Obama Says Pakistans Government Is Very Fragile

Adeel

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By Julianna Goldman and Kim Chipman

April 30 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama said the government in Pakistan is very fragile and expressed concern about security in the nuclear-armed nation, as Pakistani forces battled Taliban militants in the northwest.

The government doesnt seem to have the capacity to deliver basic services: schools, health care, rule of law and a judicial system that works for the majority of the people, Obama said at a White House news conference last night.

The U.S. has huge national security interests in making sure that Pakistan is stable and that you dont end up having a nuclear-armed militant state, Obama told reporters.

Obama has made tackling extremism in Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan the central focus of U.S. foreign policy and is pressing the government in Islamabad to crack down on militants. Pakistans military this week attacked the Taliban with helicopter gunships and jets to halt an advance that brought fighters to within 100 kilometers (60 miles) of the capital, Islamabad.

At least 20 people were killed in the financial capital, Karachi, yesterday, said Wasim Ahmed, the city police chief, adding it was too early to say whether the violence was ethnic or political. President Asif Ali Zardari said the nation could ill afford such attacks in the southern city, while troops battled militants in the north.

Mortal Threat

Pakistans government is beginning to recognize that the obsession with India as the mortal threat to Pakistan has been misguided, and that their biggest threat right now comes internally, Obama said.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence in 1947, two over the divided Himalayan region of Kashmir. U.S. military officials say tensions over Kashmir are diverting Pakistan from the fight against extremists.

Pakistans military recognizes the threat of nuclear weapons falling into the wrong hands, Obama told reporters, adding he is confident the nations atomic arsenal is secure.

Pakistans government is trying to reassert control in the northwest after the Taliban took advantage of a peace accord in the Swat Valley to push into neighboring areas.

More than 50 Taliban guerrillas were killed in the operation to secure Buner district, the closest Taliban ground forces have come to the capital, army spokesman Athar Abbas told reporters yesterday. As many as 75 militants were killed in Dir district earlier this week.

The Obama administration has criticized the peace accord that saw Islamic law introduced in seven northwestern districts, including Swat, Buner and Dir, and last week accused the government of abdicating to extremists.

Congressional Aid

U.S. officials were yesterday supportive of the offensive and asked Congress to approve $400 million to shore up the fight against extremists.

The Pakistani government is undertaking concrete actions to demonstrate their commitment to counterinsurgency and counterterrorism, Undersecretary of Defense Michele Flournoy told the House Armed Services Committee in Washington. We must show our Pakistan partners that if they take decisive action against extremists, we will give them the support they need.

The $400 million, requested earlier this month, would expand U.S. training and equipment for Pakistani forces to conduct counterinsurgency operations.

Military Technology

Pakistan can and will defeat the Taliban, Ambassador Husain Haqqani wrote in an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal yesterday. He called on the Obama administration to share military technology with Pakistan to help in the fight against terrorism.

Pakistan needs night vision equipment, radio jammers and a larger, modernized fleet of helicopter gunships for ground support, Haqqani said, adding the U.S. has been reluctant to share the technology because of concerns it could be used against India.

Such concerns are misplaced, the ambassador wrote. Pakistanis understand that the primary threat to our homeland today is not from our neighbor to the east but from the Federally Administered Tribal Areas on our border with Afghanistan.


Last Updated: April 30, 2009 01:16 EDT
 

Saladin A

Minister (2k+ posts)
We can not rule out that the Indian Hindu fundamentalists and fanatics are always conspiring to wipe Pakistan out of the world map. They can not still stomach the fact that Pakistan was created for the Muslims and is now the only Muslim nuclear power. Even the Taliban insurgency and terrorism affecting Pakistan is Indian, CIA, MI5 and CIA inspired and financed.
 

jawad_jd

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
YES Saladin A ... I completely agree ...

MAY ALLAH save us from this crisis ...

PAKISTAN ZINDABAD !

PAKISTAN PAINDABAD !
 

jawad_jd

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
Saladin A said:
We can not rule out that the Indian Hindu fundamentalists and fanatics are always conspiring to wipe Pakistan out of the world map. They can not still stomach the fact that Pakistan was created for the Muslims and is now the only Muslim nuclear power. Even the Taliban insurgency and terrorism affecting Pakistan is Indian, CIA, MI5 and CIA inspired and financed.


YES Saladin A ... I completely agree ...

MAY ALLAH save us from this crisis ...

PAKISTAN ZINDABAD !

PAKISTAN PAINDABAD !
 

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