Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pakistan will get more aid from U.S.

Move seeks stability, stiffer Taliban stance

Associated Press

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama’s administration is planning to send more help to Pakistan amid complaints from government officials there that the United States doesn’t understand their security priorities or offer enough help, the Washington Post reports.

According to the plan, decided on in last month’s White House Afghanistan war review, the U.S. will offer more military, intelligence and economic support to Pakistan, the newspaper reported online late Friday. The Obama administration also plans to intensify efforts to forge a regional peace despite frustration that Pakistani officials aren’t doing enough to fight terrorist groups in the country’s vast tribal areas, it said.

The decision is set to be delivered by Vice President Joe Biden in a planned visit to Pakistan next week, the Post said.

The vice president is expected to challenge the Pakistanis to articulate a long-term strategy for the region and specify what assistance they need to move successfully against Taliban safe havens in areas bordering Afghanistan.

Some U.S. military commanders and intelligence officers who have lost patience with Pakistan had proposed allowing U.S. ground forces to launch targeted raids against insurgent strongholds, but Obama and his top national security aides rejected those suggestions, the Post said. They concluded that the United States cannot afford to threaten or further alienate a precarious, nuclear-armed country whose cooperation is essential to the administration on several fronts.

The conclusions were referred to as unspecified policy “adjustments” in a five-page summary of the December war review that has been made public, according to the Post. Several administration officials told the newspaper the classified review focused on areas where strong efforts were needed, as opposed to new programs.

The classified review pledged to “look hard” at issues of economic stability, the Post said. It also directed administration and Pentagon officials to “make sure that our sizable military assistance programs are properly tailored to what the Pakistanis need and are targeted on units that will generate the most benefit” for U.S. goals, said one senior administration official who participated in the review and was authorized to discuss it with the newspaper on condition of anonymity.

Previously, Pakistan has complained that promised U.S. aid – projected to total more than $3 billion in 2011 – has been slow to arrive and requests for military equipment, including helicopters, have not been fulfilled.