Another major attack on American interests in Afghanistan by Pakistan-based militant groups would greatly damage the alliance with Islamabad, a senior US official said on Tuesday. The official was voicing Washington's frustrations with Pakistan.
The official specifically referred to an attack in September on an American base in Wardak province that wounded 77 American troops and a 20-hour siege of the US embassy in Kabul that killed nine. "A spectacular raid or a set of spectacular mis-steps, which are possible, could take the relationship much more in a direction that would be detrimental for both countries," the official said from Islamabad, requesting anonymity because of the sensitivity of the relationship.
Both attacks were blamed on the Haqqanis. The former Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral, Mike Mullen, has said the Haqqanis are a "veritable arm" of Islamabad's top spy agency, the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). "You need to encircle them, not let them have free travel, prevent them from trying to get into Afghanistan," the US official said. "Cut them off from funding. Cut them off from information. And let them know that there will be a price to be paid from both the Americans and the Pakistanis if you do what you did at the embassy in Kabul, or in Wardak."
The official said she was not expecting a Pakistani military offensive against the Haqqanis. Mullen's allegation outraged the Pakistanis, but they later said they do maintain contacts with the Haqqanis - as do many spy agencies - but do not support them. "We have never paid a penny or provided even a single bullet to the Haqqani network," ISI chief Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shuja Pasha told Reuters days after the attacks.