Hillary Clinton urges Pakistan to target militants within its borders
Secretary of State Clinton's surprise visit to Pakistan is meant to show ongoing cooperation between Washington and Islamabad as popular support for the partnership falls in both countries.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton meets President of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari in Islamabad, Pakistan on Friday, May 27. Clinton said that relations between the United States and Pakistan had reached a turning point after the killing of Osama bin Laden and Islamabad must make "decisive steps" in the days ahead to fight terrorism.
Press Information Department/AP
New Delhi
On a surprise visit to Islamabad, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Pakistani leaders that the US is committed to working with Pakistan, but that the country must take 鈥渄ecisive steps鈥 against Islamic militants within its borders.
鈥淭his was an especially important visit because we have reached a turning point,鈥 Ms. Clinton said. 鈥Osama bin Laden is dead, but Al Qaeda and its syndicates of terror remain a threat to us both.鈥
The popular support for cooperation in both countries tanked after the US launched a raid that killed Mr. bin Laden without informing Pakistan. But today鈥檚 visit demonstrates that there remains appetite among the leaders of both nations to salvage the partnership.
Each side made small conciliatory gestures. Clinton said there was no evidence that Pakistan鈥檚 senior leaders knew that bin Laden was hiding in Abbottabad, close to a military academy. Pakistan recently returned pieces of a secret stealth helicopter that crashed during the Abbottabad raid and agreed to give the CIA access to bin Laden鈥檚 compound.
For months, however, the US and the Pakistani military have been in a standoff. The US wants Pakistan to turn against the Haqqani network, a Taliban affiliate with Al Qaeda ties responsible for attacks in eastern Afghanistan. The Pakistani military has refused to tackle the group and instead argued for their inclusion in the nascent peace process 鈥 a nonstarter for the US.
Recent events have left the US in a stronger position to push Pakistan鈥檚 military, which is facing unprecedented scrutiny at home. Pakistan media is questioning the effectiveness of the security establishment after the US raid and a series of major militant attacks, including a 17-hour siege of a Karachi naval base.
In these talks, 鈥淧akistan is on the back foot decidedly,鈥 says Mosharraf Zaidi, a newspaper columnist based in Islamabad. 鈥淭he level of criticism that the military and the state is taking is unprecedented.鈥
The weak civilian government in Pakistan has more often seen eye-to-eye with the US on objectives in the region. But the military has stymied cooperation against certain militants that it views as useful for the country鈥檚 security objectives in Afghanistan and against India.
Increasingly, however, Pakistanis doubt that the security establishment has the capability of controlling militants.
The civilian government may have more space now to push the military to clean up militant groups 鈥 but only if the demands are seen as popular demands, not American ones, cautions Pakistani analyst Hasan Askari Rizvi.
鈥淭his is what the people of Pakistan are asking for 鈥 we are asking our military to do more,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he government has more space to be talking and taking public positions [now] but I think the US should let the government take its own course.鈥
He criticizes Clinton for meeting today with Pakistan鈥檚 military and intelligence chiefs, rather than sticking to meetings with civilian leaders like Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani. The top US military officer, Adm. Mike Mullen, accompanied Clinton.