25 Saudi Guantanamo prisoners return to militancy

(Reuters) – Around 25 former detainees from Guantanamo Bay camp returned to militancy after going through a rehabilitation program for al Qaeda members in Saudi Arabia, a Saudi security official said on Saturday.

World | Saudi Arabia

The United States have sent back around 120 Saudis from the detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, set up after the U.S. launched a “war on terror” following the September 11 attacks by mostly Saudi suicide hijackers sent by al Qaeda.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, has put the returned prisoners along with other al Qaeda suspects through a rehabilitation program which includes religious re-education by clerics and financial help to start a new life.

The scheme, which some 300 extremists have attended, is part of anti-terrorism efforts after al Qaeda staged attacks inside the kingdom from 2003-06. These were halted after scores of suspects were arrested with the help of foreign experts.

Around 11 Saudis from Guantanamo have gone to Yemen, an operating base for al Qaeda, while others have been jailed again or killed after attending the program, said Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, Director General of the General Administration for Intellectual Security overseeing the rehabilitation.

He pinpointed strong personal ties among former prisoners but also tough U.S. tactics as the reason why some 20 percent of the returned Saudis relapsed into militancy compared to 9.5 percent overall in the rehabilitation program.

“Those guys from other groups didn’t suffer torture before, the non-Guantanamos (participants). Torturing is the most dangerous thing in radicalization. You have more extremist people if you have more torture,” Hadlaq told reporters in a rare briefing about Saudi anti-terrorism efforts.

REHABILITATION SCHEME “A SUCCESS”

Despite the setback with Guantanamo prisoners, Saudi Arabia regards the rehabilitation scheme, which kicks in after militants have served a prison term, as a success.

“There is no doubt that there is an effect,” Hadlaq said.

U.S. President Barack Obama ordered the camp shut after taking office in January 2009 but his plans have been stymied. There are now about 180 detainees left, among them 13 Saudis. At its peak, the camp held about 780 detainees.

More than 2,000 sympathizers of al Qaeda are still in prison in Saudi Arabia. Some 2,000 teachers have been removed from classrooms for their extremist views in the past five years while 400 teachers are in prison, Hadlaq said.

Saudi Arabia plans to build five more rehabilitation centers which will be able to accommodate 250 people each, he said.

The expansion plans are partly to cope with the eventual release of 991 suspected al Qaeda militants whom the authorities said in October were awaiting trial for 30 attacks since 2003.

In July, a Saudi court sentenced one unnamed Islamist to death and handed out to others jail terms of up to 30 years in the first publicly reported trials since the arrests.

(Reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Robert Woodward)

25 Saudi Guantanamo prisoners return to militancy

RIYADH, June 19 (Reuters) – Around 25 former detainees from Guantanamo Bay camp returned to militancy after going through a rehabilitation programme for al Qaeda members in Saudi Arabia, a Saudi security official said on Saturday.

The United States have sent back around 120 Saudis from the detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, set up after the U.S. launched a “war on terror” following the Sept. 11 attacks by mostly Saudi suicide hijackers sent by al Qaeda.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, has put the returned prisoners along with other al Qaeda suspects through a rehabilitation programme which includes religious re-education by clerics and financial help to start a new life.

The scheme, which some 300 extremists have attended, is part of anti-terrorism efforts after al Qaeda staged attacks inside the kingdom from 2003-06. These were halted after scores of suspects were arrested with the help of foreign experts.

Around 11 Saudis from Guantanamo have gone to Yemen, an operating base for al Qaeda, while others have been jailed again or killed after attending the programme, said Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, Director General of the General Administration for Intellectual Security overseeing the rehabilitation.

He pinpointed strong personal ties among former prisoners but also tough U.S. tactics as the reason why some 20 percent of the returned Saudis relapsed into militancy compared to 9.5 percent overall in the rehabilitation programme.

