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ISI links with Taliban won't be surprising: Petraeus

June 29, 2010 23:31 IST

A top American military commander headed for Afghanistan on Tuesday said he would not be surprised by links between Pakistan's spy agency Inter State Intelligence and Islamist extremist organisations, who have established a safe haven in Pakistan's restive tribal region.

"Let's remember that we funded the Inter-Services Intelligence to build these organisations when they were the Mujahideen and helping to expel the Soviets from Afghanistan. And so certainly residual links would not be a surprise," General David Petraeus, Commander of the US Central Command, told US lawmakers.

"The question is what the character of those links is and what the activities are behind them," he said responding to a question from Senator John McCain at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Currently the Commander of the US Central Command, Petraeus has been nominated by the US president as the new Commander of US and North Atlantic Treaty Organisation forces in Afghanistan after the resignation of General Stanley McChrystal last week.

McChrystal had to resign after the appearance of an interview in which he was very critical of top officials of the Obama Administration.

When asked whether it was a matter of "concern" that Pakistan and the ISI continues to work with the Taliban, Petraeus said it is necessary to figure out if they are working with the Taliban to support the Taliban or to recruit sources in the Taliban.

"Well, again, what we have to always figure out with Pakistan center is, are they working with the Taliban to support the Taliban or to recruit sources in the Taliban," Petraeus said.

"And that's the difficulty, frankly, in trying to assess what the ISI is doing in some of their activities in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, in contacts with the Haqqani network, or the Afghan Taliban," he said.

But for the top commander "there are no questions about the longstanding lengths," referring to the past when ISI mentored and helped in the growth of such terrorist organisations.

Earlier in his oral testimony, Petraeus said the Taliban which was defeated by the US post-9/11 in Afghanistan, was later successful in establishing a safe haven in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

"In the subsequent years, the extremists were able to recruit, with al-Qaeda establishing new sanctuaries in the tribal areas of Pakistan and the Taliban and its affiliates reentering Afghanistan in an effort to reestablish the control they once had in much of the country," he said.

In light of those developments, our task in Afghanistan is clear, he said.

"In short, we cannot allow the Al Qaeda or other transnational extremist elements to once again establish sanctuaries from which they can launch attacks on our homeland or on our allies," Petraeus asserted.

He said achieving that objective, however, requires that we not only counter the resurgent Taliban elements but also help our Afghan partners develop their security forces and governance capacity.

"We must also help our Afghan partners develop their security forces and governance capacity so that they can over time take on the tasks of securing their country and seeing to the needs of their people," he said.
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