US Senator McCain points towards Pakistan military, terror groups link

Calling for a realistic US policy towards Pakistan, Senator John McCain, a former American presidential candidate, on Thursday aired concern over the “troubling connection” between the Pakistani military and terrorist groups in that country.

“The troubling connection remains between Pakistan's military and terrorist groups like the Haqqani network and Lashkar-e-Taiba who are killing Indians, Afghans and Pakistanis,” McCain, the Republican presidential candidate in the 2008 race, told reporters here.

He was sharing his impressions of his visit to Pakistan last week where he met Pakistani leaders, including President Asif Ali Zardari.

Alluding to the ongoing debate in the US about a rethink among the powers-that-be in Washington about its ties with Islamabad, McCain said: “This is a time for intensive reflection about our relations with Paki

stan. The US must develop a realistic relationship with Pakistan.”

McCain, the influential US senator from Arizona who is currently on a visit to India, hoped that Pakistan will emerge “a successful democratic nation” and underlined the need for strengthening democratic civilian rule in that country.

The senator also emphasised that the US had resolved not to let the Taliban return to Afghanistan and was trying to help develop a secure nation that “will not be a base for terrorists”.

McCain met National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon in the morning and discussed a swathe of issues relating to the burgeoning India-US strategic partnership.

“The US has a critical stake in India's success,” McCain said. He expressed confidence that the India-US relationship “can be and should be the indispensable partnership of the 21st century”.

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Factbox: Key facts in U.S.-Pakistan relations

(Reuters) – Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Islamabad on Sunday, hoping to bolster shaky U.S. relations with a close ally in the struggle against militant insurgents in both Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan.

Here are some facts about the importance and problem areas of the relationship, what aid has been given, what Pakistan wants and what is to come:

STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE

Pakistan is of huge strategic importance and a main ally for the United States as it seeks to defeat al Qaeda and cripple the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan. Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of the September 2001 attacks on the United States, is believed to be hiding somewhere along the lawless border with Afghanistan. The leaders of the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan are also believed to be hiding in Pakistan.

Washington is also pressing for Pakistan to step up the fight against its own homegrown Taliban militants, which U.S. officials believe were behind the attempted bombing in New York’s Times Square on May 1.

Washington needs Pakistan as it seeks to stabilize Afghanistan as U.S. President Barack Obama sends in an extra 30,000 troops in the coming months.

SECURITY COOPERATION

Much of Clinton’s meetings will focus on how to improve security cooperation, from intelligence-sharing to more equipment from the United States for its ally.

The two sides held an earlier round of talks in March and agreed to fast-track pending Pakistani requests for military equipment including helicopters, fighter jets and pilotless drones.

Washington has also pledged to deliver 1,000 laser-guided bomb kits to Pakistan and is considering more weapons sales to help Pakistan with insurgents in the Afghanistan border region.

KEY IRRITANTS

There is mistrust on a range of issues, from security cooperation to how aid is delivered. Most opinion polls show a majority of Pakistanis hold an unfavorable view of the U.S. government and are suspicious of its intentions. Pakistan’s government bristles when Washington complains it has not done enough to tackle militants in a war that has killed more than 2,000 soldiers and weighed on the economy.

Civilian deaths from drone strikes are also unpopular in Pakistan, although the civilian government is believed to privately support them.

A recent source of U.S. irritation has been delays in granting visas for U.S. officials wanting to audit how aid is spent while Pakistan complains about increased security checks for its citizens visiting the United States.

Clinton, in a visit to Pakistan in October, publicly expressed puzzlement that its government had been unable to find scores of al Qaeda leaders including Osama bin Laden who are believed to be hiding in rugged border territory that divides Pakistan and Afghanistan.

AID PROGRAMME

The United States is Pakistan’s biggest aid donor and has given about $15 billion in direct aid and military reimbursements since 2002, about two-thirds of it security related.

While Pakistan is being propped up by an $11.3 billion International Monetary Fund loan, a new U.S. aid package triples non-military assistance to Pakistan to $1.5 billion a year over the next five years.

The flow of money is being held up, however, as the Obama administration changes how it distributes that aid. Instead of largely using U.S. contractors and non-governmental organizations, it wants to funnel much of the aid via the Pakistani government and domestic NGOs in the hope this will bolster local capacity.

NUCLEAR COOPERATION

Pakistan would like a civilian nuclear cooperation deal with the United States, similar to the one Washington has with India, but there were scant signs of progress on this front during the March meetings.

The United States is leery of such a deal out of concern for how it might affect ties with New Delhi.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari recently visited China amid signs that Chinese companies were ready to move ahead with plans to build two nuclear reactors for Pakistan, which could raise concerns in both Washington and New Delhi about nuclear proliferation.

(Editing by John O’Callaghan and Chris Allbritton)

Afghan Taliban kill 11 Pakistani travellers – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Suspected Afghan Taliban insurgents killed 11 Pakistanis who crossed into Afghanistan in order to detour around a dangerous part of the border area, officials said on Saturday.

Paktia governor spokesman Rohullah Samon said gunmen opened fire on a bus carrying the travellers in Samkani district, as they made their way from Kurram to Peshawar via Afghanistan.

Tribesmen frequently take the circuitous Afghan route as the direct road linking the two regions is often the scene of Pakistan Taliban attacks on travellers.

While the Pakistan and Afghan Taliban are different organisations, they have close links and draw the overwhelming bulk of their fighters from the Pashtun ethnic group which was divided by a colonial-era border known as the Durand Line.

While Pakistan has taken some steps against its own Taliban insurgency, Kabul and its allies accuse Islamabad of secretly supporting the Afghan Taliban and giving sanctuary to their leadership.