“Those guys from other groups didn’t suffer torture before, the non-Guantanamos (participants). Torturing is the most dangerous thing in radicalisation. You have more extremist people if you have more torture,” Hadlaq told reporters in a rare briefing about Saudi anti-terrorism efforts.

REHABILITATION SCHEME “A SUCCESS”

Despite the setback with Guantanamo prisoners, Saudi Arabia regards the rehabilitation scheme, which kicks in after militants have served a prison term, as a success. “There is no doubt that there is an effect,” Hadlaq said.

U.S. President Barack Obama ordered the camp shut after taking office in January 2009 but his plans have been stymied. There are now about 180 detainees left, among them 13 Saudis. At its peak, the camp held about 780 detainees.

More than 2,000 sympathisers of al Qaeda are still in prison in Saudi Arabia. Some 2,000 teachers have been removed from classrooms for their extremist views in the past five years while 400 teachers are in prison, Hadlaq said.

Saudi Arabia plans to build five more rehabilitation centres which will be able to accommodate 250 people each, he said.

The expansion plans are partly to cope with the eventual release of 991 suspected al Qaeda militants whom the authorities said in October were awaiting trial for 30 attacks since 2003.

In July, a Saudi court sentenced one unnamed Islamist to death and handed out to others jail terms of up to 30 years in the first publicly reported trials since the arrests. (Reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Robert Woodward)

US wants Pak Army Chief Kayani to stay for another year

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Even though the Pakistan government has clarified its stand on the tenure of Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, sources in the US Central Command (CENTCOM) have revealed that he is likely to get an extension.

Insiders in the CENTCOM said that General Kayani has developed strong working relations with his American counterparts and it will be in the ‘best interest of the operation (war on terror) not to change leadership mid-stream.’

Sources also said that General Kayani has assured the Obama administration that the Pakistani armed forces would not disrupt the country’s civilian set-up, and would play in their “own sandbox”, The Examiner reports.

Earlier, ruling out the chances of giving Kayani an extension in service, Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar said that the PPP-led Government would not extend his tenure, and neither had he asked for it.

General Kayani (55) is the 14th chief of the Pakistan Army. He was promoted as a full General in October 2007, and made the Vice Chief of Army Staff.

He took over as the new Army Chief after Pervez Musharraf’s retirement on November 28,2007. (ANI)

‘Obama’s approach to India ruining close Bush-era ties’

US administration’s approach to India, including its “slow” response to the request for questioning David Headley, and its proximity to Pakistan in the war on terror are steadily driving a wedge in the strong relations cultivated during the Bush-era, noted historian Arthur Herman has observed.

In an opinion piece in the New York Post, widely regarded as a conservative publication, Herman wrote that India is still waiting to question LeT operative Headley, months after it emerged that he had a role in the Mumbai terror attack.

The author and historian also described the “cozy relationship” shared by the US and Pakistan as the second area of a rift in Indo-US relations.

“The partnership with India that George W Bush carefully built is in shambles — jeopardising our future in Asia,” the piece said.

“What the Pentagon and the media trumpet as Pakistan’s new ‘cooperation’ in fighting the Taliban, Indian experts see as simply one jihadist wing of Pakistan’s secret service (the ISI) surreptitiously taking out the others, with our Predator drones doing the shooting,” it added.

Herman is the author the bestseller How the Scots Invented the Modern World, and his most recent book is Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age.

The author warned that the US should not make the “mistake of scorning India” like it did during the Cold War.

“Repeating that mistake will now hurt us and our ability to make our voice heard in that vital hemisphere,” he said, contending that the approach will drive India to its once close ally Russia.

The article noted that when Obama did not sell retired aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk to New Delhi, India bought a Russian carrier along with 16 nuclear reactors and a fleet of new MIG 29 fighters.

“The Russian deal means more than another lost opportunity for the United States — and another troubling expansion of Moscow’s influence in the region,” Herman wrote.

