Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
International

Pakistan 'Harbouring Terrorists' In Afghanistan To Counter Indian Influence: Top US Official

IANS, 24 May, 2017 12:53 PM
  • Pakistan 'Harbouring Terrorists' In Afghanistan To Counter Indian Influence: Top US Official
Pakistan is "harbouring terrorists" and using them as "reserve" in Afghanistan, a top US intelligence official has told lawmakers. 
 
Pakistan wants to see an Afghanistan that "does not have heavy Indian influence," Lt Gen Vincent Stewart, Director, Defense Intelligence Agency told members of the powerful Senate Armed Services Committee during a Congressional hearing on worldwide threats.
 
 "They (Pakistan) view all of the challenges through the lens of an Indian threat," Lt Gen Stewart said.
 
"So they (Pakistan) hold in reserve terrorist organisations -- if Afghanistan leans towards India, they will no longer be supportive of an idea of a stable and secure Afghanistan that could undermine Pakistan's interest," Lt Gen Stewart said.
 
 
The top defence official said that Pakistan needs to be told very clearly that Afghanistan's security and stability is in the interest of all, and does not pose a risk to Pakistan.
 
"We've got to convince Pakistan that if they're harbouring any of the Haqqani network members, that it is not in their interest," he said. "We ought to be working together to go after those 20 terrorist organisations that undermine not just Afghanistan, not just Pakistan, but the entire region," Lt Gen Stewart said. "And so we have to make sure we're pushing them (Pakistan) to do more against the Haqqani network."
 
So, we've got tell Pakistan "that the status quo is not in their best interest," he said.
 
Dan Coats, Director of National Intelligence said there is a need to evaluate how to address the situation of Pakistan harbouring terrorist. "I think certainly an evaluation of how we work with Pakistan to address the situation of the harbouring of terrorist groups would be essential to a strategy that affects Afghanistan, going forward in Afghanistan," he said in response to a question.
 
"Because that is potentially a very disrupting situation, putting our own troops at risk and undermining the strategy of dealing with the Taliban and local groups that are trying to undermine the government," Mr Coats said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland

Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland
Man Kaur's dash became more of a gentle amble the closer she came to the finish line, with more energy spent beaming at spectators than running.

Watch Video: 101-Year-Old Man Kaur Bags Gold In 100 Metres Sprint Event In Auckland

Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens

Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has announced major changes to citizenship laws, making it tougher for foreign nationals to become Australian citizens.

Australia Making It Tougher For Foreign Nationals To Become Australian Citizens

Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested

Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested
Sujata Shroff, director at a city-based realty firm, was arrested yesterday. She was later produced in a local court which granted her bail, they said.

Woman Executive Who Ran Over 5 With Car In Pune, Arrested

Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker
Reports indicate this could have been a hate crime, which makes this unacceptable attack all the more horrifying," Congressman Joe Crowley, chairman of the Democratic Caucus, said in a statement.

Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report
Abhishek Gattani, 38, pleaded "no contest" when his wife approached the police

Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago
Three women dressed in burqas killed a man who had been accused of blasphemy in 2004 in a northeastern Pakistani town, police said on Thursday, the second brutal killing over alleged insults to Islam in a week.

Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago