U.S. showed Pakistan evidence on militant faction

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The United States has  presented evidence to Pakistan about the growing threat and  reach of a militant faction which Washington suspects has ties  to Pakistani intelligence, U.S. officials said yesterday.

In the presentations, U.S. military leaders provided  Pakistan’s army chief with information detailing the role of  the Haqqani network in a string of increasingly brazen  bombings, including one last month targeting the main NATO air  base at Bagram in Afghanistan.

Washington has long pressed Islamabad to crack down on the  Haqqanis in the North Waziristan tribal zone bordering  Afghanistan, who are closely aligned with the Taliban, but U.S.  officials acknowledge it is a hard sell because of resistance  within Pakistani intelligence.

General David Petraeus, who oversees the Afghan war as head  of U.S. Central Command, told a congressional hearing the  Haqqanis had “transnational” ambitions, suggesting they could  try to strike beyond Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Washington has issued similar warnings about the growing  reach of the Pakistani Taliban, which investigators blame for a  botched May 1 car bomb in New York’s Time Square.

There are strategic reasons for Pakistan’s hesitancy to  attack the Haqqanis, a faction which some in Islamabad see as a  strategic asset that will give them influence in any eventual  settlement to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

One U.S. official said “some elements” of Pakistani  intelligence, but far from all, still support the Haqqanis.

Without mentioning the Haqqanis by name, Petraeus  acknowledged long-standing ties between Islamabad and what he  called “bad guys,” suggesting the relationships were useful to  gather intelligence on the groups.
But he voiced confidence Pakistanis understood that “you  cannot allow poisonous snakes to have a nest in your backyard,  even if the tacid agreement is that they’re going to bite the  neighbors kids instead of yours.”

“Eventually,” Petraeus said, “they turn around and bite you  and your kids.”

Pakistan has denied a report by the London School of  Economics that alleges enduring ties between its Inter-Services  Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Afghan Taliban.

The report said the agency not only funds and trains  Taliban fighters in Afghanistan but is officially represented  on the movement’s leadership council, giving it significant  influence over operations.

Petraeus said there was “no question” Pakistan has  maintained “a variety of relationships,” in some cases dating  back decades, to groups which, with U.S. support, battled the  Soviets when they occupied Afghanistan.

“Some of those ties continue in various forms, some of  them, by the way, gathering intelligence,” he said.

“You have to have contact with bad guys to get intelligence  on bad guys.”