“It also represents a growing perception among Indian policymakers that they need to adjust to an Asia in which America plays little or no role, especially if the US economy buries itself under a mudslide of debt,” he added.

He notes that India fears Obama’s arming of Pakistan could lead to it lording it over other nations in the region, which could lead to more terror attacks.

It also suggests that New Delhi isn’t thrilled about Washington’s push for all nations to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

The author also recalled that India wasn’t too thrilled about Obama’s suggestion that China should try and mediate between New Delhi and Islamabad over Kashmir.

“As the Indian press noted at the time, nothing could be more calculated to arouse New Delhi’s wrath than the suggestion that not one but two erstwhile enemies should have a say in the fate of what is still sovereign Indian territory,” he said.

Outcome of US-led ‘War On Terror’ hinges on ‘Battle Of Kandahar’ success

New York, May 12 (ANI): The slated US offensive against Taliban in Kandahar could be the defining moment in the US-led war on terror in Afghanistan. More than 20,000 US troops are being mobilized for the do-or-die operation that will see the US go all out to reclaim the nerve center of the Afghan Taliban.

According to Stephen Biddle, a civilian adviser to Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the outcome of the entire war is riding on it.

“If we fail to secure this population, it”s hard to see how the campaign could succeed,” CBS News quoted Biddle as saying.

The operation is already under way with more than a hundred Taliban operatives being reportedly captured or vanquished.

Operation Cooperation for Kandahar, the official name for the operation, is unprecedented in scale and far outstrips previous US attempts at weeding out the Taliban militia from Marjah.

Right now there are only 12,000 U.S., Canadian and Afghan troops in and around Kandahar, and according to Michael Semple, an Irish EU official who has spent more than two decades in Afghanistan and is a Taliban expert, that”s not enough to stop the Taliban”s reign of terror, the report said.

Between now and July, the number of troops will essentially double. American and Canadian troops will set up bases in the districts surrounding Kandahar and spread out into the villages where the Taliban have their safe havens, the report said.

At the same time, U.S. and Afghan forces will establish checkpoints – 40 in all – on roads leading into Kandahar. Inside the city, U.S. troops will man every police station alongside Afghan police, though Semple has his reservations about the Afghan Police’s ability.

“The weak point in the strategy is the Afghan police. They have yet to prove themselves,” Semple said.

“The operation in Kandahar is 100 times more important than the operation in Marjah, that was a sideshow; Kandahar is the real thing,” he added

The Marjah operation is still not over and U.S. officers do not expect the Kandahar operation to produce results until the end of the year. (ANI)

Pak govt. mulling 100-billion rupee increase in defence budget

Lahore, May 11 (ANI): The Pakistan government is likely to increase the country’s defence budget by a whopping 100 billion rupees in the next financial year.

According to a private television channel, the government has decided to enhance defence allocations in the budget, as it has expended a heavy amount on the ‘war on terror’.

Last year, Pakistan had allocated 343 billion rupees for defence spending, but in order to cope up with the demands of the war against extremism, the budget was increased further to 378 billion rupees.

According to documents relating to the defence budget increase, about 70 billion rupees increase in the defence budget was necessitated by increase in the salaries and allowances of the armed forces’ personnel, The Daily Times reports. (ANI)

Shahzad”s hatred stemmed from personal failure, war on terror

New York, May 6 (ANI): Confessed Times Square car bomber Faisal Shahzad”s hatred stemmed from personal failure and the US-led Allied war on terror in Afghanistan.

According to the New York Daily News, a raft of grievances that built up over time fueled his descent from a suburban Connecticut family man to a wanna-be terrorist.

It quoted law enforcement sources, as saying that “He did a slow burn.”

“[He was] slowly radicalized as events piled up – the war in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, Muslim brothers being killed, innocent people being hit by drones from above,” one source said.

Shahzad, the son of a wealthy Pakistani family who earned a college degree and an M.B.A. in America, offered few clues of his growing resentment toward his adopted country.

