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A senior US military officer said Tuesday Pakistani leaders show no sign they are ready to crack down on Haqqani militants operating from sanctuaries near the Afghan border, despite repeated US requests. The United States has long demanded Pakistan go after the Haqqani network in North Waziristan that has staged attacks on Nato-led forces in Afghanistan.
But top officers indicated they did not expect any improvement in Islamabad's co-operation and that Pakistan lacked the will and the resources to move against Haqqani militants. "Sir, I don't think it is likely to change," Vice Admiral William McRaven, who oversaw a raid last month by Navy SEALs that killed Osama bin Laden in his Pakistani hideout, told senators.
Referring to talks with Islamabad military leaders, McRaven said "it is both a capacity issue for the Pakistanis and I think potentially a willingness issue." McRaven, nominated by President Barack Obama to take over US special operations command, said the situation in north-west tribal areas "is difficult for them to deal with."
Lieutenant General John Allen, named as the next commander in Afghanistan, suggested Pakistan was keeping its options open by allowing Haqqani fighters to operate within its borders. "It's a function probably of capacity. But it might also be a function of their hedging, whether they have determined that the United States is going to remain in Afghanistan, whether our strategy will be successful or not," Allen told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
"At some point, as we have emphasised to the Pakistanis, we've got to bring pressure to bear on this insurgent safe haven," he said. Senator Carl Levin, after hearing the officers answer his questions on Pakistan, said Islamabad's approach was unacceptable. "Well, something's got to give, something's got to change," Levin said. His comments came amid calls from some lawmakers to scale back the billions in US aid for Pakistan due to the presence of extremist safe havens.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2011

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