Gen.  Ashfaq Parvez Kayani statement was issued after the chairman of the US  Joint Chiefs of Staff accused Pakistan’s military-run spy agency of  links to a powerful militant faction fighting in Afghanistan. — Reuters  Photo
ISLAMABAD:  The Pakistani army on Thursday rejected the notion that it was not  doing enough to fight militants, hours after the top US military officer  accused the country’s military-run spy agency of continued links to a  powerful Taliban faction fighting in Afghanistan.
The  back and forth reflected the unusually poor state of relations between  the two counter-terrorism allies, which sunk to new lows after an  American CIA contractor in January shot two Pakistanis he said were  trying to rob him.
While on one hand both US and Pakistani  officials have spoken of the need to keep the partnership intact,  especially as Washington looks for a way out of Afghanistan, officials  from both countries have also made strong, even harsh, statements  defending their actions.
While visiting Pakistan on Wednesday, Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff,  told a private TV channel that he would bring up the issue of  Pakistan’s ties to the militant Haqqani network when he saw Pakistani  army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
The Haqqani network is a  powerful, largely independent Afghan Taliban faction with bases in  Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal region. It is considered one of the  most lethal fighting forces battling US and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s  military-run Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency forged links to the  network’s leaders that date back to the 1980s Soviet occupation of  Afghanistan. But after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Pakistan has  insisted it has cut its ties to the network.
Still, many analysts  and US officials suspect Pakistan may be trying to retain its links to  the Haqqanis so that it can use them as a means of retaining influence  in Afghanistan, and keeping a bulwark against archrival India, after the  Americans leave.
“The ISI has a long-standing relationship with  the Haqqani network, that doesn’t mean everybody in the ISI but it’s  there. I believe over time that has got to change,” Mullen said in the  private TV channel interview.
In a statement issued after he saw  Mullen, Kayani did not mention the Haqqanis, and said both sides were  determined not to let their relationship collapse.
But he rejected  “negative propaganda of Pakistan not doing enough,” and pointed to its  multiple military offensives against various insurgent groups as  evidence of Pakistan’s “national resolve to defeat terrorism.”
Kayani  also slammed the ongoing US missile strikes in Pakistan. Those strikes  almost always hit North Waziristan, where the Haqqanis are based and the  one tribal region along the Afghan border where Pakistan has not staged  an offensive despite US pleas.
Pakistan has long denounced the  drone-fired missile strikes as violations of its sovereignty, but the  South Asian nation is widely believed to secretly cooperate with at  least some of the attacks.
In recent weeks, however, Kayani has  spoken out against the strikes. In mid-March, he issued a strong  statement denouncing on such attack after it killed nearly 40 people.  While the US insisted the group consisted of militants, Kayani said  dozens of mostly innocent tribesmen died.
That strike came the day  after the US secured the release of American CIA contractor Raymond  Davis by paying the families of the two shooting victims’ so-called  “blood money.” The Davis case badly strained relations, with Pakistan  refusing to take a stand on whether Davis had diplomatic immunity from  prosecution as the US embassy claimed.



 



 
 
 
 






 
 
 
