Monday, November 23, 2009

World

Obama Focuses on Cooperation With Afghanistan and Pakistan

The administration is devising a plan to fight insurgent groups including the Taliban

Posted May 15, 2009

As President Barack Obama stood side by side with the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan after a day of closely watched joint meetings last week, he struck an optimistic tone and pledged cooperation. This was no small feat, particularly on the heels of news that a U.S. military bombing in Afghanistan Monday killed dozens of civilians, prompting profuse apologies from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The promise of stepped-up coordination is a welcome one; Obama went so far as to call it "unprecedented." The great need for more synchronization between the countries has been evident, U.S. military officials say, as the Taliban continues to inch closer to the Pakistani capital of Islamabad. In Afghanistan, a network of Taliban-led insurgents is fighting with ever greater skill and coordination. "There is much to be done," Obama said.

This comes as no news to officials within the Obama administration, who have been busy laying out a strategy for the region in the months leading up to these meetings. Ideally, and broadly, the goals include dismantling insurgent groups in Afghanistan and ensuring that al Qaeda can't remain in Pakistan.

But some in Congress, Democrats among them, have been stressing that sound strategy doesn't guarantee military success—progress does. The question now is how to measure it. This becomes particularly vital as the Obama administration raises the stakes in Afghanistan, sending in 21,000 more U.S. troops and a surge of civilians even as violence is on the rise in Iraq. There are more aid dollars on the way as well. And so the administration has been working to come up with benchmarks to gauge success as the new resources roll in. Some of these are certain to include ways to assess the capabilities of the Afghan National Army and police.

Trickier, however, is how to measure progress in Pakistan, which may well be the greatest strategic challenge currently facing the Pentagon. That this continues to be the case even after America has given some $12 billion in aid to the country is the chief argument for setting benchmarks to measure progress in order to keep the funds flowing. What those will be, precisely, has yet to be determined. But the key, adds Pentagon policy chief Michele Flournoy, will be "holding both ourselves and our Pakistani partners accountable," a topic no doubt broached during the trilateral talks.

On Capitol Hill, however, there has been some disagreement about how to do this. In recent testimony, Obama officials made it clear that they opposed attaching too many conditions to new aid money for Pakistan. They have come out against a bill introduced by California Democratic Rep. Howard Berman, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, to tie aid to assurances that Pakistan's intelligence service is not supporting terrorist groups, a frequently recurring accusation.

That would constrain U.S. strategic options in the country, say senior Pentagon officials, including Flournoy, who called the proposed legislation "too inflexible." But absent such assurances, U.S. lawmakers say they have little confidence in the ability of the Pakistani government, in the words of Wisconsin Democrat Dave Obey, the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, "to do one blessed thing." 

Reader Comments

A Tip For American Think Tank

Please stop funding the corrupt Pakistani Leaders,first it was Busheraf the butcher receiving the american dollars,deliever nothing,presently it is mr.10% (zardari) reknowned for his corruption...

make ur way to pakistani people's hearts...they will deliever,they are looking for u....

for example...

give subsidy on the prices of petrol and diesel ... or just ask pakistani govt. to stop making money by selling them on higher rates than the international prevailing barel rate...

unless u do something for these poor people of 16 crores pakistanis,they will kill talibans,they will get u ''osama'' and they will be a true parteners of americans in the war against terror..!

Poor Pakistan

This poor country has paid a lot in this so called Afghanistan war,which is being made a battle ground of two superpowers since last three decades for no good reason BUT just Might is Right....

Pathans of Afghanistan are being used by AMERICANS thru Pakistan AGAINST Russia...by th ename of ISLAM ...Jihad

Pathans are again using by INDIA thru Afghnaistan Govt. against Pakistan,because Americans are looking for a safe exit actually and giving or leaving behind INDIA as the Incharge of this troubled land and tighten grip around PAKISTAN who has nukes...the ISLAMI BOMB..a threat to Israel..!

Pakistan war

The United States cannot win the Afghanistan War in Pakistan, any more than it could win the Vietnam War in Cambodia. The only result of continued military actions in Pakistan is complete disruption of an already-shaky Pakistan and its ultimate delivery into the most-ruthless elements of their society; namely, the Pakistani Taliban. The United States and Russia should pool a trillion dollars for rebuilding of Afghanistan as they both are responsible for the destruction and chaos there since the early days of their Cold War rivalry. All military actions should cease. This war is being fought to satisfy domestic American political concerns, and it will lead only to wider and worse war.

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