What is distinctly absent from this discussion is any mention of how the U.S. intends to persuade Pakistan to bolster its scant cooperation on rooting out jihadists in Pakistani territory to any meaningful level. All of the suggestions -- and that is how they come across -- have an abstract quality to them, as though it sure would be nice if Pakistan carried some of them out one of these days before an attack hatched on Pakistani soil causes massive casualties in the U.S., Europe, Australia, or elsewhere. There are other issues, as well. One is evident in the continued use of the phrase "war on terror," which forces its users to settle for naming a tactic rather than the ideology that drives the enemy: Islamic jihad and its imperative of open-ended warfare to establish Islamic law and subjugate unbelievers accordingly. But that would raise additional questions about who our friends really are (and aren't), and how sure the U.S. can be of how "staunch" certain supposedly "staunch allies" are.
That would be difficult. Banning the term "jihad" is much easier.
"US asks Pakistan to live up to 'war on terror' commitment," by P. Parameswaran for Agence France-Presse, May 5:
WASHINGTON (AFP) - The United States said Monday it wanted Pakistan to live up to its commitment of urgently bringing security under control in its remote tribal areas allegedly used as safe haven by Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.
The call came amid worries in Washington that the new coalition government led by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, which is negotiating with a Taliban commander, may strike a deal with militants and undermine a long "war on terror" partnership.
Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said Islamabad recognized that bringing the mountainous and unpoliced Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) under control was an urgent priority for Pakistan's own sake.
"But let me be clear: we will not be satisfied until all the violent extremism emanating from the Federally Administered Tribal Areas is brought under control," he said at a forum of the Washington-based National Endowment for Democracy.
"It is unacceptable for extremists to use those areas to plan, train for, or execute attacks against Afghanistan, Pakistan, or the wider world," he said. "Their ongoing ability to do so is a barrier to lasting security, both regionally and internationally."
Negroponte said Pakistan's government "must bring the frontier area under its control as quickly as possible," pointing out that Washington was prepared to provide "appropriate assistance" in order to achieve that objective.
Gilani's government, formed after the backers of key war on terror ally President Pervez Musharraf were defeated in elections in February, has pledged to completely overhaul Islamabad's counter terrorism pursuit.
It has been trying to reach a peace deal with a Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud accused of masterminding the slaying of former premier Benazir Bhutto in December.
Warlord Mehsud declared a unilateral truce with security forces in the lawless tribal regions last month after officials said the government had drafted a peace agreement with Islamic militants.
But the militant halted talks last week because the government refused to withdraw its troops from his area.
Negroponte warned that Americans "don't want to see the tribal area being used as a platform for plotting and executing international terrorist activity against the West.
Thanks Jihad Watch
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