Monday, July 5, 2021

Pakistani Military And Intelligence Officials Say They Are Losing Influence Over The Taliban

A Pakistani army soldier stands guard along with border fence at the Pakistan-Afghanistan border near the Punjpai area of Quetta in Balochistan on May 8, 2018.  

VOA: Pakistan Intel Chief Gives 8-Hour Briefing on Afghanistan 

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN - Senior Pakistani military and intelligence officials told members of Parliament during a closed, eight-hour briefing Thursday that they are losing influence over the Taliban and building up border defenses for fear of increased violence in neighboring Afghanistan once the U.S. withdrawal is complete. 

Lieutenant General Faiz Hameed, director general of Inter-Services Intelligence, gave the briefing, with army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa on hand to answer questions. 

They told the parliamentary committee that Pakistan was trying to persuade the Taliban to negotiate a settlement to the conflict, but the country’s influence is waning, according to a statement from Pakistan’s Information Ministry and VOA sources inside the meeting.  

Read more ....  

WNU Editor: The spillover from the war in Afghanistan is now impacting the Pakistan-Afghan border .... Militants kill three Pakistani soldiers near Afghan border (Reuters). It is going to get worse, and there is a now a real prospect of millions of Afghan refugees fleeing into Pakistan.

I personally find it hard to sympathize with Pakistan. After-all. They brought this all upon themselves .... Pakistan's dangerous gamble in Afghanistan has left it in perilous state, warns expert (Hindustan Times).

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Pakistani Military And Intelligence Officials Say They Are Losing Influence Over The Taliban"

Wait what?

They have influence? How? Some Pakistani official walked up to the house of a Taliban leader and politely asked him to tone it down, to not launch so many attacks?

Or was it more of a beans bullets and safe harbor provided to the Taliban by Pakistan that gave them influence? Plus providing intel and weapons training?

Now that the Taliban no longer need safe harbor nor need the funding by Pakistan, the Taliban said "So long and thank you for all the fish".


Jac said...

Pakistan reap what it sowed. I'm not sympathizing either.

Anonymous said...

Duplicitous muz-lum weasels. No longer in the driver's seat vs a vs America.