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‘Cancer' of terror, not India, a threat to Pakistan: Obama

May 13, 2010 11:31 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:59 pm IST - Washington:

Mr. Obama says Pakistan has realised that it is not India but the “cancer” of terrorism emanating from its own territory is the primary concern.

United States President Barack Obama has warned that extremists pose a serious threat to Pakistan's sovereignty and pointed out that Islamabad had realised that it was not India but the “cancer” of terrorism emanating from its own territory that was its primary concern.

“I think there has been in the past a view on the part of Pakistan that their primary rival, India, was their only concern,” he said at a joint press conference with visiting Afghan President Hamid Karzai here on Wednesday night.

Mr. Obama said: “I think what you've seen over the last several months is a growing recognition that they have a cancer in their midst; that the extremist organisations that have been allowed to congregate and use as a base the frontier areas to then go into Afghanistan – that now threatens Pakistan's sovereignty,” he said.

Old bad habits

His administration's goal was to break down some of the old suspicions and the old bad habits and continue to work with the Pakistani government to see their interest in a stable Afghanistan that was free from foreign meddling.

Afghanistan, Pakistan, the U.S. and the international community should all be working to reduce the influence of extremists in those regions, Mr. Obama said.

“I am actually encouraged by what I've seen from the Pakistani government over the last several months. But just as it's going to take some time for Afghanistan's economy, for example, to fully recover from 30 years of war, it's going to take some time for Pakistan, even where there is a will, to find a way in order to effectively deal with these extremists in areas that are fairly loosely governed from Islamabad.”

Mr. Obama praised the recent steps taken by Pakistan against extremist elements inside the country.

“You know, part of what I've been encouraged by is Pakistan's willingness to start asserting more control over some of these areas, but it's not going to happen overnight. And, you know, they have been taking enormous casualties, the Pakistani military has been going in fairly aggressively, but this will be an ongoing project,” he said.

Referring to the 45-minute meeting he had at the Oval office with Mr. Karzai, Mr. Obama said they discussed the fact that the only way ultimately that Pakistan was secure was if Afghanistan was secure.

“The only way that Afghanistan is secure is if the sovereignty, the territorial integrity, the Afghan Constitution, the Afghan people are respected by their neighbours. We think that that message is starting to get through, but it's one that we have to continue to promote,” he said.

Mr. Obama reassured Mr. Karzai that the U.S. would not abandon Afghanistan after its proposed troop withdrawal next year.

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