But last year, Shahzad”s fixation on U.S. policy in the Middle East was evident at a house party in leafy Shelton, Conn.

Neighbor Dennis Flanner said a brooding Shahzad was staring at the TV news in a room packed with drunken partygoers.

“They were talking about those drones blowing things up in Afghanistan,” Flanner, 18, said. “He was the only one watching it. Everybody else was just having a good time.”

At one point, Flanner said, a reveler told Shahzad to loosen up and have some fun. Shahzad wasn”t having it.

“They shouldn”t be shooting people from the sky,” Shahzad replied, according to Flanner. “You know, they should come down and fight.”

By that point, Shahzad, a financial analyst, was starting to shed his middle-class life.

In June, he quit the job he had held since 2006 at marketing firm Affinion. Banks foreclosed on the home he had owned since 2004 and where he had lived with his wife, Huma Mian, and their young son and daughter.

In the fall, Shahzad went to Pakistan, where he admits getting bomb training, according to a federal complaint. When he returned to the U.S. in February, he rented an apartment in a shabby area of Bridgeport, Conn.

“It looks like everything was tilting toward, ”I”m not succeeding in America. I”m going back to Pakistan, and I”m going to carry out an attack,”” said former FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt.

Van Zandt said it was revealing that Shahzad opted not to carry out a suicide attack.

“It tells me that his dedication to whatever motivation he had to do this was not to the level of what we”ve seen of other Middle Eastern terrorists. He was not that radicalized.” (ANI)

8 Pak pilots complete F-16 flying training in US

Islamabad, May 4 (ANI): Eight fighter pilots of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) have completed their seven month training for the advance F-16 combat jets.

The flying training conducted in Tucson, Arizona included a fighter conversion course on the F-16 C/D aircraft, flight lead upgrade training and instructor pilot certification, The Daily Times reports.

The prime motive behind the training programme was to coach the Pakistani pilots so that they could impart similar training to other pilots back home over how to handle the advanced jets.

It may be noted that the US is likely to provide four of the first 18 F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan in June.

The fighter jets are part of the 2.9 billion dollars arms package, which includes electronics and weapons upgrades for 34 existing Pakistani F-16s.

Bruce Lemkin, Deputy Under Secretary in the Pentagon for the Air Force, had earlier said that the Air Force is also reviewing Pakistan’s request to loan or lease excess or decommissioned U.S. F-16s for ground operations before newer ones are delivered.

A US military officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said 17 of the 18 combat aircrafts would be delivered to Islamabad by December.

It may be noted that in 1990, the U.S. halted the production of a third and fourth batch of F-16s ordered by Pakistan, due to its nuclear weapons program. 40 F-16A/B aircraft had been delivered under the Peace Gate I and II programs, however none of the Peace Gate III and IV aircraft were delivered.

However, in 2005 Islamabad finally received the go-ahead to order 24 additional F-16s, which was believed to an explicit reward for General Pervez Musharraf’s support in the ‘war on terror.’ (ANI)

Pak inaction over captive militants to hit war on terror efforts: US

Washington, Apr.22 (ANI): The holding of thousands of suspected militants by the Pakistan Army for an indefinite period could not only sway public sentiment towards their movement, but also impact US military and financial aid to Pakistan, officials have revealed.

The extremists are being held captive by the military on the plea that Pakistan’s civilian justice system does not have the power and is too weak to prosecute the largenumber of alleged militants, and that they cold walk free if handed over to the civilian set-up.

Pakistan Army spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas, stressed that the military is “extremely concerned” that the detainees will be allowed to go free if they are turned over to the civilian government.

“More than 300 suspected militants who had been detained in the military’s 2007 operation in the Swat Valley were later released under a peace deal. Many returned to the Taliban, making the army’s task harder when it again rolled into Swat last spring,” Abbas said.

However, U.S. officials said they are worried that the arrests could further inflame local sentiment thereby creating sympathy for the militants.

