Zardari rejects US timeline for fighting tribal insurgents
Pakistan
Zardari rejects US timeline for fighting tribal insurgents
President Asif Ali Zardari has resisted a direct appeal from US President Obama for a rapid expansion of Pakistani military operations in tribal areas and has called on the US to speed up military assistance to Pakistani forces and to intervene more forcefully with India, its traditional adversary.In a written response to a letter from Obama late last month, President Zardari said his government was determined to take action against al-Qaeda, the Taliban and allied insurgent groups attacking US forces in Afghanistan from the border area inside Pakistan. But, he said, Pakistan's efforts would be based on its own timeline and operational needs.Zardari in his three-page letter to Obama made repeated reference to Pakistan's core interests, unresolved historical conflicts and conventional imbalances. He called on Obama to push Pakistan's neighbors towards diplomatic rapprochement. Zardari noted that military operations in the Swat Valley alone had cost Pakistan $2.5 billion and said that Pakistan expected the United States to provide increased material support.The message was reinforced Monday by Pakistan's military chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani, who told Gen. David H. Petraeus, the head of the US Central Command, that the United States should not expect a major operation in North Waziristan in the coming months, according to a senior US defense official. Pakistan cant fight against every tribe Talking to Dunya News on President Zardaris letter to Obama, senior analyst Talat Masood said that Pakistan has no new strategy. He said that Pakistan only wants to tell US that it is not possible for them to fight against every tribe and warrior. He said that there are many tribes in the country and these tribes are not harmful. He said operation against these tribes would be destructive. Talat Masood said that Pakistan should only control the actions of militants targeting American and NATO troops from Waziristan.