![]() |
| Andhra Pradesh ~ India ~ International ~ City ~ Entertainment ~ Business ~ Bullion ~ Forex ~ Sports ~ Technology ~ Health ~ Features |
| US Elections Calendar ~ Pervez Musharraf ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News |
|
Home
/ International News / 2008 / April 2008 / April 19, 2008 New Pak Government receiving all possible assistance from US |
War against Taliban can be won, says NATOs US commander
Altaf warns 400,000 armed Afghans have intruded into Karachi
US drones still hover over North Waziristan
JI chief Qazi warns forming tribal lashkars will push Pak towards a civil war
Altaf warns 400,000 armed Afghans have intruded into Karachi
Karzai offered cabinet berths to Taliban if they agree to peace deal
Praja Rajyam Party tour programme announced
India will not block Chenab water: MK Naraynan
McCain saw White House from a cell in Hanoi
Everything you ever wanted to know about sex but were afraid to ask
Sify Technologies wins brandon hall excellence in learning award for third consecutive year
Tendulkar, Team India to bat for children health and safety on Oct. 15
The new Pakistani Government is receiving all possible help from the Bush Administration, and the US Congress is doing its every bit to bring peace to the restive tribal areas of that country, according to a media report.
Washington, Apr 19 : The new Pakistani Government is receiving all possible help from the Bush Administration, and the US Congress is doing its every bit to bring peace to the restive tribal areas of that country, according to a media report.
The US is also removing irritants that may have crept into the Pakistan-US bilateral relationship.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman, Senator Joseph Biden's plan for the economic development of the Pakistani tribal areas bordering Afghanistan "has been on the anvil for some months now and could form the blueprint for a renewed effort to revitalise efforts to effectively fight terrorism and extremism," the Daily Times said in its report.
Earlier, Biden had described Pakistan's co-operation in the terrorism war as "critical to success in Afghanistan".
Biden wants to increase the non-military assistance to Pakistan three times, sustain it for a decade and focus it on schools, roads and clinics.
He believes that the US should pay for costs genuinely incurred in fighting the Taliban, al Qaeda and their affiliates, but it should not let the reimbursement "continue to be an unaccountable slush-fund".
He, however, maintains that military in Pakistan is designed to fight a conventional war with India, not to conduct counter-insurgency operations in the tribal areas.
"If Afghanistan fails or Pakistan falls prey to fundamentalism, both countries will pay a heavy price. And America will suffer a terrible strategic setback. I believe it is still within our power to shape a different, better future," Biden has said.
ANI