“They’re treating the local population with a heavy hand, and they’re alienating them,” The Washington Post quoted a US official, as saying.

“As a result, it’s sort of a classic case going back to Vietnam; it risks actually creating more sympathy for the extremists,” the official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, said.

U.S. officials are also concerned that by holding thousands of people without trial, Pakistan risks violating the Leahy Amendment, which requires recipients of U.S. military assistance to abide by international human rights laws and standards, the newspaper said.

“Obviously, you don’t want the Pakistanis to do anything to complicate a relationship that requires support from Congress,” another Obama Administration official said.

It is worth mentioning that Washington has provided Islamabad with nearly 18 billion dollars in military and development aid since 2002. (ANI)

Osama bin Laden’s Facebook account disabled

London, Apr 17(ANI): Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s profile on social networking website Facebook has been shut down, after a security expert raised the issue with the website’s U.S. owners.

According to reports, Osama had a Facebook page named “The leader of the Mujahideen, Osama bin Laden”, and he used it as a platform to show videos and speeches to Islamic militants.

Talking about the decision, Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said that the company could not ascertain if the profile belonged to Osama or was fake.

“People often attempt to register fake accounts under the name of famous or infamous people, and we have a number of technical measures designed to prevent this behavior,” Fox News quoted Noyes, as saying.

“Sometimes these fakes do get through, but there is no evidence to suggest that the account in question or the other dozens of people who have tried to present themselves as Osama Bin Laden have any relation to the terrorist. As is our standard practice, we have disabled the account,” he added.

The account became active less than a month ago, but had already attracted nearly 1,000 extremists, and although the language used was Arabic, messages in English had started to appear.

Internet terror expert and author Neil Doyle said: “Bin Laden, via his supporters, is clearly taunting his pursuers.”

Since 2001, Osama and his organization have been major targets of the United States” War on Terror.

There is a 16 million pound reward for his capture, and he along with other Al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding near the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan”s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. (ANI)

Osama bin Laden’s Facebook account disabled

London, Apr 17(ANI): Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s profile on social networking website Facebook has been shut down, after a security expert raised the issue with the website’s U.S. owners.

According to reports, Osama had a Facebook page named “The leader of the Mujahideen, Osama bin Laden”, and he used it as a platform to show videos and speeches to Islamic militants.

Talking about the decision, Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said that the company could not ascertain if the profile belonged to Osama or was fake.

“People often attempt to register fake accounts under the name of famous or infamous people, and we have a number of technical measures designed to prevent this behavior,” Fox News quoted Noyes, as saying.

“Sometimes these fakes do get through, but there is no evidence to suggest that the account in question or the other dozens of people who have tried to present themselves as Osama Bin Laden have any relation to the terrorist. As is our standard practice, we have disabled the account,” he added.

The account became active less than a month ago, but had already attracted nearly 1,000 extremists, and although the language used was Arabic, messages in English had started to appear.

Internet terror expert and author Neil Doyle said: “Bin Laden, via his supporters, is clearly taunting his pursuers.”

Since 2001, Osama and his organization have been major targets of the United States’ War on Terror.here is a 16 million pound reward for his capture, and he along with other Al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding near the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. (ANI)

Osama bin Laden has a page on Facebook

London, Apr 16(ANI): Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is reportedly using social networking website Facebook as a platform to show videos and speeches to Islamic militants.

According to reports, Osama has a page named “The leader of the Mujahideen, Osama bin Laden” and his address is given as “the mountains of the world”.

Following the revelation, security experts have urged Facebook’s US office to shut down the page.

The account became active less than a month ago, but had already attracted nearly 1,000 extremists, and although the language used is Arabic, messages in English have started to appear, The Sun reports.

Internet terror expert and author Neil Doyle said: “Bin Laden, via his supporters, is clearly taunting his pursuers.”

Since 2001, Osama and his organization have been major targets of the United States’ War on Terror.

