Kerry praises Pakistan operation, more work to be done

0

ISLAMABAD (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Tuesday praised the Pakistani military’s operation
against militants in the country’s northwest, saying the results are "significant," but
cautioned that more work needs to be done.
Pakistan launched a major operation in the North Waziristan region in June. The U.S. had long advocated
for such an operation because the region had become a hub for militant groups who attack targets in both
Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan and a source of tension between the U.S., Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The current operations "in the northwest have disrupted militant activities in the tribal areas and
resulted in important seizures of weapons," Kerry said, speaking during a press conference in
Islamabad with Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistani prime minister’s adviser on foreign affairs.
"The operation is not yet complete but already the results are significant. Pakistani soldiers and
their commanders deserve enormous credit," he said.
"But make no mistake: The task is a difficult one and it is not done. We all have a responsibility
to ensure that these extremists are no longer able to secure a foothold in this country or
elsewhere," he said.
Kerry also announced that $250 million in previously appropriated money will be given to emergency relief
efforts in the tribal areas, mainly North Waziristan. Hundreds of thousands of people fled the area due
to the fighting.
Kerry also praised the reopening Monday of the school in Peshawar where Taliban gunmen on Dec. 16
slaughtered students and teachers in one of the country’s worst terrorist attacks. Kerry called it a
testament to the resolve of the Pakistani people.
The secretary arrived in Pakistan on Monday and met with Aziz as well as Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. He
met later Tuesday with Pakistan’s army chief, Gen. Raheel Sharif, at military headquarters in
Rawalpindi, and is expected to fly to Geneva for a meeting Wednesday with the Iranian Foreign Minister
Mohammed Javad Zarif to discuss nuclear negotiations that are to resume on Thursday in the Swiss city.

Kerry had hoped to travel to Peshawar to visit survivors of the school attack at a hospital but weather
forced the trip’s cancellation, said a State Department official speaking on condition of anonymity
because the official was not authorized to speak to the media on the subject.
In Pakistan, Kerry is making the case for more robust efforts against all extremist groups in the
country, particularly after the Peshawar school attack that killed 150 people, most of them children.

Pakistan has boosted operations against violent extremists in recent months. But U.S. officials traveling
with Kerry said Washington wants to ensure that there is a "real and sustained effort" to
limit the abilities of the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, the Haqqani Network and Lashkar-e-Taiba, which
pose direct threats to Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, as well as to American interests.
Pakistan has been on edge ever since the Dec. 16 attack that was claimed by the Pakistani Taliban as
retaliation for the North Waziristan army operation. In response, Pakistan boosted operations in the
rugged tribal areas, reinstituted the death penalty for terrorists and moved to try civilian terror
suspects in military courts. On Tuesday Pakistan executed seven people including one convicted of
attacking the U.S. consulate in Karachi in 2003.
Aziz defended steps Pakistan had taken after the school attack, saying action was being taken against all
militant groups.
Pakistan has often been accused of having a "good Taliban, bad Taliban" policy, meaning they
tolerate or support some militants they find useful as proxies in Afghanistan or India and battle other
militants who target the Pakistani state. Pakistani officials insist they go after all militants.
"We’ve been very clear with the highest levels of the Government of Pakistan that Pakistan has to
target all militant groups, the Haqqani Network and others, that target U.S. coalition and Afghan forces
and target people in Pakistan and elsewhere. And Pakistan has made it very clear that they intend to do
so," Kerry said.
The two men also discussed relations with neighboring Afghanistan, with which Pakistan has often had
tense relations.
Kerry spoke of the need to help Afghanistan recover from years of instability and he welcomed Pakistan’s
stated intent to support Afghan-led reconciliation with the Taliban.
Aziz said the U.S. and Pakistan have a "common interest in a united, stable and prosperous
Afghanistan" and said Pakistan supports reconciliation but stressed that it was also critical to
"make sure Afghan soil cannot be used to undercut" the fight against terrorism.
Kerry also maintained that it was important not to view the U.S.-Pakistan relationship only through the
prism of counterterrorism and security. He noted that the United States has provided significant
assistance to Pakistan to improve its infrastructure, including roads and power generation.
Between 2009 and 2014, the U.S. provided Pakistan with more than $4.38 billion in civilian assistance,
including more than a billion in humanitarian aid.
Kerry and Aziz also addressed the recent heightened tensions along the Pak-India de-facto border of the
disputed region of Kashmir. Both Pakistan and India have accused the other of indiscriminately firing
across the disputed boundary. Two of the three wars India and Pakistan have fought have been over
Kashmir, and any increase in cross-border attacks in the heavily militarized region is generally cause
for concern.
"We are concerned about the rise of the number of incidents on the border along the line of
control," Kerry said.
Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed.

No posts to display