Pakistan’s government has made little progress in the past year in battling militants, and there is “no clear path toward defeating the insurgency” in the country, according to a White House report that comes as the U.S. struggles to build it’s often shaky relationship with Islamabad.
While sections of the report tout military gains in Afghanistan, it says the security situation in parts of Pakistan’s border regions has deteriorated since fighting resumed in the last part of 2010. And it raises concerns about ongoing political and economic problems on which Pakistan’s government cannot make progress.
U.S. officials agree that Pakistan is critical to U.S. efforts to defeat al-Qaida, since the terror group’s leaders — including Osama bin Laden — are believed to be hiding in safe havens along the country’s mountainous border. And the Pentagon has worked to bolster the Pakistani government’s counterinsurgency program with money and training, and to encourage cross-border cooperation with Afghanistan.
By: Brant
"... not to allow the enemy ... to hide across the border in a nation that shows little inclination or ability to keep them out."
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+10 to Brant.