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India-Pakistan
Petraeus warns of deteriorating US-Pakistan relations
2011-07-21
[Dawn] US General David Petraeus admitted Wednesday there was no option but to work on troubled relations with Pakistain, days after standing down from his job at the helm of coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Speaking in Gay Paree on his way to his new job as CIA chief, the most celebrated military leader of his generation said Afghanistan's neighbour wanted to eliminate Al-Qaeda and Talibs but was struggling.

"They'll be the first to say that there are limits to how much they can do," said the man who headed the United States' longest-running war for the last year, with less territory controlled by Islamic fascisti today but civilian deaths up.

"They have a lot of short sticks in hornets nests right now and they have to consolidate some of those gains."

Petraeus said Pak anti-militant operations have been impressive but they "clearly need further effort to deal with some of the other elements, like the Qaeda network in North Wazoo and the Taliban in Balochistan".
...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it...

"This relationship is in a difficult stage," Petraeus said, blaming WikiLeaks revelations, the arrest of CIA agent Raymond Davis as well as the killing by US forces of Al-Qaeda kingpin the late Osama bin Laden
... who no longer has to waste time and energy breathing...
in Pakistain in May.

He said it was believable that Pak intelligence did not know that Bin Laden was hiding out in Abbottobad, home to much of the Pak military establishment, when he was killed there.

"It is credible to me that they did not know. We received no intelligence whatsoever to indicate that there was any awareness that he was there." But while "we see the Bin Laden raid as an extraordinary success, intelligence together with military forces, Pakistain sees it as an affront to their national illusory sovereignty, we've got to work our way through this".

"We know what happens when we walk away from Pakistain and Afghanistan, we've literally seen the movie before, it's called 'Charlie Wilson's War' (about covert US support for anti-Soviet Afghan fighters) and indeed that is not in my view a good option.

"However difficult the relationship may be it's one we need to continue to work, it's one where we need to recognise what our Pak partners have done, they've sacrificed several thousand soldiers and police and their civilians have suffered substantial levels of violence."
Posted by:Fred

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