The Sunday Guardian

Pak fails to curb support to anti-India militants

- IANS

Atop Trump administra­tion official has slammed Pakistan for its failure to curb support to anti-India militants and sought progress into the 2016 Pathankot attack probe.

He has warned Islamabad that ties between the two countries would deteriorat­e if there is another “high-profile terrorist attack in India”.

Director of National Intelligen­ce Daniel R. Coats, during a Congressio­nal hearing, said: “Islamabad’s failure to curb support to anti-India militants and New Delhi’s growing intoleranc­e of this policy, coupled with a per- ceived lack of progress in Pakistan’s investigat­ions into the January 2016 Pathankot cross-border attack, set the stage for a deteriorat­ion of bilateral relations in 2016.”

Last year, Jaish- e- Mohamed militants attacked the Indian airbase in Pathankot on January 2 and killed seven security personnel.

Coats said easing of heightened Indo-Pakistani tension, including negotiatio­ns to renew official dialogue, will hinge in 2017 on a sharp and sustained reduction of crossborde­r attacks by terrorist groups based in Pakistan and progress in Pathankot investigat­ion.

Testifying before the Senate Select Committee on Intelli- gence along with key intelligen­ce officials on Thursday, Coats said that New DelhiIslam­abad relations remain tense following two major terrorist attacks in 2016 by militants crossing into India from Pakistan.

“They might deteriorat­e further in 2017, especially in the event of another highprofil­e terrorist attack in India that New Delhi attributes to originatin­g in or receiving assistance from Pakistan,” Coats said as he presented worldwide threat assessment of the intelligen­ce community.

The director of National Intelligen­ce further said: “Increasing numbers of firefights along the Line of Control (LoC), including the use of artillery and mortars, might exacerbate the risk of unintended escalation between these nuclear-armed neighbours.”

Coats said that Pakistanib­ased terrorist groups present a sustained threat to US interests in the region and continue to plan and conduct attacks in India and Afghanista­n.

“The threat to the US and the West from Pakistani- based terrorist groups will be persistent but diffuse. Plotting against the US homeland will be conducted on a more opportunis­tic basis or driven by individual members within these groups,” he said.

Noting that Pakistan will probably be able to manage its internal security, Coats said anti-Pakistan groups will probably focus more on soft targets.

“The groups we judge will pose the greatest threat to Pakistan’s internal security include Tehrik- e Taliban Pakistan, Jamaat ul-Ahrar, Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontine­nt, ISIS-K, Laskhare-Jhangvi, and Lashkar-e Jhangvi al-Alami,” he said.

Coats said that the emerging China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) will probably offer militants and terrorists additional targets.

On Pakistan’s pursuit of tactical nuclear weapons, Coats said it “potentiall­y lowers the threshold for their use”.

Early deployment during a crisis of smaller, more mobile nuclear weapons would increase the time when “systems would be outside the relative security of a storage site”, thus “increasing the risk that a coordinate­d attack by nonstate actors might succeed in capturing a complete nuclear weapon,” Coats said.

Noting that Pakistan will probably be able to manage its internal security, Coats said antiPakist­an groups will probably focus more on soft targets.

 ??  ?? Director of National Intelligen­ce Daniel R. Coats.
Director of National Intelligen­ce Daniel R. Coats.

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