Pakistan is not targeting U.S. troops: Mike Mullen
September 27, 2008 The day after U.S. and Pakistani forces exchanged fire along the Afghan border, the top U.S. military officer said he was comfortable Pakistani troops had not been told to shoot at American forces. Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he received assurances from the Pakistani military leadership during a visit to Pakistan last week and appealed for calm in the face of "hair-trigger tension" over the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region. But Mullen, top military adviser to President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, said he had not spoken to Pakistani officials since the exchange of fire occurred. "I've been given assurance by the senior military leadership in Pakistan that there is certainly no intent or plan to fire on our forces," Mullen told reporters. "I find no need, based on my discussions and the assurances so far, to pick up the phone and talk to (Pakistani military leaders) to see if we're not understanding each other."






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