Clinton Presses Pakistan to Eliminate Militant Safe Havens

Posted October 20th, 2011 at 11:35 am (UTC-5)
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U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is demanding Pakistan remove militant safe havens and play a greater role in bringing peace to neighboring Afghanistan.

Clinton made the comments following talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in Kabul on Thursday, hours before she arrived in Pakistan.

Mr. Karzai and Clinton discussed the reconciliation process and security transition, as international troops begin withdrawing from Afghanistan and transferring security responsibility to Afghan security forces.

Clinton said Pakistan needs to be part of the solution in tackling the shared Taliban threat.

Following talks with President Karzai, the secretary told reporters that her message to Pakistan was “very clear.” As the U.S. and Afghan government work to bring stability to Afghanistan, Pakistan can “either be helping or hindering.”

Clinton said Pakistan must eliminate terrorists who kill their own people and cross the border to “kill in Afghanistan.”

Both U.S. and Afghan officials have accused Islamabad of supporting insurgent groups in Afghanistan, a charge the Pakistani government denies.

After her stop in Kabul, Clinton arrived in Islamabad late Thursday for talks with Pakistani leaders She heads a high-ranking delegation that includes U.S. spy chief David Petraeus and top military officer General Martin Dempsey.

The United States has been pushing Pakistan to launch a military offensive against militants in the North Waziristan tribal region, the reported base of the al-Qaida-linked Haqqani network.

Clinton noted earlier Thursday that U.S. and Afghan forces had recently launched a joint operation against Haqqani militants operating on the Afghan side of the border.

Pakistan's army chief said Tuesday that his forces could take action in North Waziristan “tomorrow” if he were convinced it would solve all problems. But General Ashfaq Kayani insisted that any such offensive would be Pakistan's decision.

On Thursday, Pakistani paramilitary soldiers launched a raid in the Khyber tribal area along the Afghan border, resulting in a shootout that killed at least three soldiers and up to 34 militants.