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Pakistan to defend if attacked: Owais; says Obama warnings undercut Pak govt

Source: AFP July 21, 2008

PESHAWAR  - White House hopeful Barack Obama’s threats of US military action against extremist sanctuaries in Pakistan are undermining Islamabad’s new government, the NWFFP Governor warned.
Governor Owais Ghani said any incursion into Pakistan’s mountainous northwestern tribal belt bordering Afghanistan would spark ‘disastrous’ consequences for the whole world.
“Candidate Obama gave these statements, I come out openly and say such statements undermine support, don’t do it,” Ghani told AFP in an interview at his official residence in Peshawar.
A spate of US missile strikes in Pakistan on Al-Qaeda and Taliban hideouts in the tribal areas had also inflamed public sentiment against Islamabad’s role in the US-led ‘war on terror’, said Ghani, who oversees anti-militancy policies in NWFP and the adjoining Federally Administered Tribal Areas.
The strikes added to the economic and political woes facing the government that beat allies of US-backed President Pervez Musharraf in elections in February.
“I think they are being shortsighted and they are being unrealistic,” said Ghani, a key Musharraf lieutenant, referring to Obama and other US officials.
“What the allies and the world must understand is that no government, whether political or military, can remain involved in this global war on terrorism unless the majority of public sentiment backs it,” he said. “These strikes are undermining that, but even the statements are, too.”
Meanwhile, presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Obama met US troops in Afghanistan during a visit to assess efforts against extremists.
Last week, he said that “if Pakistan cannot or will not act, we will take out high-level terrorist targets like (Osama) bin Laden if we have them in our sights.”
The New York Times reported last month that the US administration last year drew up a plan making it easier for US special forces to act in Pakistan’s tribal belt, but internal rows have kept it from getting the green light.


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