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        Pakistan Rejects US Blame for Not Doing Enough to End Afghan War

   by Ayaz Gul

   Top officials in Pakistan have sharply reacted to U.S. accusations of
   not doing enough to help end the war in Afghanistan. They allege the
   blame stems from military "failures" the United States and its allies
   have suffered in the conflict, now in its 15th year.

   Islamabad acknowledges that traditionally uneasy relations with
   Washington have again been "witnessing a downward slide" in recent
   months.

   The tensions, Pakistani officials say, mainly stem from what they
   reject as "unsubstantiated" charges their country is supporting and
   harboring the Taliban and the Haqqani network of militants waging the
   Afghan war.

   The Haqqani network issue "remains the top U.S. concern at the moment,"
   Pakistan's foreign policy adviser, Sartaj Aziz, recently told
   parliament.
   U.S. Senator Bob Corker, the chairman of the Foreign Relations
   Committee, recently used his authority to deny the use of U.S. funds
   for Pakistan to buy eight F-16 fighter jets, despite Islamabad's
   insistence the deal is crucial for its counterterrorism operations.

   ''

   ''This past Wednesday, U.S. lawmakers passed a defense policy bill to
   increase restrictions on military aid for Pakistan.  The congressional
   objections in both cases stemmed from Islamabad's failure to stop
   harboring the Taliban and militants linked to the Haqqani network
   fighting the beleaguered Afghan government.

   Scapegoat
   A senior Pakistani official dealing with national security matters
   alleges the Obama administration is trying to make Islamabad a
   "scapegoat to cover up its own failures" in Afghanistan.

   Pakistan's national security adviser, Nasir Janjua, in an interview
   with VOA, said his country is making "all our endeavors" to facilitate
   the Afghan reconciliation process under a group of four nations,
   including the United States.

   In addressing a conference on Afghanistan this week in Islamabad,
   Janjua suggested Pakistan is being blamed for the Afghan conflict
   because "the notion of victory is not visible" for the U.S.-led
   military coalition.

   "All those who have been operational commanders or commanders in
   Afghanistan, when they are held accountable and when they have not
   succeeded, obviously what do they come up with ...And then Haqqani and
   Taliban and blame on Pakistan just surfaces," Janjua said.

   The former military general said the United States has been relying on
   its military power to even bring about political reconciliation between
   Kabul and the Taliban.

   "There were strategies being formulated of surge and reconcile.  You
   slap a man and then you want him to sit down with you and reconcile,"
   Janjua noted.

   He was referring to President Barack Obama's 2009 decision when more
   American troops were deployed in a bid to weaken the Taliban and push
   the group to the negotiating table.

   ''Counterterrorism campaign
   The Haqqani network, according to Afghan and U.S. military commanders,
   maintains ties to the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment and
   operates out of tribal areas of the neighboring country.  According to
   U.S. assessments, the network is the region's most dangerous group and
   has been behind major attacks against local and foreign forces in
   Afghanistan.

   Janjua says Pakistan has deployed more than 200,000 troops to clear
   areas near the Afghan border of all insurgents and established
   government control over most of the treacherous terrain.  He says the
   counterterrorism campaign has cost Pakistan tens of thousands of lives
   with economic losses estimated at $107 billion.

   Pakistan has long said that while it has established hundreds of border
   outposts in recent years, Afghan and coalition forces have not matched
   the action.

   Afghanistan opposes strengthening border controls because it disputes
   the more than 2,500-kilometer-long porous frontier with Pakistan and
   maintains such an attempt would add problems to the divided families
   and tribes in both countries.

   Pakistani officials say more than 50,000 Afghans cross the border and
   go back every day, including divided families carrying special passes
   called easement rights and Afghan refugees living in Pakistan for more
   than three decades.

   This massive movement of people, Islamabad says, makes it extremely
   difficult to discourage militants from crossing the border.

   Janjua, however, cited several reasons for the Taliban's reluctance to
   join the Afghan peace and reconciliation process.

   He said they include prevailing "misperceptions or perceptions" in
   Afghanistan about whether President Asharf Ghani's government will
   survive after completing two years in September, lack of coordination
   among Afghan leaders on how to approach the reconciliation process, and
   the splintering of the Taliban after the death of its founder and first
   leader, Mullah Omar.

   Challenging relationship
   A U.S. official acknowledges challenges within the U.S.-Pakistan
   relationship.

   "It is an important, vital relationship that we strongly believe in.
   Is it complicated at times? Absolutely, it is.  And do we see
   eye-to-eye on every issue with Pakistan?  No, we don't.  But that's why
   the relationship matters so much, because we have shared threats and
   shared concerns," said State Department spokesman John Kirby last week.

   Analysts like Masood Khan of Islamabad's Institute of Strategic
   Studies, urge both countries to resolve differences through diplomatic
   engagements.

   "I would say that despite current turbulence in relations, the U.S.
   should not disengage with Pakistan.  That would not be wise.  It has
   taken time and effort to bring relations back on track.  That trend
   must be strengthened," Khan said.
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   [1]http://www.voanews.com/content/pakistan-reacts-sharply-to-afghan-rel
   ated-us-accusations/3338994.html

References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/pakistan-reacts-sharply-to-afghan-related-us-accusations/3338994.html