Islamabad denies the charges, but Pakistan has long seen Afghanistan as “strategic depth” in case of war with its eastern neighbour, India. (Writing by David Fox; Editing by Jeremy Laurence) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

U.S. says new sanctions on Iran could impact Pakistan

(Reuters) – Pakistan should be wary of committing to an Iran-Pakistan natural gas pipeline because anticipated U.S. sanctions on Iran could hit Pakistani companies, the U.S. special representative to the region said on Sunday. While sympathetic to Pakistan’s energy needs, the U.S. special representative to the region, Richard Holbrooke, told reporters that new legislation, which targets Iran’s energy sector, is being drafted in the U.S. Congress and that Pakistan should “wait and see.”

Politics

“Pakistan has an obvious, major energy problem and we are sympathetic to that, but in regards to a specific project, legislation is being prepared that may apply to the project,” he said, referring to the pipeline. “We caution the Pakistanis not to over-commit themselves until we know the legislation.” Pakistan is plagued by chronic electricity shortages that have led to mass demonstrations and battered the politically shaky government of President Asif Ali Zardari.

U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman said last week he expects Congress to finish shortly legislation tightening U.S. sanctions on Iran that will include provisions affecting the supply of refined petroleum products to Tehran, and add to sanctions on its financial sector.

Lieberman, an independent, is a member of a House-Senate committee of negotiators working on final details of the bill and said it could pass by July 4.

The $7.6 billion natural gas pipeline deal, signed in March, doesn’t directly deal with refined petroleum products and was hailed in both Iran and Pakistan as highly beneficial.

The U.S. has so far been muted in its criticism of the deal, balancing its need to support Pakistan, a vital but unstable ally in the global war against al Qaeda, with its desire to isolate Iran.

But the legislation could be comprehensive enough to have major implications for Pakistani companies, Holbrooke said.

“We caution Pakistan to wait and see what the legislation is.”

This was Holbrooke’s tenth trip to Pakistan since President Barack Obama appointed him special representative to the region. His visit followed a series of working groups this week that are part of the U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue, which both countries say will lay the groundwork for a new relationship.

Afghanistan was on the agenda in meetings with the Pakistani leadership, Holbrooke said, including talks on a Pakistani role in talks between the Afghan Taliban and the Kabul government.

But the United States would not support Pakistan pushing the Haqqani network, one of the strongest factions of the Afghan insurgency and mostly based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan, into talks with Kabul as Washington sees the group as intransigent, brutal and too tightly allied with al Qaeda.

The United States has said any groups wishing to lay down their weapons must renounced al Qaeda and agree to participate peacefully in the Afghan political process.

“It’s just hard to see that happening,” Holbrooke said of the Haqqani network.

Regardless of what happens in Afghanistan, he said, the United States would remain engaged with Pakistan.

“Pakistan matters in and of itself. Whatever happens in Afghanistan, the U.S. cannot turn away from Pakistan again,” he said. “We are not going to repeat the mistakes that occurred – at least not on our watch — of the last 20 years.”

U.S. showed Pakistan evidence on militant faction

(Reuters) – The United States has presented evidence to Pakistan about the growing threat and reach of a militant faction which Washington suspects has ties to Pakistani intelligence, U.S. officials said on Wednesday.

World

In the presentations, U.S. military leaders provided Pakistan’s army chief with information detailing the role of the Haqqani network in a string of increasingly brazen bombings, including one last month targeting the main NATO air base at Bagram in Afghanistan.

Washington has long pressed Islamabad to crack down on the Haqqanis in the North Waziristan tribal zone bordering Afghanistan, who are closely aligned with the Taliban, but U.S. officials acknowledge it is a hard sell because of resistance within Pakistani intelligence.

General David Petraeus, who oversees the Afghan war as head of U.S. Central Command, told a congressional hearing the Haqqanis had “transnational” ambitions, suggesting they could try to strike beyond Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Washington has issued similar warnings about the growing reach of the Pakistani Taliban, which investigators blame for a botched May 1 car bomb in New York’s Time Square.

There are strategic reasons for Pakistan’s hesitancy to attack the Haqqanis, a faction which some in Islamabad see as a strategic asset that will give them influence in any eventual settlement to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

One U.S. official said “some elements” of Pakistani intelligence, but far from all, still support the Haqqanis.

Without mentioning the Haqqanis by name, Petraeus acknowledged long-standing ties between Islamabad and what he called “bad guys,” suggesting the relationships were useful to gather intelligence on the groups.

But he voiced confidence Pakistanis understood that “you cannot allow poisonous snakes to have a nest in your backyard, even if the tacid agreement is that they’re going to bite the neighbors kids instead of yours.”

“Eventually,” Petraeus said, “they turn around and bite you and your kids.”

Pakistan has denied a report by the London School of Economics that alleges enduring ties between its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Afghan Taliban.

PAKISTAN INTELLIGENCE ROLE

The report said the agency not only funds and trains Taliban fighters in Afghanistan but is officially represented on the movement’s leadership council, giving it significant influence over operations.

Petraeus said there was “no question” Pakistan has maintained “a variety of relationships,” in some cases dating back decades, to groups which, with U.S. support, battled the Soviets when they occupied Afghanistan.

“Some of those ties continue in various forms, some of them, by the way, gathering intelligence,” he said.

“You have to have contact with bad guys to get intelligence on bad guys.”

Some of the groups in question, including the Haqqani network, are now leading the fight against Western forces.

The Pentagon has expressed confidence that Pakistan will eventually mount an offensive in North Waziristan, but has acknowledged the country’s armed forces were already stretched by operations in other tribal areas.

