Monday,
May 07, 2012
http://images.thenews.com.pk/07-05-2012/ethenews/t-14410.htm
WASHINGTON: The
Taliban is stronger now than before President Barack Obama ordered a surge of
US troops to Afghanistan,
two senior US
lawmakers said on Sunday, contradicting the administration's assessment of the
insurgency.
“I think we both say that what we found is the Taliban is stronger,” Senate
Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein told “Fox News Sunday” in an
interview that included House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, who
agreed with her statement. The two lawmakers returned last week from a trip to Afghanistan.
The Defence Department said last week in a report to Congress that its surge of
33,000 extra troops in Afghanistan
ordered in late 2009 had weakened the Taliban but that the insurgency remained
resilient. The report said overall insurgent attacks declined in 2011for the
first time in five years, even though violence increased in areas surrounding
the Taliban’s southern stronghold of Kandahar, a
region where US
efforts have been focused since2009.
Feinstein, a Democrat, said radical Islamist religious schools in Pakistan
were providing new recruits to the Afghan insurgency.“So an insurgency which
one can expect will burn itself out after a period of time will not necessarily
burn out,” she said.
Obama travelled to Kabul
last week to sign a strategic partnership agreement with Afghan President Hamid
Karzai. The deal sets out a long-term US
role in Afghanistan,
including aid and advisers, after most American and Nato combat soldiers
withdraw by the end of 2014. Rogers said there
was a danger that Obama's announcement of a date of withdrawal of US combat forces in Afghanistan
and Washington's decision to hold talks with
the Taliban could under mine the US objective of denying a safe
haven to terrorists.
"The first priority is to deny safe haven and that means a strategic
defeat of the Taliban and we have to also defeat the safe havens in the tribal
areas of Pakistan,"
said Rogers, a Republican.
The Obama administration is due to pull the last of its 33,000 surge troops
from Afghanistan by this
fall, leaving around 68,000 US
soldiers there. Rogers and Feinstein both said the United
States should designate the Haqqani network, an Afghan
insurgent group believed to be based in Pakistan, as a terrorist
organisation.
"They've killed nearly 500 US
troops. They are based in Miranshah (in Pakistan). This is something we
have to be very aggressive to put an end to," Rogers said. The United
States has repeatedly urged Pakistan's
military to launch a major offensive in North Waziristan
to go after the Haqqanis, which have links to al-Qaeda. Pakistan says it is already
stretched fighting home grown Taliban militants elsewhere near the Afghan
border.
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