U.S. asks Pakistan to take action against terror groups

April 02, 2010 08:14 am | Updated November 17, 2021 05:50 am IST - Washington

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi during a meeting in Washington. Photo: AP

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi during a meeting in Washington. Photo: AP

The Obama Administration has asked Pakistan to take action terrorist groups operating from its borders, such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), not only because it is important to India, but also because it is important to the United States too, even as it praised the recent Pak action against terrorists in the Swat Valley and the arrest of top Taliban leaders.

This is the message that was conveyed to the top Pak officials when the Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Robert Blake, was in Pakistan recently.

“I urged them (Pakistan) to also take action against the Punjab-based groups, such as LeT, not only because that’s important to India, but it’s important to the United States.

LeT has growing ambition and scope in its activities, as shown by the David Headley case.

So we think it’s very much in the interests of Pakistan, as well, to take action against the LeT,” Mr. Blake told foreign reporters at a news conference here yesterday.

“I thanked all of our interlocutors in Pakistan for the very important progress that Pakistan has made to date, first in its campaign in Swat and one more recently in South Waziristan, and then the arrest of Taliban leaders that you will all have seen,” he added.

“But we think there also needs to be progress against these Punjab-based groups, many of which, by the way, are targeting Pakistan, as well.

Groups like Jaish-e-Mohammed been responsible for attacks in Lahore. They are responsible for the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team. So again, I think there’s a compelling reason for the government (of Pakistan) to take action against those groups,” Mr. Blake argued.

The State Department official who was recently in India and Pakistan, conceded that the issue of Kashmir came up for discussion in both the countries, but said it is up to Islamabad and New Delhi to decide how they would like to proceed on this issue.

“It’s like water (issue). Kashmir always comes up in everything. So it’s very prominent.

But again, that’s something that the two countries are going to have to work out,” Blake said adding “Both countries have made quite a lot of progress in the period between 2004 and 2007.

So sometimes the premise of people’s question is that it’s impossible for India and Pakistan to make progress.

That’s simply not true. Both of your countries have made significant progress during that period.

In fact, there’s the blueprint for some sort of agreement on Kashmir, if they choose to endorse that,” he said.

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