“The problem has been one of capacity. And again, we’re working hard to enable that capacity,” Petraeus said.

Petraeus, General Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, discussed Haqqani’s alleged role in the bombings in a recent meeting with Pakistan’s army chief Ashfaq Kayani.

“We have shared information with him about links of the leadership of the Haqqani network … that clearly commanded and controlled the operation against Bagram air base and the attack in Kabul, among others,” Petraeus said.

Suicide bombers carrying rockets and grenades launched a brazen predawn attack on the base on May 19, killing an American contractor and wounding nine U.S. troops. About a dozen militants, many wearing suicide vests packed with explosives, were killed, the Pentagon said at the time.

A day earlier, a suicide bomber attacked a military convoy in Kabul, killing 12 Afghan civilians and six foreign troops.

Bagram is the main base for U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan, with the largest airfield in the country. It was used by the former Soviet Union during its invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart; editing by Todd Eastham)

One Pakistani killed and 15 abducted in Kyrgyzstan

(Reuters) – One Pakistani student has been killed and around 15 reportedly taken hostage in Kyrgyzstan’s riot-stricken southern city of Osh, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Sunday.

At least 83 people have been killed — 72 in Osh alone — in gun battles over the past three days in the Central Asian state’s worst ethnic violence in two decades.

“One student has been killed and there are reports that 15 have been taken hostage for ransom. We are trying to confirm these reports,” Qureshi told Reuters.

“Our first priority is to ensure the safety of our brethren stranded there. We are trying to establish contact with Kyrgyz authorities,” he said.

Around 1,200 Pakistanis, mostly students, live in Kyrgyzstan, although many of them have returned to Pakistan for summer vacations, Qureshi said. Universities in the former Soviet states are attractive to many Pakistanis for their cheaper training in medical and engineering fields.

Obaid Ansari, who studies medicine in Osh, said he fled the city and returned to Pakistan shortly after riots broke out.

“I am receiving text messages from my colleagues and friends that have taken refuge in basements. They informed me that 15 have been abducted,” Ansari said by telephone from his home town of Jacobabad in southern Pakistan.

“I and four of my friends managed to flee as we were outside Osh when trouble started. When we returned, there was fire all over,” he said, adding the situation in Osh was “very dangerous.”

The interim government of Kyrgyzstan, an ex-Soviet republic hosting U.S. and Russian military bases, gave its security forces shoot-to-kill powers after deadly riots between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz in Osh and Jalalabad.

Osh is a stronghold of former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who was toppled in riots in April. Interim government leader Roza Otunbayeva has accused supporters of Bakiyev, who is in exile in Belarus, of stoking ethnic conflict.

Bakiyev has denied any role in the riots.

(Additional reporting by Asim Tanvir in Multan; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Paul Tait)

One Pakistani killed, 15 abducted in Kyrgyzstan

ISLAMABAD, June 13 (Reuters) – One Pakistani student has been killed and around 15 reportedly taken hostage in Kyrgyzstan’s riot-stricken southern city of Osh, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Sunday.

At least 83 people have been killed — 72 in Osh alone — in gun battles over the past three days in the Central Asian state’s worst ethnic violence in two decades.

“One student has been killed and there are reports that 15 have been taken hostage for ransom. We are trying to confirm these reports,” Qureshi told Reuters.

“Our first priority is to ensure the safety of our brethren stranded there. We are trying to establish contact with Kyrgyz authorities,” he said.

Around 1,200 Pakistanis, mostly students, live in Kyrgyzstan, although many of them have returned to Pakistan for summer vacations, Qureshi said. Universities in the former Soviet states are attractive to many Pakistanis for their cheaper training in medical and engineering fields.

Obaid Ansari, who studies medicine in Osh, said he fled the city and returned to Pakistan shortly after riots broke out.

“I am receiving text messages from my colleagues and friends that have taken refuge in basements. They informed me that 15 have been abducted,” Ansari said by telephone from his home town of Jacobabad in southern Pakistan.

“I and four of my friends managed to flee as we were outside Osh when trouble started. When we returned, there was fire all over,” he said, adding the situation in Osh was “very dangerous”.

The interim government of Kyrgyzstan, an ex-Soviet republic hosting U.S. and Russian military bases, gave its security forces shoot-to-kill powers after deadly riots between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz in Osh and Jalalabad.

Osh is a stronghold of former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who was toppled in riots in April. Interim government leader Roza Otunbayeva has accused supporters of Bakiyev, who is in exile in Belarus, of stoking ethnic conflict.

Bakiyev has denied any role in the riots.

(Additional reporting by Asim Tanvir in Multan; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Paul Tait) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

ANALYSIS-New budget highlights Pakistan’s “survival mode”

June 7 (Reuters) – Wedged in by IMF demands for fiscal austerity, Pakistan’s unpopular civilian government has presented a budget that may fail to please both voters hit by tax hikes and investors wary about its optimistic economic forecasts.

Saturday’s budget underscores how hard it will be for the government to appease frustrated Pakistanis hit by food inflation, unemployment and tax hikes seen as helping fuel an Islamist insurgency and discrediting civilian authorities.

The government’s predictions for a lower budget deficit of 4 percent of GDP may also be simply too ambitious, putting off hard decisions on spending and revenues for later, as well as almost guaranteeing a continued unpopular IMF bailout. [ID:nLDE654057]

“To be honest, I think this government is surviving not so much because of its popularity but more so by default, ” said Rashid Rehman, editor of the Daily Times newspaper.

“The government’s hands are tied and one must not forget, given the fact that we’re in the IMF programme, that there is little fiscal space for the government to manoeuvre. It’s in survival mode.”

