Pakistan on Wednesday hit out angrily at a leaked NATO report
accusing its spies of secretly aiding the Afghan Taliban, saying that
pre-dawn air strikes killed at least 20 local Taliban fighters.
Pakistan's alliance with the United States and NATO plummeted to an
all-time low after US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on
November 26 and Islamabad has since shut its Afghan border to NATO
supply convoys.
Relations with Afghanistan are also notoriously frosty over mutual
blame for insurgencies plaguing both countries, but top-level talks in
Kabul on Wednesday had been aimed at charting new cooperation.
But the leaked NATO document claims that Islamabad, via Pakistan's
ISI intelligence agency, is "intimately involved" with the insurgency
and that the Taliban assume victory is inevitable once Western troops
leave in 2014.
The BBC said the report was based on material from 27,000
interrogations of more than 4,000 captured Taliban and Al-Qaeda
operatives.
"Pakistan's manipulation of the Taliban senior leadership continues unabatedly," the report was quoted as saying.
Taliban captives said Islamabad was using a web of intermediaries and
spies to provide strategic advice to the Taliban on fighting US and
NATO troops.
"This is frivolous, to put it mildly. We are committed to
non-interference in Afghanistan and expect all other states to strictly
adhere to this principle," Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman Abdul
Basit told AFP.
A senior security official condemned the leak, as reported by the
BBC, which also broadcast a documentary "Secret Pakistan" last year
accusing parts of Pakistan's intelligence service of complicity with
Taliban militants.
"The report is not available, leaks not worth commenting," he told AFP.
A meeting Wednesday between Afghan President Hamid Karzai and
Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar was likely to be
overshadowed by the NATO report, despite being billed as an effort to
get relations back on track.
"We are also committed to an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned reconciliation process," Pakistan's foreign ministry spokesman said.
Wednesday's talks follow reports that Islamabad and Kabul are keen to
open peace talks with the Taliban in Saudi Arabia, separate to US talks
in Qatar.
Both countries are wary of being sidelined from American peace
efforts, focused first on securing an exchange of prisoners with the
Taliban.
Over the last week, Pakistan has stepped up fighting in its tribal
badlands on the Afghan border, where Pakistani and Afghan Taliban,
Al-Qaeda operatives and other Islamist militants have carved out
strongholds.
Fourteen soldiers have been killed in a bid to restrict the Taliban
in Orakzai and Kurram districts, en route to North Waziristan,
Pakistan's premier militant bastion where Islamabad has resisted US
pressure to wage an offensive.
Security officials told AFP that Pakistani warplanes carried out
pre-dawn air strikes killing at least 20 Taliban insurgents on Wednesday
and that there were reports that a key Pakistani Taliban commander was
among the dead.
Independent confirmation of death tolls is largely impossible in the
tribal belt, a Taliban and Al-Qaeda stronghold barred to journalists and
aid workers.
The officials said jets bombed four hideouts in Orakzai belonging to
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) commanders Mulla Tufan and Moinuddin at
around midnight (1900 GMT Tuesday).
"Bases of TTP commanders Mulla Tufan and Moinuddin were destroyed.
Reportedly, commander Moinuddin, along with more than 20 terrorists,
have been killed," one of the officials told AFP.
The bombing comes in the wake of clashes between security forces and
militants in neighbouring Kurram in the Jogi mountains, where the
military says 52 insurgents and 14 soldiers have been killed since
January 25.
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