There is a 16 million pound reward for his capture, and he along with other Al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding near the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

Osama bin Laden has a page on Facebook

London, Apr 16(ANI): Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is reportedly using social networking website Facebook as a platform to show videos and speeches to Islamic militants.

According to reports, Osama has a page named “The leader of the Mujahideen, Osama bin Laden” and his address is given as “the mountains of the world”.

Following the revelation, security experts have urged Facebook’s US office to shut down the page.

The account became active less than a month ago, but had already attracted nearly 1,000 extremists, and although the language used is Arabic, messages in English have started to appear, The Sun reports.

Internet terror expert and author Neil Doyle said: “Bin Laden, via his supporters, is clearly taunting his pursuers.”

Since 2001, Osama and his organization have been major targets of the United States’ War on Terror.

There is a 16 million pound reward for his capture, and he along with other Al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding near the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. (ANI)

Now, it’s US’ turn to do ‘something extraordinary’: Qureshi

Islamabad, Mar.31 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that the US has acknowledged Islamabad’s actions in the ‘war on terror’, and it was now Washington’s turn to do ‘something extraordinary’.

Interacting with media persons on the recent strategic talks between Pakistan and the US, Qureshi said the relationship between both countries has improved greatly over the past few years, which is evident from the enhanced level of interaction.

“You have to see the basic difference between the past and the present meetings. The level of interaction has been upgraded. You can see the level of participation. There are specifics and by the end of April, we will be delivered a big sum and by the end of current fiscal year,” The News quoted Qureshi, as saying.

He said the White House has been hesitant in offering Islamabad the equipments needed to fight against extremists, but the situation has changed as it has now not only agreed to fulfil Pakistan’s requirements but also to fast track the process.

“Earlier, the US administration was not serious in giving us assistance. But, during the recent strategic talks it was agreed that Pakistan also needs economic assistance. We presented them a dossier of demands to tell them what we need,” Qureshi said. (ANI)

Pak to get four F-16s by June end : Officials

Washington, Mar.30 (ANI): The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) would receive four of the first 18 F-16 fighter jets from the US in June, senior Pakistani and American have officials said.

The fighter jets are part of the 2.9 billion dollars arms package, which includes electronics and weapons upgrades for 34 existing Pakistani F-16s.

Bruce Lemkin, Deputy Under Secretary in the Pentagon for the Air Force, said the Air Force is also reviewing Pakistan’s request to loan or lease excess or decommissioned U.S. F-16s for ground operations before newer ones are delivered.

A US military officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said 17 of the 18 combat aircrafts would be delivered to Islamabad by December.

Pakistani fighter pilots are already receiving training in the US on the new F-16s, so that they can put the aircraft to optimum use once they are delivered, The Business week reports.

US Air Force spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Jeffry Glenn said 1,000 kits for converting unguided weapons into laser-guided bombs, the first ever sent to Pakistan, have been sent to Pakistan earlier this month, and it could take as many as 30 days to arrive.

The bombs can be dropped from Pakistan’s existing older F- 16s, Glenn said in an e-mail.

It may be noted that in 1990, the U.S. halted the production of a third and fourth batch of F-16s ordered by Pakistan, due to its nuclear weapons program. 40 F-16A/B aircraft had been delivered under the Peace Gate I and II programs, however none of the Peace Gate III and IV aircraft were delivered.

However, in 2005 Islamabad finally received the go-ahead to order 24 additional F-16s, which was believed to an explicit reward for General Pervez Musharraf”s support in the ‘war on terror.’ (ANI)

US to give Pak 14 F-16 jets: PAF chief

Islamabad, Mar.27 (ANI): Pakistan Air Force (PAF) chief Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman has claimed that the US has agreed to provide 14 F-16 combat jets to Islamabad.

Talking to media persons during a press conference here, Air Chief Marshal Suleman said Pakistan would be getting more than a dozen F-16 jets, which would enhance the PAF’s capability to a great extent.

