Pakistan minister defends truce with militants

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Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri on Sunday strongly defended a truce with militants along his country’s border with Afghanistan, saying “not just brawn but brains” are needed in the fight against terrorists.

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Pakistan’s foreign minister on Sunday strongly defended a truce with militants along his country’s border with Afghanistan, saying “not just brawn but brains” are needed in the fight against terrorists.

Pakistan President Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s deal with militants in an area where al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden could be hiding has drawn criticism that Islamic extremists will have a safe haven.

“I can understand why people are confused, but there’s a time when not just brawn but brains are also needed,” Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri said. “Sometimes what happens is that when you have acts of violence you end up alienating the local population.”

Kasuri took on those who have accused Pakistan of not doing enough in the hunt for bin Laden and other terrorist leaders, saying “Pakistan’s commitment to the war against extremism and terrorism is very much in place.

“President Musharraf is a strong leader, and I think the time has come where President Musharraf’s leadership on this issue should not be questioned,” the minister told CNN’s “Late Edition.”

As part of the truce, militants have agreed to stop attacking Afghan and U.S.-led coalition forces in eastern Afghanistan.

Kasuri said “there’s no question of withdrawing the army” from the semiautonomous tribal regions along the Afghan border.

Musharraf sent the army into the area in December 2001, an attempt to pursue al-Qaida militants fleeing Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban government. Heavy fighting in Pakistan, however, killed hundreds of militants, soldiers and civilians. It also caused deep resentment among local Pashtun tribesmen.

U.S. hails effort as ‘a good one’
Richard Boucher, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, said last week that the United States thinks “the overall effort is a good one,” pointing out that the deal requires tribal leaders to prevent the Taliban and al-Qaida from operating in the region.

Kasuri spoke of the close cooperation between intelligence officials in the United States and Pakistan, saying it was “inconceivable” that Pakistan would know about the presence of al-Qaida and Taliban leaders in Pakistan without U.S. intelligence also knowing.

It was “more likely,” Kasuri said, that bin Laden was hiding in Afghanistan, where thousands of U.S. and allied troops are trying to track down Taliban fighters and fugitives from the al-Qaida network.

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