India’s role very important in Afghanistan: German Envoy

ATTN: ANI Item being re-issued with amendments in para 13 and 14.

New Delhi, May 10 (ANI): Germany has hailed India’s role in capacity building, and development in infrastructure and education sectors in war torn Afghanistan.

German Ambassador to India Thomas Matussek said: “I think this is the right approach, and not every country in Afghanistan should contribute with military means.”

“I think the civilian help is much more important. Other countries, including Germany, have to make sure that we create a secure environment, but in the long run it is much more important that the Afghans are in the position to handle their own fate and they could only do it with the active cooperation of the neighbors and India has a very important role to play,” the German envoy told ANI.

India is investing more than a billion dollars in small and large-scale projects, including dams, schools and power grids in Afghanistan.

According to recent surveys conducted by independent international organizations, a majority of Afghans are impressed by Indian efforts in rebuilding their country.

But a team of Indian medical workers and doctors was recently attacked in Kabul and Indian mission also came under terrorist attacks twice which were reportedly orchestrated by Pakistan based terror outfits.

Pakistani terrorist groups are specifically targeting Indian interests in Afghanistan and have openly expressed their annoyance over Indian presence.

Ambassador Matussek also welcomed the recent dialogue between Indian and Pakistani prime ministers at Thimphu.

“We welcome every contact and every talk which contribute to good prosperous relationship between these two countries who share such a wonderful but also sometimes very traumatic common history. I think if India and Pakistan solve their issues and if it comes to lessening of tensions, the whole world will profit from it,” he said.

Refusing to comment on the recent decision taken by a Mumbai court on Ajmal

Kasab, the German envoy said: “I think it is very good and positive that people are brought to justice, every country has their own judicial system. You know we are against death penalty but this is where we stand we believe, we don’t interfere or comment on other countries especially the friendly countries.”

Ever since the Mumbai attacks, India and Germany have stepped up cooperation in the field of counter terrorism, which includes training of security experts and exchanging notes on strategies.

Speaking on the future scope of defense cooperation between the two countries, Ambassador Matussek said that Germany can offer best multi role aircrafts and is ready to forgo End User Monitoring Agreement, which is the pre condition for defense deals imposed by many countries, including the United States.

“We have number of projects for instance if you talk about multi role aircraft for the future. We have Eurofighter Typhoon, which is the best aircraft you can get in the market,” he said.

The envoy said that Germany just don’t want to sell the planes but intends to sell the first batch, develop second and third batch here in partnership and technology transfer to the degree that no other competitor will offer.

He also said that technology supplied to India would not be shared with Pakistan and China. Germany has also proposed a MoU on counter terrorism, which is under review. (ANI)

Pakistan not keeping its promise to dismantle terror infrastructure: Rao

Washington, Mar 16 (ANI): Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao has made it clear that Pakistan is not doing its part to follow through on promises to dismantle terrorist organisations, adding that some of the leaders of these groups continue to have access to the airwaves to make threats against India.

Speaking at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, Rao said that Pakistan-Afghanistan situation would not be resolved soon as she felt that the problems between Pakistan and Afghanistan is one obvious, where the U.S. and Indian interests converge.

She urged Washington to see India as a mature partner with a powerful economy and that the challenge to the relationship is to take the current interaction to a higher level.

Rao was, however, cautious on the issue of Iran. She saw the situation as complicated and did not want to see sanctions currently under discussion to harm the Iranian people.

She also felt that Iran should have both rights and responsibilities if it wants to use nuclear power.

Rao addressed other regional issues such as China and said that India wants to view their large neighbour with the widest possible lens.

With China openly investing in Africa, she pointed out that the US and India can work together on helping boost development for the continent.

She promised that Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh would participate in the upcoming Nuclear Security Summit, set for April in Washington while downplaying concerns that the legislative process is delayed on the Indian side to fully implement the Indo-US civil nuclear cooperation process.

Rao did not appear worried that the demands of the U.S. domestic political scene will take away from Washington”s growing relationship with New Delhi; instead, she repeated the position that it”s time for India to take full responsibility on the world stage in organizations such as the United Nations Security Council and G-20. (ANI)

ISI launches global SI-War against Durrani

Islamabad, Jan.16 (ANI): The Inter-Services Intelligence agency in Pakistan appears to have launched a coordinated SI-War against the country’s former National Security Adviser, Major General (retired) Mahmud Ali Durrani, aimed at proving that he was an American agent in Islamabad working for American and Indian interests.