He said the PAF is capable of thwarting both ‘conventional’ and ‘unconventional’ threats from the enemy.

“The Pakistan Air Force is focusing on its preparedness and is taking stock of it preparations according to the modern trends,” The News quoted Air Chief Marshal Suleman, as saying.

In 1990, the U.S. halted the production of a third and fourth batch of F-16s ordered by Pakistan, due to its”s nuclear weapons program. 40 F-16A/B aircraft had been delivered under the Peace Gate I and II programs, however none of the Peace Gate III and IV aircraft were delivered.

However, in 2005 Islamabad finally received the go-ahead to order 24 additional F-16s, which was believed to an explicit reward for General Pervez Musharraf”s support in the ‘war on terror.’ (ANI)

After civil nuke deal snub, US now rejects Pak’s drone technology demand

Washington, Mar.27 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has admitted that the United States has not yet heeded Islamabad’s plea to hand over the unmanned Predator aircrafts to enable it to carry out the drone attacks targeting the extremists.

“I don’t think so,” Qureshi said in response to a question that whether the US has agreed to his country’s long standing demands for the drone technology.

In an interview with the CNN, Qureshi, acknowledged that the CIA operated missile hits inside Pakistan’s geographical boundaries has ‘taken out some valuable targets’ but added that the Obama Administration would be able to reduce the existing massive anti-America sentiment in Pakistan by offering it the drone technology.

“The issue of sovereignty is there. People of Pakistan feel strongly about it. We want the ownership. We make the decision when to operate. It will help improve the feelings in Pakistan,” Qureshi said.

Pakistan has been pestering the US to hand over drone technology to it so that it can carry out strikes on suspicious militant targets in the lawless tribal regions along the Afghan border.

Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying that they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-Americanism among the population, it is believed that it is sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hideouts.

The US has rejected Pakistan’s demand for armed drones, but during his recent Islamabad visit US Defence Secretary Robert Gates had offered to provide at least a dozen ‘unarmed aerial vehicles to Pakistan.

The Shadow surveillance drone was seen as a compromise aimed at enticing Pakistan further into the ‘war on terror’ and helping the country’s political leadership explain the drone strikes to the country’s people. (ANI)

Sharif urges EU to help India, Pak reduce tension and establish regional peace

Lahore, Mar.24 (ANI): Former Pakistan Prime Minister and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif has urged the European Union (EU) to play a role in reducing tensions between India and Pakistan and establish peace in the region.

During a meeting with Swedish Ambassador Urlika Sundberg and Special Envoy, Anna Karin Enestrom, here, Sharif said peace and stability can only be established in the region by resolving all outstanding problems such as the long pending Kashmir issue and issues concerning sharing of river waters between India and Pakistan.

Sharif also urged the international community to help Islamabad in the reconstruction and rehabilitation work in the tribal areas and the Swat Valley, which was ruined by the ‘war on terror’.

Sundberg assured that her country, which currently holds the EU presidency, is committed to help Pakistan for the social uplift and development of the war torn tribal areas, The Daily Times reports. (ANI)

Kayani leaves for US to take part in next week’s strategic dialogue

Islamabad, Mar.20 (ANI): Pakistan Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has left for the United States to take part in the upcoming strategic dialogue between the two countries on March 24.

During his ‘official’ visit, Kayani is also likely to meet top US military and government officials in Tampa and Washington, The Dawn reports.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi would head the Pakistani delegation while the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would represent Washington during the next week’s talks.

In recent months, senior Obama Administration officials have been hailing the close ties with Pakistan, which has acted tough on extremist leaders hiding inside its boundary.

Next week’s strategic dialogue, the first at the ministerial level, takes place in the backdrop of Pakistan’s consistent demands from the US to help it ‘more’ in order to enable it to take on the extremists more effectively in the ‘war on terror’. (ANI)