The Free Press Journal

US also admits ISI has terror tentacles

- LALIT K JHA

Pakistan's intelligen­ce agency ISI has connection­s with terrorist groups and runs its own foreign policy, a top US General said on Wednesday. This could easily be the strongest indictment of the support that the Pakistan's spy agency provides to terrorist groups.

India and Afghanista­n have also been time and again charging their neighbour Pakistan with similar allegation­s. "I think it's clear to me that the ISI has connection­s with terrorist groups," General Joseph Dunford, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told members of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee during a Congressio­nal hearing. He was responding to a question from Senator Joe Donnelly.

Donnelly had asked Dunford if he thought the ISI was still helping the Taliban. Over the past several years, Dunford said, the US has had a bilateral approach to try and effect a change in Pakistan's behaviour. He, however, added he does not think that they had succeeded; so, a multilater­al approach might yield better results, it was pointed out.

The top American general was joined by his Defence Secretary Jim Mattis in slamming the ISI. "We have seen havens left to the terrorists' own devices. We have seen the government of Pakistan come down on terrorism, while ISI appears to run its own foreign policy," Mattis said acknowledg­ing for the first time in public domain that ISI runs its own policy and does not seem to be controlled by the federal government.

The strong statements on ISI and Pakistan from top officials of the Trump Administra­tion came hours before the Pakistani Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif landed in Washington on a three-day visit.

Asif is scheduled to meet the Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and the National Security Adviser H R McMaster and address the think-tank community at the US Institute of Peace.

Attending the annual UN General Assembly sessions in New York last week, Asif had slammed United States for being responsibl­e for the rise of terrorist groups in Pakistan. "Don't blame us for Haqqanis and don't blame us for the Hafiz Saeeds. These were the people who were your darlings just 20 to 30 years back. They were being dined and wined in the White House and now you say go to hell Pakistanis because you are nurturing these people," he said during his appearance before the Asia Society in New York.

‘‘It is very easy to say that Pakistan is supporting Haqqanis, Hafiz Saeed and Lashkar-e-Taiba. They are liabilitie­s...we have said they are liabilitie­s... but give us time to get rid of these liabilitie­s because we do not have the assets to match these liabilitie­s and you are increasing them further," he said.

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