President Asif Ali Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party formed a coalition government after defeating former President Pervez Musharraf’s supporters in a 2008 election, but an economic downturn and political infighting quickly made it unpopular.

On the brink of default, Pakistan turned to the IMF in November 2008 for a $10.66 billion loan package to help put its economy back on track. It received the fifth tranche of $1.13 billion last month.

The budget raised taxes on sectors such as capital gains, increased a sales tax and slashed some subsidies on energy and food, while trying to provide some social relief for the roughly third of the 170 million population that lives in poverty.

“The government now has very few levers to provide relief,” said Asad Sayeed, director at Collective for Social Science Research.

BETWEEN A HARD ROCK AND A STONE

Key to meeting IMF conditions is cutting the deficit, targeted at 5.1 percent this year and seen as posing a serious inflation risk and hurting the economy just as it tentatively recovers from its lowest growth rate in decades.

“The tax collection target is grossly over-ambitious,” said Ashfaque Hasan Khan, dean of Islamabad’s NUST Business School.

Pakistan’s tax-to-GDP ratio which is around 9.5 percent, is one of the lowest in the world.

“A country like Pakistan, where fiscal indiscipline is all around, then it should be in an IMF programme to learn discipline,” he said, adding the government would have to go back to the IMF for more money this year.

But continued IMF assistance could become politically unpopular if it is associated with austerity and may fuel further resentment in Pakistan against perceived Western meddling.

“People here sometimes portray the IMF as if its holding a baseball bat and making the country do whatever it wants,” Finance Minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh told reporters.

Meanwhile, the government raised defence spending by 17 percent, a sign of the military’s influence in politics.

Commentators questioned why an increase was needed, given the army’s battle against militants in the northwest was mostly funded by the United States.

The country’s main stock exchange was unfazed by the budget as analysts said all the measures had been priced in and there were no surprises and the uncertainty was over.

The KSE-index rose 1.6 percent on Monday, even as most other Asian markets fell.

The government has targeted 1.778 billion rupees in tax revenue, which is almost 21 percent higher than the current fiscal year’s target, one that is likely to be unmet as well.

Pakistan collected 1.026 billion rupees in the first ten months of the 2009/10 fiscal year.

Pakistan is also aiming to generate more than 51 billion rupees, which would be 0.3 percent of GDP, from an auction of 3G spectrum licences that analysts said was unlikely to materialise.

The inflation target of 9.5 percent for fiscal year 2010/11 was unlikely to be met if there were slippages in the fiscal target, analysts said.

“Considering we will probably not meet the tax collection target for the current fiscal year, we will definitely see fiscal slippages in the next fiscal year,” said Asif Qureshi, director at Invisor Securities Ltd. (Additional reporting by Kamran Haider; Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Alex Richardson)

Infiltration from Pak into India obstacle to relationship: US

The US has said that the continued infiltration of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and other (Pakistani) Punjab-based terrorist groups into India is one of the most important obstacles to the Indo-Pak relationship and the dialogue between the two South Asian neighbours.

“One of the most important obstacles to expansion of those relations is the continuing infiltration from Pakistan to by Punjab-based groups, such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM),” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Robert Blake said yesterday.

“The United States has consistently called for greater action on the part of Pakistan to stop the activities of these groups,” Blake asserted, thus putting on Pakistan the onus of success of the resumption of the dialogue between the two countries.

The State Department spokesman also refuted reports that the US is pressurising either India or Pakistan to continue with the dialogue process, as is being reported in the American and Indian media.

“We always have an interest in seeing our two friends have peaceful relations, but we are not pressurising either side,” Blake said.

The United States has consistently said that it is up to India and Pakistan to determine how to improve their relations and that the pace and the scope and the character of whatever talks they have is really up to those two countries to decide, he added.

“But we will always stand ready to help in any way that we can, because again, we see it very much in our interest to see improved ties between these two friends of ours,” Blake said.

Pakistan, he conceded, along with Afghanistan would be one of the major issues of discussions during the next week’s strategic dialogue between India and US; which would be co-chaired by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and External Affairs Minister S M Krishna. Blake said during the meeting the US will welcome the announcement that has been made by the Indians and the Pakistanis that their two foreign ministers will meet in Islamabad in mid-July.

“That meeting will be preceded by a very important meeting between the home ministers that will take place in late June.

Home Minister P Chidambaram of India will be, again,

visiting Islamabad. So those are very important opportunities to try to expand relations and to reduce some of the frictions between these two friends of the United States,” he said.

The State Department official said the US would like to see two of its friends — India and Pakistan — to get back on the days of 2004-2007, when Pakistan took actions against terrorists and that laid the basis for a very significant expansion in relations between the two countries.

“But one of the first things that has to happen is for there to be visible progress in stopping this,” he said.

“I think the point that the Secretary (of State) and(Defense) Secretary Gates and the (US) President himself has made is that increasingly, these groups are all operating together as a syndicate.

So it’s very much in Pakistan’s own interest to take on these groups as well,” Blake said.

At home in Dubai, Sania trains with Malik for Big W

Sania Mirza is finding Dubai to be a home away from home. The other day she was training on the courts of an academy housed in a star hotel in the UAE metropolis when the temperature touched 41 degrees Celsius at 9.30 in the morning. By afternoon she got to hear that it was 45 degrees in Hyderabad. Just like at home, a few heads — mainly from Pakistanis and Indians — turn in her direction as she begins sparring with her hitting partner, Zeeshan Ali, the former India player.

“The last three weeks have been good with regard to training,” Sania told The Indian Express on Wednesday, while talking about her injured wrist that has kept her out of action since February. “My wrist has bothered me for the last two years. It is a chronic wrist injury but at the moment it is not hurting. I have been training in Dubai for the past nine days and it feels good,” Sania said.

