< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Pervez Musharraf ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / February 2008 / February 29, 2008
Pak safe havens allowed al Qaeda, Taliban to regain strength
Taliban

Gates accuses Brit envoy, commander of defeatism in Afghanistan

Nawaz Sharif mediating truce between Taliban and Karzai govt

US to support Talibans return to power post severance of ties with Qaeda

5 killed in suicide blast at Pak MPs house, leader safe with leg injuries

More on Taliban

al Qaeda

US to support Talibans return to power post severance of ties with Qaeda

5 killed in suicide blast at Pak MPs house, leader safe with leg injuries

Former elite officer says plan to kill Osama was nixed in 2001

More on al Qaeda

Top News

Praja Rajyam membership drive from October 2

Sonia Gandhi says UPA government committed to fighting terrorism

Nepal Maoist Central Committee meet postpone for a month

Arjun Rampal talks about his upcoming flick, EMI

Aditya Birla Group contributes Rs. 5 crores towards flood relief measures in Orissa

Sourav Ganguly decides to retire after Australia series

Girls struggle more than boys to adjust in language-learning environment

The Future of the Internet IDATE's 30Th Annual International Conference 19 & 20 November 2008 - Le Corum, Montpellier (France) Guest Country South Korea

Pak safe havens allowed al Qaeda, Taliban to regain strength

The chief US intelligence official has said that the safe haven in Pakistans tribal areas bordering Afghanistan has enabled al Qaeda to regain strength and allowed the Taliban to train, recruit, rest and recuperate and then come back into Afghanistan to engage the coalition forces.

Washington, Feb 29 : The chief US intelligence official has said that the safe haven in Pakistan's tribal areas bordering Afghanistan has enabled al Qaeda to regain strength and allowed the Taliban to "train, recruit, rest and recuperate and then come back into Afghanistan to engage the coalition forces."

More than six years after the US invaded Afghanistan, the Taliban has regained control of about 10 per cent of the country, Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

McConnell said the Taliban has suffered "significant degradation" in its leadership and is unable to successfully face off against US and NATO forces.

He attributed the rise in violence to the Taliban resorting to the terrorist tactics used by al Qaeda in Iraq.

At the same time McConnell praised Pakistani authorities for helping the US "more than any other nation in counter terrorism operations."

Meanwhile, General Michael Maples, the Director of the Defence Intelligence Agency, told the senators that Pakistan's efforts to confront al Qaeda and the Taliban in the ungoverned regions of the country have had little impact.

"Pakistani military operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) have had limited effect on al Qaeda," Maples added.

Both Maples and McConnell expressed concern about al Qaeda's continued effort to recruit and train operatives for terrorist operations against the US and its allies and its stated desire to obtain weapons of mass destruction.

McConnell and Maples spoke on the eve of a Senate Foreign Relations committee hearing to discuss Pakistan with Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte.

ANI

October 7, 2008

October 6, 2008

October 5, 2008

October 4, 2008

October 3, 2008

October 2, 2008