Aaj English TV

Saturday, May 18, 2024  
09 Dhul-Qadah 1445  

US, Pakistan will work together for Afghan peace: Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Sunday said that Washington and Islamabad would work together for peace and security in Afghanistan as she also recognized the need to stem militants’ use of safe havens on the Afghan side for attacks against Pakistan.

Clinton, who led a high-level delegation for talks with top Pakisani political and military leaders this week for “intensive” discussions, indicated in a CNN interview an improved level of mutual understanding.

“We are very clear. We need to do two things together. We need to squeeze the terrorist networks, including the Haqqani network, out of their safe havens, preventing them from being able to plan and carry out attacks across the border.
“And we have to, on the Afghan side of the border, squeeze and eliminate safe havens of those who move back and forth and use safe havens in Afghanistan to attack Pakistan,” she said.
Islamabad has been for months asking the US-led international forces stationed in Afghanistan to stop Afghan-based militants from using safe havens in that country for attakcs inside Pakistan.

Secondly, Clinton added in the interview, “we have to have a very firm commitment to an Afghan-led reconciliation peace process.”
“We are about 90-95 percent in agreement between the United States and Pakistan about the means of our moving toward what are our commonly sharedgoals and we have a work plan and real commitment to making sure we are aseffective as possible together,” she told the channel’s State of the Union programme.
The chief US diplomat, who issued some tough statements ahead of her visit to Islamabad this week, also openly acknowledged the effectiveness of Pakistan’s cooperation against al-Qaeda militant organization.
“The cooperation on security that we have received over the past years from Pakistan has been absolutely essential in our efforts to defeat and disrupt the al-Qaeda network.”
The Pakistanis, she noted, themselves have suffered enormously as a result of their military actions against the terrorist networks and of course that has not only been only military losses but civilians to a total of about 30,000 over the last decade.
Clinton’s delegation included Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen Martin Dempsey and Director of CIA David Petraeus for the two-day Pakistan visit,which took place in the backdrop of serious strains arising from a spate of events this year including American unilateral action to take out Osama bin Laden from his Abbottabad hideout and retired Admiral Mike
Mullen’s assertions of Pakistani connections with Afghan Haqqani militants.
NATO plans to pull out combat troops from Afghanistan by 2014 and hand over security responsibility to Afghan army and police.
Meanwhile, the US has also acknowledged reaching out to militants as part of Afghan reconciliation efforts for an orderly transition in the conflict-hit country.