Sania and her husband, Pakistan batsman, Shoaib Malik are busy setting up their house in Dubai. The couple whose marriage attracted controversy are now happy that the hullabaloo surrounding them has died down. Dubai is a neutral venue for both of them.

“Whatever happened just before our wedding was disturbing and difficult for both of us and for the families. When it was all over, I said to Shoaib ‘we have come through this. I think we can come through more things in my life rather easily now’. We both faced what people never face in their lives probably. We were not even married when all the controversy happened. It is great to be together. After all that happened, we are both back to being happy again and that really counts.”

Sania believes not much has changed since the wedding. “I have to get used to sharing my bathroom and bedroom,” she said jokingly. “Shoaib and I have been working out together. We play sports in which we have to be lean but also strong. It helps that we are from sporting backgrounds,” Sania added.

“Just yesterday, when we were watching a movie, we were telling each other that we can’t believe we are married. One good thing is that we never fight over watching soap operas or serial. I am not the ‘girly’ types so I watch sport and so does he.”

Good news came in the form of Malik’s name being in the probables list for the Asia Cup. The former Pakistan skipper is undergoing a one-year ban for ‘indiscipline’. “I have heard that things can change overnight in Pakistan cricket. I never used to follow Pakistan cricket earlier but now I do. Shoaib didn’t follow too much of women’s tennis but now he has no choice.”

Sania will kick-start her return with the event in Birmingham before heading to Wimbledon. “I didn’t take time off because I was getting married. I got married because I had time on my side due to my wrist injury. Somehow, people don’t understand that. Everyone goes through rough patches and Shoaib himself has had a roller-coaster year. He understands what it means to make a comeback after an injury.

“Grass is the most difficult surface to make a comeback, especially after a wrist injury, as the surface is uneven and one has to make lot of adjustments with the wrist. If I had a choice I would have made a comeback on a hard court. But that said I have played well on grass.”

Ranked 91 in singles and 75 in doubles, Sania knows that she’ll realise how match fit she is only after playing a couple of games. “I am not going in hoping to make the quarterfinal of Wimbledon. It is not going to be that easy. It doesn’t work like that. I want to get on court and play a few matches. And then we will see.”

Pakistan’s Musharraf to “join politics” – CNN

Former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf has said he intends going home to enter politics, perhaps standing to become president or prime minister, CNN reported.

Musharraf, who seized power in a coup in 1999 and ruled until stepping down as president in 2008, has raised the possibility of re-entering politics several times over the past year although political analysts have played down the likelihood.

“I certainly am planning to go back to Pakistan and also join politics. The question of whether I am running for president or prime minister will be seen later,” Musharraf told CNN in an interview.

Musharraf left Pakistan about a year ago and spends most of his time in Britain and the United States.

Many Pakistanis welcomed the 1999 coup by the straight-talking army chief, which ended a decade of fractious rule by rival parties tainted by corruption accusations.

But the longer he ruled the more unpopular he became.

In 2007, he became embroiled in a conflict with the judiciary after attempting to dismiss a Supreme Court chief who was expected to challenge Musharraf’s bid to cling to power.

For months, lawyers, joined by opposition party supporters, staged protests across the country, decrying what they described as Musharraf’s dictatorship.

In November 2007, he imposed a brief spell of emergency rule in an attempt to ensure he could hold on to power, outraging many. He later kept a promise to step down as army chief.

He tried to strike a power-sharing deal with former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, who returned from self-exile in October 2007 to campaign for a general election. But she was assassinated weeks later.

SECURITY, LEGAL DANGERS

Musharraf’s government said Pakistani Taliban were responsible but in a country where conspiracy theories run rife, many people believed shadowy forces, perhaps close to Musharraf, played a part in her death.

The party that backed Musharraf was humiliated in a February 2008 election, in which Bhutto’s party won the most seats, and Musharraf stepped down later that year.

He threw his country into an unpopular alliance with the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks although some U.S. and Afghan officials said his commitment was half-hearted.

He survived two Islamist bomb attacks and officials spoke of other plots to assassinate him. Asked about concerns regarding his safety if he were to return home, Musharraf said:

“There are security issues. Maybe my wife and my family is more worried than I am but there are security issues which one needs to take into consideration and that is why I’m not laying down any dates for my return,” he said.

“But I do intend launching and declaring my intentions formally, sooner than later,” he said.

He could also face a host of legal dangers.

The Supreme Court, headed by the chief justice Musharraf tried to dismiss, has declared his 2007 imposition of emergency rule unconstitutional, which could be a basis for actions against him.

Polls show that the prime minister Musharraf ousted in 1999, Nawaz Sharif, is Pakistan’s most popular politician and he too has called for Musharraf to be put on trial.

(Writing by Robert Birsel; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Man linked to Times Square bomb plot had Shahzad’s phone number

New York, May 21 (ANI): A Pakistani man suspected of helping the failed bombing attempt in Times Square had bomb suspect Faisal Shahzad”s phone number on his cell phone, a federal immigration attorney revealed at a hearing Thursday.

The New York Post and the FOX News Channel reported that investigators also found an envelope with the name “Faisal” written on it in Aftab Ali Khan”s apartment.

The possible link between Khan, 27, and Shahzad was revealed at a hearing Thursday where Khan faced charges of violating immigration law by staying in the country on an expired visa.

Sources told FOX News that Khan admitted to the immigration judge that he was inside the United States illegally and offered to leave the country voluntarily.

Khan”s lawyer denied his client had any connection with Faisal Shahzad or had ever heard his name.

