Break links with Haqqani
Piling up pressure on Pakistan, the US has asked its authorities, particularly the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), to sever ties with the Haqqani network of Taliban and demanded "strong and immediate action" against the outfit, even as it insisted there is no permanent breach in bilateral relations and lines of communication are open.
"It is critical that the government of Pakistan break any links they have, and take strong and immediate action against this network so that they are no longer a threat to the United States or to the people of Pakistan - because this network is a threat to both," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters yesterday.
Carney said the Obama administration believes and knows that the Haqqani network was responsible for the attacks on the US embassy in Kabul and the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) headquarters, and a number of other recent attacks that caused death and injury not only to Afghans but to American soldiers.
"We know that the Haqqani network operates from safe havens in Pakistan and that the government of Pakistan has not taken action against these safe havens," he said, adding that top US officials, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen, would continue to have conversations with the Pakistani leadership on this issue.
The United States, Carney said, has an important relationship with Pakistan.
"That relationship and the cooperation that we have had with Pakistan has assisted us greatly in our efforts to defeat al-Qaeda. It is important to remember that Pakistan has suffered mightily at the hands of terrorists and they've paid a terrible price for it," he said.
"It is a complicated relationship, as you've heard me say before, and when we have issues that we need to discuss with the Pakistanis we're very candid and forthright in doing so. As I just mentioned, Chairman Mullen and Secretary Clinton met with their Pakistani counterparts earlier in the past week or so to discuss, and those conversations will continue," Carney said.
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