Journalists and publications who are close to the establishment in Islamabad are being used to project the line that after Major General (retired) Durrani, the “agents” who are pushing Islamabad into publicly accepting the “half-cooked evidence” provided by the United States and India in relation to the November 26, 2008 terror attacks on Mumbai, are Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States, Hussain Haqqani and Information and Broadcasting Minister Sherry Rehman.

According to one report, a powerful group of which Haqqani and Rehman are prominent members is working overtime for the past several weeks to convince their superiors for Pakistan to accept “blame without verification and without pursuing other compelling leads” in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

The report further goes on to say that Major General (retired) Durrani’s behavior over the last few days, “and especially on January 7″ has been “particularly desperate”, and that there are rumors in circulation that he could be arrested and interrogated to “determine the interests he was serving”.here is a view that Durrani has had the backing of both President Asif Ali Zardari and Rehman, and that there was an attempt by Rehman to rescue Durrani from his eventual sacking.

The report further goes on to say that Durrani’s conduct and the recent security-related policy failures of the government “reinforce the need for a purge” both within the government and the political elite. It is being claimed in the corridors of power here that foreign governments have been able to breach both institutions and cultivate assets, who have been ” conducting their own private foreign policies directly with foreign powers, without the approval or knowledge of the Pakistani state.”

Durrani has been allegedly accused of contacting a Pakistani journalist working for the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) in December and leaking the story of a Lashkar activist confessing to making phone calls to the Mumbai terrorists. It is now being said that Durrani was seeking to embarrass Pakistan and quashing the voices calling for evidence and verification – a classic pressure tactic by an insider.

The WSJ is said to have come out with an elaborate story, linking the alleged confession to the ISI’s tense relations with elected governments in Pakistan since the 1990s. Durrani, it seems, wanted to expose the ISI for its role in clandestine attacks on India, a view that has always been projected by the Indian establishment.

As far as Ambassador Haqqani is concerned, the report says that he has been insisting with his superiors in Islamabad that Pakistan accepts the FBI evidence on a tape recording that purportedly shows a Pakistani citizen in Pakistan talking to one of the terrorists involved in the 26/11 mayhem that claimed 179 lives. Critics of this stance are saying that this information needs to be verified by Pakistani experts to determine its accuracy.

Haqqani’s failure to convince Islamabad, according to the report, has made the pro-American lobby desperate enough to send the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen to Islamabad to convince President Zardari to “allow the Indian Air Force to conduct limited surgical strikes” and to “deactivate the state of alert in the Pakistan Air Force” for this purpose. Admiral Mullen failed in his mission.

A four-point charge sheet has reportedly been prepared to showcase foreign policy blunders while Durrani was NSA, and it includes the following:

Immediate admission of guilt on behalf of ISI, when Mr. Gilani was told accept the sending of ISI Director General to New Delhi on India’s summons.

The weak, apologetic diplomacy in the face Indian war-mongering

Misleading China in the UN Security Council voting, resulting in incriminating Pakistani individuals and organizations without evidence

The Zardari Government is suspected of dragging its feet on issuing orders to the Pakistani military to raise the level of alert even when Indian defence forces were moving to forward positions.

The report particularly focuses on the events of January 7 when Durrani apparently leaked to an Indian TV channel and a couple of Pakistani news channels that Pakistan has accepted the Indian evidence that Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving Mumbai terrorist, was a Pakistani citizen.

The report says that Durrani may have wanted this story to be leaked anonymously, but one journalist made the “error” of naming him.

Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir sought to deny Durrani’s leak, but Information Minister Rehman went a step further and text messaged that Durrani was right in naming Kasab a Pakistani citizen.

The report says that Durrani is an active member of the “Balusa Group” created and financed by the US Government to lobby Washington’s interests in the upper echelons of the Pakistani Government, with the stated prime objective of maintaining peace between Pakistan and India through track II diplomacy. However, according to sources within the Pakistani establishment, the group was also involved to promote US energy interests in Afghanistan, India and Pakistan, and to convince Pakistan to let India have unlimited access to Afghanistan and the Central Asian republics, a concession sans returns.

It concludes by saying that Durrani, as an insider, has facilitated US moves to expand the war in Afghanistan, weaken the Pakistani military and firmly align Pakistan with American interests opposite to China and others, with India’s help, and therefore, there is a need to purge individuals like him on a priority basis. (ANI)