Khan is one of three Pakistanis believed to have helped Shahzad by providing money. The three men were arrested May 13 after a series of FBI raids across the northeastern U.S. (ANI)

Times Square plot evidence proves TTP’s expanding reach with Al-Qaeda’s help

Los Angeles, May 15 (ANI): Even though Pakistan has been maintaining that there is little evidence that Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomber, had received training and was funded by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), US officials are certain that the extremist outfit has expanded its reach beyond the troubled Af-Pak region by developing closer ties with Al-Qaeda.

According to US officials, the TTP and Al-Qaeda, whose leaders are believed to have been hiding in Pakistan’s lawless tribal regions along the Afghanistan border, have come closer in the past two years.

U.S. officials pointed out that the Pakistan government’s claim that Shahzad was not assisted by the TTP is primarily aimed at avoiding it being compelled to open a new front against the extremists in North Waziristan, the Taliban’s stronghold.

The Los Angeles Times cited US officials, privy to the investigations in the Times Square bombing case, as claiming that Shahzad had actually received several days of training in Mohmand region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

They also revealed that Shahzad had received about 15,000 dollars from the TTP to plot the failed New York bombing.

US officials are also trying to investigate Shahzad’s claims regarding meeting the TTP chieftain Hakeemullah Mehsud during his training in North Waziristan.

However, despite growing evidence that Shahzad was in fact trained and assisted by the Paskistan Taliban, US military officials clarified that there are no plans to pile up pressure on Islamabad on the basis of the Time Square case to launch an offensive in North Waziristan.

“There”s no effort underway to convince the Pakistanis that they need to accelerate their timetable for North Waziristan,” said Captain John Kirby, spokesman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen. (ANI)

Gates rates Pak relationship six on rate card of ten

Washington, May 13 (ANI): US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has rated Washington’s relationship with Pakistan as six on a scale of ten, adding that he expects a sustained progress in ties between both countries.

In an interview aired on CNN, Gates stressed that ties between Islamabad and Washington have improved ‘significantly’ in the recent past, and that he would give the relationship “six or a seven now.”

Gates noted that the Obama Administration is well aware about its responsibilities and respects Pakistan’s stand on its sovereignty.

“The Pakistanis are very sensitive to the size of the American footprint, the number of Americans on the ground in a training capacity or whatever. They’re also extremely sensitive about their sovereignty. And we have to respect those things,” The Daily Times quoted Gates, as saying. (ANI)

Aid to Pakistan at risk over bomb probe: US officials

India, May 9 — After more than a year of doling out carrots to Pakistan, the Obama administration has reminded its strategic partner on the Afghanistan border that the US mood could quickly sour if FBI investigators confirm ties between the Times Square bombing suspect and Pakistani insurgent groups.

The warnings so far have been nonspecific, and publicly couched in confidence that the Pakistanis will do whatever is required. But the administration has indicated that anything less than full cooperation on the May 8 bombing attempt could make the continued flow of billions of US economic and security dollars “problematic,” officials from both countries said.

Pakistani efforts to combat the militants have under gone a positive “sea change” over the past year, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in an interview to be broadcast Sunday on CBS’s “60 Minutes.” But “we want more, we expect more,” Clinton said.

“We’ve made it very clear that if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences.” Gen Stanley McChrystal, the US commander in Afghanistan, gave a similar message on Friday during a meeting with Pakistani Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani.

On Saturday, the administration delivered a formal request to Pakistan for assistance in investigating the suspect’s ties with militants in Pakistan’s tribal regions. An ever-closer relationship with Pakistan is at the core of Obama’s war strategy in Afghanistan and against Al-Qaida. The nature and outcome of the threatened consequences for noncooperation are subjects the administration has barely begun to contemplate.

“There’s going to be enough here to trigger a policy debate,” predicted one senior official with access to US intelligence on Pakistan and involvement in White House discussions about the bombing attempt. “This is going to really create a new focus on Pakistan, militants in the tribal areas and their recruitment of and connections” to terror operatives recruited in the West, the official said.

Like others who agreed to discuss sensitive US-Pakistan relations and the ongoing bomb investigation, this official would speak only on the condition of anonymity. The suspect, Pakistan-born and raised Faisal Shahzad, is a naturalised US citizen who has told investigators that he was trained and directed by Tehrik-e-Taliban, the so-called Pakistani Taliban, and met with its highest officials during recent visits there.

The hapless nature of the plot, and Shahzad’s his willingness to talk about it freely, have led officials to question some aspects of his account. But his story and other evidence have provided more than enough signposts leading back to Pakistan. To some US officials, Shahzad’s story has exposed a growing disconnect between the long-term strategy of patiently wooing Pakistan, and the reality of an increasingly direct threat to the US homeland from Pakistani-based militants.

Impatient with the intricacies of Pakistani politics, its anti-American sensitivities and its fixation on India as its greatest strategic threat, these officials see the Times Square incident as weighing in favor of a far more muscular and unilateral US policy. It would include a geographically expanded use of drone missile attacks in Pakistan and pressure for a stronger US military presence there.

To others, however, it is too early to draw firm conclusions about Shahzad’s connections and how the Pakistani government will deal with them. For now, the operative administration view is that expanded US aid and strategic ties have begun to pay dividends and “reinforce the point that the strategy we designed over a year ago was the right strategy,” one official said. If the bomb attempt had happened early in the administration, he and others said, cooperation would have been tenuous at best.

Asked whether any change in strategy was currently being contemplated, a senior US military official responded, “The answer is no.” These officials point out their confidence is not based solely on trust. Pakistan’s economy is on the verge of collapse, with gross domestic product falling from more than 8 per cent growth in 2005 to under 3 per cent last year.

