    “So we’ve got to get the conversation going again with Pakistan about their role in not harbouring any of these terrorists, helping to stabilise Afghanistan and, I think, maybe, we’ll have some progress,” he said.
     
    Lt. Gen. Stewart said he believed Pakistan still had some influence in bringing Taliban to the table. “So we’ve got to get them to think about reconciliation, that the status quo is not in their best interest,” he said.
     
    The intelligence chiefs also flagged the issue of Pakistan’s concern over India’s influence in Afghanistan, and cautioned that the latter could look to China to offset this perceived imbalance in regional geo-politics and end its so-called global isolation.
     
    “They view all of the challenges through the lens of an Indian threat to the state of Pakistan. So they hold in reserve terrorist organisations… so that — if Afghanistan leans towards India, they will no longer be supportive of an idea of a stable and secure Afghanistan that could undermine Pakistan interests,” he said. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report
    Abhishek Gattani, 38, pleaded "no contest" when his wife approached the police

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago
    Three women dressed in burqas killed a man who had been accused of blasphemy in 2004 in a northeastern Pakistani town, police said on Thursday, the second brutal killing over alleged insults to Islam in a week.

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers
    A woman hurled racist abuse at passengers on a train in Ireland, telling one of them to "f*** off back to India" after he placed a bag on an empty seat.

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k
    An Indian-American CEO has been ordered to pay US$ 135,000 to her former domestic worker after a Labour Department investigation found she underpaid and mistreated her.

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident
    Prominent Indian-American hotelier Vikram Chatwal has been ordered to do five days of community service and barred from owning a pet for five years for trying to set two dogs on fire.

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident

    Indian Doctor Denies Genital Mutilation Charge; Judge Keeps Her Locked Up

    Indian Doctor Denies Genital Mutilation Charge; Judge Keeps Her Locked Up
    DETROIT — A Detroit-area doctor charged with performing genital mutilation on two 7-year-old girls denied the allegations through her lawyer Monday, insisting that she conducted a benign religious ritual for families of a Muslim sect.

    Indian Doctor Denies Genital Mutilation Charge; Judge Keeps Her Locked Up