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THE STANS
US senator urges 'tough' Pakistan diplomacy after raid
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 27, 2011

US senator urges Pakistan cooperation after air strikes
Washington (AFP) Nov 27, 2011 - A top US senator warned Pakistan Sunday that there are strings attached to financial aid from the United States, and urged greater cooperation following cross-border NATO air strikes that killed 24 Pakistani troops.

"There is a lot of diplomacy that has to occur and they need to understand that our support for them financially is dependent on their cooperation with us," Republican Senator Jon Kyl said on the Fox News Sunday talk show.

The air strikes Saturday have brought another chill to already frosty relations between the two uneasy allies, with Islamabad still a key partner for US military operations in neighboring Pakistan.

The United States, which depends on Pakistan as a vital life-line to supply 130,000 foreign troops fighting in landlocked Afghanistan, has scrambled to salvage the alliance.

In a joint statement, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have offered "deepest condolences" and said they backed "NATO's intention to investigate immediately."

Senator Dick Durbin, a top Democrat, echoed Clinton and Panetta's statement, offering condolences, but warned that the crisis would likely further endanger US troops in the region.

"As difficult as it is to find our way through this diplomatic morass, between the incompetence and corruption in Afghanistan, and complicity in parts of Pakistan, our soldiers are caught right in the middle of this at a time when they're trying to bring peace to this region," he said.


A top US senator called for "tough diplomacy" with Pakistan Sunday and urged Islamabad to cooperate with the United States to maintain its financial aid, following cross-border NATO air strikes that killed 24 Pakistani troops.

"There's a lot of diplomacy that has to occur and it has to be tough diplomacy in the sense that they need to understand that our support for them financially is dependent upon their cooperation with us," Republican Senator Jon Kyl said on the Fox News Sunday talk show.

"We do need their support in the region," he acknowledged.

The air strikes Saturday have brought another chill to already frosty relations between the two uneasy allies, with Islamabad still a key partner for US military operations in neighboring Pakistan.

The United States, which depends on Pakistan as a vital lifeline to supply 130,000 foreign troops fighting in landlocked Afghanistan, has scrambled to salvage the alliance.

In a joint statement, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have offered "deepest condolences" and said they backed "NATO's intention to investigate immediately."

Senator Dick Durbin, a top Democrat, on Sunday echoed Clinton and Panetta's statement, offering condolences and saying he was "deeply saddened, but warned that the crisis would likely further endanger US troops in the region.

"As difficult as it is to fight our way through this diplomatic morass, between the incompetence and maybe corruption in Afghanistan, and the complicity in parts of Pakistan, our soldiers are caught right in the middle of this, at a time when they're trying to bring peace to this region," he said.

Former US ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton, a hawkish foreign policy advisor to former president George W. Bush, meanwhile Sunday warned of confronting nuclear-armed Islamabad over US financial aid.

"While it is tempting for many people to say we ought to throw the Pakistanis over the side and stop giving them aid... as long as that country has nuclear weapons that could fall into the hands of radicals and be a threat worldwide, they have incredible leverage," he said.

The United States in 2009 approved a huge five-year, $7.5 billion civilian assistance package for Pakistan, but some US lawmakers have sought to cut civilian aid due to concerns over extremism.

John Huntsman, a former US ambassador to China and current Republican candidate for president, meanwhile said expectations with respect to its south Asian ally "have to be low in terms of what we can get out of the relationship."

Washington "thought we could get more, and we have been proven wrong time and time again," he told Fox News Sunday.

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Pakistan troop deaths 'tragic, unintended': NATO chief
Brussels (AFP) Nov 27, 2011 - NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Sunday he had conveyed regret to Pakistan premier Yousuf Raza Gilani for the "tragic, unintended" deaths of 24 Pakistani soldiers in an airstrike.

"I have written to the Prime Minister of Pakistan to make it clear that the deaths of Pakistani personnel are as unacceptable and deplorable as the deaths of Afghan and international personnel," he said in a statement.

"This was a tragic unintended incident."

"I offer my deepest condolences and sympathy to the families of the Pakistani officers and soldiers who lost their lives or were injured, and to the government and people of Pakistan, following the regrettable incident along the Afghan-Pakistani border," Rasmussen added.

Pakistan says two border posts were fired upon "unprovoked" in the early hours of Saturday in Pakistan's tribal Mohmand district.

An investigation of the incident is likely to ask whether Afghan and American troops on the Afghan side of the border were fired upon first -- whether by insurgents or Pakistani military.

Pakistan on Sunday conveyed its "rage" to the United States over cross-border NATO air strikes and ordered a full-scale review of its frosty alliance with Washington and the military bloc.

Pakistan represents a vital life-line to supply 130,000 foreign troops fighting in landlocked Afghanistan, and Rasmussen joined US efforts in a scramble to salvage the alliance.

"I fully support the ISAF investigation which is currently underway," he said of the International Security Assistance Force fighting the war and which includes non-NATO allies.

"We will determine what happened, and draw the right lessons," Rasmussen added.

"NATO remains strongly committed to work with Pakistan to improve cooperation to avoid such tragedies in the future."

Earlier Sunday, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar telephoned US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and conveyed a "deep sense of rage" as the military organised a joint funeral for the 24 troops who died.



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THE STANS
Half of Afghanistan switching to local control: Karzai
Kabul (AFP) Nov 28, 2011
More than half of Afghanistan will soon be under the control of local forces after President Hamid Karzai Sunday announced the second wave of a process which should see all NATO combat forces leave by 2014. Karzai's office said that six provinces, seven cities and dozens of districts - including three in Helmand, among Afghanistan's most dangerous areas - will pass from foreign to local co ... read more


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