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THE STANS
Pakistan's envoy to US arrives home in memo row
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) Nov 20, 2011


Pakistan's ambassador to Washington returned to Islamabad on Sunday to explain himself over claims that he wrote a letter seeking US help against the country's powerful military.

Hussain Haqqani, a close aide of President Asif Ali Zardari, has played a key role in helping Pakistan's civilian government navigate turbulent relations with Washington that nosedived over the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

Local media reports implicated Haqqani in a memo allegedly sent from Zardari to Admiral Mike Mullen, then America's top military officer, seeking to curtail Pakistan's military shortly after it was humiliated by the bin Laden killing.

Zardari reportedly feared that the military might seize power in a bid to limit the hugely damaging fallout in Pakistan after Navy SEALs killed bin Laden in the garrison city of Abbottabad on May 2.

The alleged memo, released last month by American businessman Mansoor Ijaz, said that a "new national security team" in Pakistan -- with US support -- could end ties between Pakistani intelligence and Islamist militants.

A senior government official told AFP that Haqqani "arrived early Sunday and is due to attend several meetings including a meeting with the president to explain the situation".

Haqqani has offered to resign over the row, but has denied any involvement with the document.

Pakistan's opposition leader Nawaz Sharif on Saturday demanded an independent commission to investigate the issue.

Defence minister Ahmed Mukhtar told a press conference in the eastern city of Lahore on Sunday that any decision on Haqqani's future would lie with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and must be made after an investigation.

"If our ambassador is involved, then it is a matter related to the prime minister," Mukhtar said. "The prime minister just cannot dismiss Haqqani without giving him a charge-sheet and conducting an investigation."

Asked whether there was any chance of a military coup in the country, Mukhtar said: "I don't think so."

He added that a BlackBerry messenger conversation reported to have taken place between Ijaz and Haqqani was also under investigation, after it was leaked to Pakistani media this week in an apparent bid to prove the ambassador's involvement with the memo.

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McChrystal on return visit to Afghanistan: palace
Kabul (AFP) Nov 20, 2011 - General Stanley McChrystal, the US former commander of NATO troops in Afghanistan who left his post last year, visited President Hamid Karzai Saturday on a personal trip, officials said.

McChrystal was recalled by President Barack Obama from his role leading NATO troops in the war against the Taliban over comments made by him and his aides about senior political leaders to Rolling Stone magazine.

But he and Karzai enjoyed warm relations and McChrystal and his wife are now spending several days in Afghanistan "as special guests of the president," a statement from the Afghan presidential palace said.

"President Karzai once again thanked General McChrystal for a mission he called sincere and courageous and for all his efforts and services during his command in Afghanistan," the statement said.

"Also, the president made a specific reference to General McChrystals efforts to prevent civilian casualties and thanked him for all that on behalf of the people of Afghanistan."

The issue of civilian casualties in NATO raids is a highly sensitive one in Afghanistan and one over which McChrystal's successor, General David Petraeus, issued an apology earlier this year following the deaths of nine children in a NATO airstrike.

When news of the potential visit to Afghanistan first emerged last month, some analysts raised the possibility that McChrystal, who is now retired, could in future act as an informal contact between the US and Afghanistan.

Relations between Karzai and many US officials are rocky, although the US provides the bulk of the 140,000-strong foreign force which is helping Afghan security forces to fight the Taliban.

Earlier Saturday, Afghan elders at a traditional meeting or loya jirga in Kabul endorsed a proposed strategic partnership deal which Karzai is negotiating with the US.

This will govern the presence of US troops in the country after 2014, when all NATO-led combat forces are due to leave Afghanistan.



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THE STANS
Afghanistan faces 'regional war' if NATO troops go
Washington (AFP) Nov 17, 2011
Afghanistan risks falling into civil and regional war if all US and international troops leave as planned by the end of 2014, the conflict-wracked state's former interior minister warned on Thursday. Mohammad Haneef Atmar, speaking in Washington, also said Kabul's efforts to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table, which the United States sees as crucial to a peace settlement, had failed ... read more


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