More than $3.5 billion in US economic and military assistance is in the pipeline, and a nearly $8 billion International Monetary Fund agreement and $3.5 billion World Bank financing package are pending. In economic terms, one Pakistani official said, “the cumulative impact of the US role is enormous.”

Insurgent groups with sanctuaries or operations in Pakistan range from Al-Qaida and the Afghan Taliban networks to domestic organisations including the Pakistani Taliban and Kashmir-focused groups such as Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba. The administration has argued that they increasingly overlap and urged Pakistan to take them all on.

In response, Pakistan has discounted a significant Al-Qaida presence, and been slow to break its long-standing intelligence ties with the Afghan Taliban leaders it sees as a hedge against an unfriendly government next door. Far from taking on the Kashmiri groups, it has considered them a strategic asset against its traditional Indian adversary.

Following a series of domestic attacks and suicide bombings, it has conducted fierce and costly offensives over the past year against the Pakistani Taliban in the Afghan border badlands of the northwest frontier and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, or FATA.

The United States has contributed by targeting Pakistani Taliban leaders with drone strikes, and praised the Pakistani military as it drove Taliban forces from their operational base in the FATA region of South Waziristan. But that patience, administration officials warned, does not extend to the Shahzad case.

FBI team in Pakistan to probe Times Square bomb plot

Islamabad, May 8 (DPA) A team of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is in Islamabad to exchange information on the New York Times Square bombing plot, Pakistani officials said Saturday.

A three-member FBI team arrived in Pakistan’s capital Friday to obtain information from local officials about their probe into possible links between Islamist extremists and Faisal Shahzad, a 30-year-old US citizen from Pakistan charged in the botched bombing.

‘The FBI officials are focusing on two things. First, they want to question Faisal Shahzad’s father, father-in-law and his friends so they can guess how that man was radicalized and whether he had any links with radicals,’ said a Pakistani security official.

‘Secondly, they want to know if any militant organisation in Pakistan had sent money to Faisal Shahzad to fund the bombing plot,’ he said, requesting anonymity. ‘They want us to find out if any transactions took place through hawala.’

The hawala is an informal, private system of quick money transfer that millions of Pakistanis living abroad use to send remittances to the families back home.

US officials say Shahzad has admitted to the plot and told investigators that he attended militant training camps in Pakistan, but authorities in both countries have not confirmed any conclusive contact between him and a terrorist organization.

‘We have taken into custody a couple of Faisal Shahzad’s friends and people who knew them but there has not been any major breakthrough in the investigation so far,’ the official said.

‘We do not know if this person had any direct or indirect links with Taliban, Al Qaeda or any other terrorist group.’

Other officials have said at least one of Shahzad’s friends is believed to have links with Jaish-e-Mohammad, a militant group with suspected ties with Al Qaeda and accused of some crimes in Pakistan.

Police arrested the person earlier this week in southern port city of Karachi.

Some media reports said authorities had taken Shahzad’s father, Baharul Haq, a retired air vice marshal, into ‘protective custody’ but officially it has not been confirmed.

Shahzad was arrested Monday on a Dubai-bound plane at John F Kennedy International Airport in New York, two days after a vendor spotted smoke arising from a vehicle in Times Square. Police defused the crude car bomb consisting of gasoline, propane and powder.

His links to Pakistani terrorists remain unclear but the pressure is building on the country to act decisively to eliminate Taliban safe havens involved in the insurgency in Afghanistan and Al Qaeda terrorist organization conducting terrorist actions overseas.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warned Pakistan of ‘very severe consequences’ if a terrorist action on US soil were linked to Pakistan.

‘We’ve made it very clear that if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences,’ Clinton told CBS in an interview to be aired Sunday.

But Clinton also praised Pakistan’s increased cooperation, adding that more was needed from the Islamic country.

‘We’ve gotten more cooperation and it’s been a real sea change in the commitment we’ve seen from the Pakistan government. We want more. We expect more,’ said Clinton, according to excerpts released by CBS.

Around 150,000 Pakistani troops are carrying out several offensives against Islamist rebels in its lawless tribal region and adjoining Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, formerly known as North West Frontier Province.

But they have mainly focused on the militants who have attacked civilian and official targets inside Pakistan, and spared those groups of rebels who conduct cross border raids into Afghanistan.

Large areas of its territory are still under control of so-called ‘good Taliban’ or ‘Afghan Taliban’ who are said to allow Al Qaeda to operate almost freely.

Rusty Pak ‘terribly out of order’ in ICC T20 WC : Akram

Lahore, May 8 (ANI): Following the two consecutive losses against Australia and England in the ICC World T20 Championship, defending champions Pakistan are looking ‘terribly out of order’, former captain Wasim Akram has said.

In his column on ESPN, Akram pointed out that Pakistan has not played any competitive cricket in the recent past, which was evident from their performances in the two games against Australia and England.

Pakistan was comprehensively beaten by Australia by 34 runs in the last of their group matches, while suffering another humiliating six-wicket defeat at the hands of England in the first match of the Super Eight Stage of the tournament on Thursday.

Akram observed that the Pakistan team management has failed to rope in the best set of players in the tournament so far.

“They have not yet been able to decide on their best-choice XI. Players have not played competitive cricket in last two months or so. No wonder why they have been on pins and needles in the tournament so far,” he said.

Akram, one of the finest fast bowlers of his time, underlined that Pakistan’s batsmen would have to improve their application if the team has to move further in the tournament.

