Anti-terrorism war: Zardari hopes new US government would understand Pakistan's efforts
President Asif Ali Zardari has voiced the hope that the incoming Barack Obama administration would recognise Pakistan's key anti-terror role as well as understand the fact that his South Asian country has been a victim of terrorism.
"We think we need a new dialogue, and we're hoping that the new (US) government will understand that Pakistan has done more than they recognise" and is a victim of the same insurgency the United States is fighting, he said in an interview with The Washington Post published on Sunday.
The president, who was in New York to attend the United Nations conference on inter-faith harmony, had telephonic conversations with senior Democratic leaders including Senator Hillary Clinton a top candidate for the post of Secretary of State in Obama Administration and Senator John Kerry who is expected to be next chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Senator Clinton expressed her support for passage of the Biden-Lugar legislation that will triple US economic assistance for Pakistan to $1.5 billion annually for a decade.
President-elect Barack Obama, who assumes US leadership on January 20, 2009, is a co-sponsor of the Congressional move and in his statements on the eve of his historic November 4 victory, vowed support for Pakistan's democracy and economic development of its people. He also pledged co-operation with Pakistan in the fight against terrorism. In the Post interview, President Zardari expressed his disapproval of the US drone attacks on Pakistani areas along the Afghan border and urged Washington to enhance the ally's ability to fight terrorism.
Such unilateral strikes, he said, harm efforts to win hearts and minds of the people. The United States should equip the country with sophisticated weapons to help its forces fight terrorists more effectively. Rather than using US Predator-fired missiles against Pakistani territory, he asked, why not give Pakistan its own Predators? "Give them to us we are your allies," he said. Zardari said Pakistan receives "no prior notice" of the air strikes and that he disapproves of them.
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