Pakistan blasts US comments about spy agency
Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani’s terse statement suggested Islamabad had no immediate intention of acting on renewed American demands that it attack the Haqqani militant faction in their main base in northwest Pakistan. It also ramped up a dispute between the two nominally allied nations that has exposed their increasingly deteriorating relationship.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Thursday accused the army’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency of supporting Haqqani insurgents in planning and executing a 22-hour assault on the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan last week and a truck bomb that wounded 77 American soldiers days earlier.
Kayani said in a statement that the allegations were "very unfortunate and not based on facts."
The claims were the most serious yet by an American official against nuclear-armed Pakistan, which Washington has given billions in civilian and military aid over the last 10 years to try to secure its cooperation inside Afghanistan and against al-Qaida.
Kayani’s statement appeared to imply that Pakistan’s contacts with the Haqqani network were part of efforts to bring it to the negotiating table. The United States, Kabul and European countries all agree that a peace deal will be needed to end the war, though not all agree on whether the Haqqanis, which have links to al-Qaida, should be included.
The statement said that "on the specific question of contacts with Haqqanis ... Admiral Mullen knows fully well which ... countries are in contact with the Haqqanis. Singling out Pakistan is neither fair nor productive."
Kayani, regarded as the most powerful man in Pakistan, said the "blame game" between it and the U.S. should give way to constructive dialogue over the future of a peaceful Afghanistan.
The Haqqani insurgent network is widely believed to be based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal area along the Afghan border. The group has historical ties to Pakistani intelligence, dating back to the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s.
Mullen’s words marked the first time an American official had tied Pakistan’s intelligence agency directly to the attacks and signaled a significant shift in the U.S. approach to Islamabad. In the past, U.S. criticism of Pakistan largely had been relayed in private conversations with the countries’ leaders while American officials publicly offered encouraging words for Islamabad’s participation in the terror fight.
Kayani said Mullen’s allegations were "especially disturbing in view of a rather constructive meeting" he had with Mullen in Spain last week.
Mullen did not provide specific evidence backing up his accusations or indicate what the U.S. would do if Pakistan refuses to cut ties to the Haqqani network. The U.S. has repeatedly demanded that Pakistan attack the insurgents and prevent them from using the country’s territory.
Given Pakistan’s reluctance, the U.S. has increasingly relied on unmanned drones to attack Haqqani fighters and other militants in North Waziristan.
The latest attack occurred Friday. Two missiles hit a house in the Khalsoor area of Mir Ali, one of the main towns in North Waziristan, said Pakistani intelligence officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. The identities of the people killed in the strike were not known.
Responding to Mullen’s comment’s earlier, Pakistan’s prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, alluded to both countries’ mutual need for each other — Pakistan’s for U.S. financial assistance and international support, and Washington’s need for Islamabad’s cooperation in the anti-terror fight and in helping negotiate a peace deal in Afghanistan.
"They can’t live with us. They can’t live without us," Gilani told reporters. "So, I would say to them that if they can’t live without us, they should increase contacts with us to remove misunderstandings."
Pakistani officials Friday reiterated claims that the United States was seeking to make Pakistan a scapegoat for its failings in Afghanistan. They have also complained recently that militants chased out of Pakistan by the army are now using Afghan soil to attack targets inside the country.
The relationship between the two countries has never been smooth, but it took one of its hardest hits when U.S. commandos sneaked into Pakistan on May 2 and killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in a garrison town not far from Islamabad.
The covert raid outraged the Pakistani government because it was not told about it beforehand, while bin Laden’s presence in Abbottabad raised further suspicions among U.S. officials about the country’s duplicity in the anti-terror fight.
Asia
Iran exported 50m barrels since US blockade lifted
Oman proposes Strait of Hormuz fee plan to US
14 students killed as tuition academy roof collapses in Pakistan's Lahore
Iran FM: No separate meeting with the US planned in Doha, discussions will focus on memorandum
NEWS FEED
Ukraine and Sweden sign historic agreement on Gripen fighter jets
Vance: China is ahead of the US in AI development thanks to the construction of energy facilities
Strait of Hormuz to be free of tolls, Vance says
Iran exported 50m barrels since US blockade lifted
White House puts cost of Iran war at about $30 billion
Norway to face Brazil after defeating Ivory Coast 2-1
Trump calls birthright citizenship ruling "massive" win for China
Oman proposes Strait of Hormuz fee plan to US
Russia strikes energy facilities in Zaporizhzhia
Appeal hearing on complaints filed by Armenian citizens continues
14 students killed as tuition academy roof collapses in Pakistan's Lahore
Lithuania's parliament approves Sinkevičius as prime minister
Azerbaijan FM meets with ICMP Director General Kathryne Bomberger
Israel's so-called "Armenian genocide" decision: Azerbaijan once again became the first to stand by Türkiye - ANALYSIS
President Ilham Aliyev offers condolences to Delcy Rodríguez over earthquake in Venezuela
First meeting of heads of religious affairs institutions of OTS member states held in Shusha - PHOTO - UPDATED
Heads of OTS religious affairs institutions tour Shusha - PHOTO
Iran: Speaker Ghalibaf's visit to Baku was successful
Milli Majlis Support Group calls for granting Corsican people the broadest autonomy
Iran FM: No separate meeting with the US planned in Doha, discussions will focus on memorandum
Final communiqué signed following First Meeting of OTS religious affairs chiefs in Shusha - PHOTO
Rutte: Claims that the US is distancing itself from NATO are not true
Samvel Karapetyan claims Armenian opposition has "secret plan" to remove Pashinyan from power
Germany and the Netherlands take command on NATO's eastern flank
State Commission announces burial ceremonies for six more missing martyrs
US envoy Witkoff and Kushner will be in Qatar, but no meeting with Iran, Qatari official says
Morgan Stanley cuts Brent price view as Hormuz flows recover, flags 2027 surplus
EU allocates €3.9 billion for drones for Ukraine under €90 billion loan package
Fuel sales restricted in Russia's Altai Republic from July 1 to September 1
Kremlin to keep names of fuel supplier countries confidential
Armenian PM to attend Ali Khamenei's funeral ceremony in Tehran
Zelenskyy: Ukrainian long-range strike hits Russia's Dubna Space Communications Center again
Uzbek committee chairman: Strengthening cooperation in religion and education across the Turkic world is essential
ICMP chief: More mass and clandestine graves remain to be discovered - INTERVIEW
2 members of Iran's IRGC killed in shooting: Reports
Azerbaijani and Kazakh foreign ministers hold phone call
Türkiye strengthens air defense capabilities, considers acquiring SAMP/T and Patriot systems
Azerbaijan moves to tighten penalties for repeated online gambling
Azerbaijan identifies new grounds for temporary restriction of internet information resources
International conference on missing persons held in Baku - PHOTO - UPDATED
Talantbek Tashybekov: Strengthening coordination on religious policy within the OTS is essential
International congress held in Baku as part of Turkic World Week
Customs duty exemption to be introduced for exports of goods produced in the Alat Free Economic Zone
State Commission: Azerbaijan to acquire specialized underground radar systems for missing persons searches
Safi Arpaguş: Turkic states should strengthen coordination in religious affairs
OTS Secretary General: New cooperation format on religious affairs will contribute to social cohesion and stability
Ramin Mammadov: Foundation laid in Shusha for OTS' first multilateral platform in the religious sphere
Georgian speaker: Azerbaijan-Armenia peace process creates cooperation opportunities for the region
Nearly 100 bcm of Azerbaijani gas transported via TANAP to date
Uzbekistan's Culture Minister: Unity is essential in the face of threats