“Batting has not really come off for the Pakistanis. If Kamran Akmal does not fire at the top, the team looks in disarray. Misbah-ul-Haq is not looking the player he was at the inaugural edition three years ago in South Africa. The defending champions’ batting needs immediate address,” he said. (ANI)

Pakistan distances itself from Kasab

Islamabad, May 7 (IANS) Pakistan has distanced itself from gunman Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, sentenced to death over the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, but has called for the perpetrators of the siege to be brought to justice.

The 23-year-old Kasab was given the death sentence on four counts of murder, waging war against India and conspiracy and terrorism offences.

‘We would appreciate that our legal experts need to go through the detailed judgement,’ Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit was quoted as saying Thursday by Dawn.

‘Pakistan has strongly condemned the horrific Mumbai attack. It is important that culprits are brought to justice,’ he said.

On being asked whether Pakistan would provide legal assistance to the lone gunman captured alive among 10 Pakistanis, or to a Pakistani-American charged with terrorism in the US over a failed New York bomb attack, Basit said distinctions needed to be made.

‘It is incumbent upon the government of Pakistan to provide whatever assistance possible to all its nationals abroad.

‘Having said that, we need to draw a distinction as to where the assistance is required and where it is not,’ he said.

Pakistan has said it will consult India on when to meet with a view towards resuming the peace process, which New Delhi suspended after the Mumbai attacks.

The prime ministers of both countries agreed to work towards resuming the frozen peace dialogue during their first direct talks in nine months, on the sidelines of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit in Bhutan.

US unlikely to consider across-the-board change in policy with Pak

Washington, May 6 (ANI): The arrest of a Pakistani American for his role in the botched Times Square car bombing plot will not stop the United States from continuing to follow its flawed policy vis-à-vis Pakistan.

According to one analysis, Washington is unlikely to press for an across the board clampdown on terrorists so long as it continues to exaggerate its own dependence on Pakistan to the exclusion of others in the region.

In the analytical piece, what comes out is that unless the US suffers another major attack, it is likely to look the other way, or at best give lip service to the terrorism threat emanating from South Asia.

The analysis, however, warns that it would be dangerous to admit and to conclude that “lone wolf” threats are over.

“It is better to assume that there are more such lone wolves lurking around somewhere. The man (Shahzad) was apprehended at the last minute, very much in the style of movies and in fortuitous circumstances. Had he booked himself on an earlier flight, he might have escaped,” the analysis says.

“The fear of a successful attempt the next time is real. Should such an attack be successful the next time, American reaction would have to be in the extreme,” it adds.

US intelligence agencies have their work cut out.

Did Shahzad have someone backing him or not? With US intelligence and law enforcement agencies being clueless on this score, the implication is that there are enough ‘converts’ to jihad in the US and West that it would make the authorities start looking hard.

There are many unanswered questions and more will emerge as the investigations continue, the analysis says, and adds that there will be two immediate reactions in the US.

. There will be increased general suspicion or even racial tension against Pakistanis or persons of Pakistani origin, and secondly,

. The authorities are also likely to become stricter in their scrutiny of people going and coming from Pakistan. There will be stricter immigration and migration checks.

Third, publicly there will be more questions asked of the Obama administration about the wisdom of co-operating with a government (Pakistan) whose people were now threatening innocent Americans.

The author of the analysis believes that US policies towards Pakistan won’t see much change.

“There will be the usual remonstrations and finger wagging, but ultimately the Pakistanis will declare helplessness owing to the bloody mindedness of the Indians. Pakistan will use this opportunity to press even more strongly on their key India specific demands (Kashmir and now water, reducing Indian presence and role in Afghanistan, getting a Pak friendly or anti-Indian leadership in Kabul, nuclear, delivery of more weapons ostensibly for CI ops). The US will continue to push for effective Pak Army action in North Waziristan, heightened intelligence co-operation and role for CIA, increased drone strikes and so on,” he concludes. (ANI)

Pak must ‘take out’ LeT, other terror groups following ‘fair’ Kasab trial: Editorial

Islamabad, May 5 (ANI): Terming the trial and the verdict of the special anti-terror court against Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone surviving gunman who along with his nine other associates unleashed a reign of death and destruction for nearly three days in November 2008 in Mumbai, as ‘fair’, an editorial in one of Pakistan’s leading English dailies has stressed that after the verdict it has become more important for Pakistan to nab people like Hafeez Muhammed Saeed and Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi if it really wants peace talks with India to succeed.

The Daily Times editorial pointed out that the Kasab’s verdict highlights the ‘impartality’ of the Indian judiciary and that Pakistan must “gain a little wisdom from the whole episode both politically and judicially.”

“If the resumption of dialogue and mutual understanding is to be demonstrated with India, we must accept this verdict for what it is: one that is fair and an example of the impartial Indian judicial tradition,” the editorial said.

It said that as the Indian court has held both the Jammat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafeez Muhammed Saeed and Lashkar-e-Taiba’s (LeT) operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi responsible for the terror attacks, it was for Pakistan’s own interest that it nabs these terrorist leaders.

“In the interests of justice and regional harmony, any lingering sympathy for these terrorist organisations should not allow anyone to escape the long arm of the law. No matter where the trail leads, we ought to take a cue from judicial structures that have a history of more respect and independence than ours and translate charges and accusations into full-scale investigations and trials,” the editorial went on to add.

While many Pakistanis may have denounced the verdict against Kasab, saying he has been specially targeted, the editorial said that people’s reaction over the court’s decision was due to the fact that Pakistan does not have a definite benchmark of legal standards.

It added that Pakistan’s judiciary system has been highly politicised, however, in India politics and judiciary have stayed clear of each other.

“Pakistan is the victim of a judicial system that has unfortunately been highly politicised in our history, but India is starkly different, as the judiciary has steered clear of politics,” the editorial said. (ANI)