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Reset Just Before Honeymoon in India
U.S., Pakistani Leaders Agree to Reset Relationship
By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan, Sept. 5, 2018 — Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo and Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, held talks with Pakistani leaders in Islamabad today to reset the
relationship between the two countries.
Pompeo and Dunford met with new Pakistani Prime Minister Imran
Khan, Foreign Minister Mehmood Qureshi and Army Chief of Staff Gen. Qamar Javed
Bajwa.
“We talked abut their new government and the opportunity to
reset the relationship between our two countries across a broad spectrum:
economic, business, commercial -- the work that we all need to do to try to
develop a peaceful resolution in Afghanistan,” Pompeo told reporters here.
Pompeo and Dunford stopped here on their way to the
“Two-Plus-Two” talks with Indian leaders in New Delhi. It was the most senior
meeting between the representatives of the U.S. government and Pakistan’s new
government.
Dunford supported the secretary in his efforts to reset the
relationship.
Consistent Objectives
“When we talked to General Bajwa on a military-to-military
level, we listened to the prime minister very carefully [and] we listened to
the secretary very carefully. The objectives were very consistent between the
secretary and prime minister,” Dunford said. “General Bajwa and I agreed that
we will leverage the military-to-military relationship for the secretary and
prime minister and, more importantly, for President Trump’s South Asia
Strategy.”
When President Donald J. Trump announced the South Asia Strategy,
Pakistan had a large role to play. “The president’s South Asia strategy was
pretty clearly articulated in 2017, and the expectations that we have that
Pakistan will cooperate in bringing the Taliban to … an Afghan-owned,
Afghan-led peace process is pretty clear as well,” Dunford said during an
earlier discussion with reporters traveling with him. “I think our bilateral
relationship moving forward is very much going to be informed by the degree of
cooperation from Pakistan in doing it.”
Pakistan has a unique role in dealing with the Taliban, who
operate in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. In announcing the strategy last year,
Trump said that Pakistan “often gives safe haven to agents of chaos, violence
and terror.”
He called on Pakistan to stop providing safe havens for
terrorists who rest and refit for actions in Afghanistan and elsewhere.
“Pakistan has much to lose by continuing to harbor criminals and terrorists,”
the president said at the time.
Actions Must Back Up Words
Pakistani leaders have been fully briefed on the South Asia
Strategy. “On the surface, they say they want to cooperate,” Dunford said
earlier. “On the surface, they say they recognize that a peaceful solution in
Afghanistan is the right approach. On the surface, they say they support an
Afghan-owned, Afghan-led peace process. So what we are looking for is the
actions to back that up.
“What we want to see: The Taliban at the peace table dealing
with Afghans,” he continued. “And we believe the Pakistanis play a unique role
in bringing the Taliban to the peace process.”
U.S. officials also believe Pakistan can have an effect on the
Haqqani network, which has been a thorn in the side of coalition and Afghan
government efforts in eastern Afghanistan for years. “We also believe the
Pakistanis play a unique role in Haqqani’s behavior and the threats we have
seen to NATO/allied forces, coalition forces and Afghan forces,” Dunford said.
Following the discussions, Pompeo said the military-to-military
relationship underpins the move to reset the U.S.-Pakistani relationship. There
will be more discussions ahead, and there must be more results, he said.
“The relationship -- military-to-military -- is one that has
remained in a place where some of the other relationships haven’t, frankly.
They still continued to have relations, worked on projects that are important
together, and I hope we can use that as one of the foundational elements, as
well.”
The bottom line with the talks is that the Pakistanis “agreed it
is time to deliver on our joint commitments,” Pompeo said.
“We’ve had lots of time where we’ve talked and made agreements,
but we haven’t been able to actually execute those,” he said. “So there was
broad agreement … that we need to begin to do things on the ground that will
deliver outcomes so we can begin to build confidence and trust between the two
countries.”
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