Sunday, July 25, 2010

Pakistan: Lashkar-e Tayeba growing to threaten globe; ISI-Taliban link a problem: US

Speaking earlier to reporters in Delhi, Holbrooke said the LeT was just one of a number of regional militant groups, along with the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, looking to destabilise South Asia.

Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch |
Source & Credit: The News International | Blog
By The News | July 23, 2010


Top US diplomatic and military officials warned on Thursday of fresh attempts by militant groups to push nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan into a military conflict. The chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, said he feared extremists would attempt another operation similar to the 2008 Mumbai attacks in order to goad India into armed retaliation against its neighbour and arch-rival.

Mullen said the Mumbai carnage had demonstrated how a small group of extremists could have a “strategic impact”. “One of the things that struck me then and is still of great concern is that those terrorists could bring two countries closer (to a possible conflict),” he told reporters on board his plane bound for New Delhi.


“I’ve worried a great deal about a repeat attack, of something like that,” Mullen said, adding that he wanted “to focus on making sure this doesn’t happen again.” Mullen began a two-day visit to India on Thursday that coincided with a visit by the US special envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke.

Speaking earlier to reporters in Delhi, Holbrooke said the LeT was just one of a number of regional militant groups, along with the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, looking to destabilise South Asia.

“They seem to be growing closer together ... (and) their long-term objective is the same: to create the maximum number of problems between India and Pakistan ... to create a crisis,” Holbrooke said.

He said that India has a legitimate role to play in stabilising Afghanistan but peace cannot be brought to the region without help from its nuclear-armed rival Pakistan.“There is an implication that there is zero-sum game here, that if we increase our interactions with Pakistan we are somehow diminishing India,” he told reporters during a visit to Delhi.

“I can’t even imagine why anyone would think that India is being diminished if we improve relations with Pakistan. That’s in India’s interests.”“We have repeatedly acknowledged and stressed that India has an important role to play. Our goal is to have full transparency with India on what’s going on in Afghanistan,” he said.

Both men said combating the LeT was a top priority. “I see them starting to emerge as a larger regional to global threat,” Mullen said.US officials said they have pressed Pakistan to prosecute LeT extremists but have so far made little headway.

Holbrooke, who was due to depart Delhi for London, rejected the suggestion that India was somehow being sidelined by Pakistani involvement in the Afghan government’s plans for reconciliation and reintegration of the Taliban and other groups.

“You cannot stabilise Afghanistan without the participation of Pakistan as a legitimate concerned party,” he said. “India is not being diminished. It’s not a zero-sum game,” he said. “India also has a major role to play in stability in the region and in search for solutions in Afghanistan.”

At the same time, Holbrooke said Washington had also raised concerns with Islamabad about links between the ISI and the Taliban. “The links between the ISI and the Taliban are a problem,” he acknowledged.

Mullen, however, stressed that the Obama administration had no choice but to “stay engaged” with the ISI, given its crucial role in Pakistan. While Washington recognised the ISI helped provide for Pakistan’s security, Mullen said: “We differ on the specifics on how that should be done.” The admiral was due to head to Pakistan after his two-day stop in India.




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