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Kayani's key role in strategic talks with US shows who calls the shots in Pak: NYT | While Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi is leading the Pakistani delegation for the Pak-US strategic talks beginning on Wednesday, it is Pak Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani who is actually in-charge of running the show. It is well known in Pakistan that Qureshi is just the nominal head of the Pakistani
delegation, and it is General Kayani who has been calling the civilian heads of
major government departments, including finance and foreign affairs, to his army
headquarters to discuss final details, the New York Times reports. General Kayani's
role in organizing agendas for talks has raised alarm in Pakistan , a country
with a long history of military juntas. Pakistan 's' leading financial newspaper,
The Business Recorder, wrote: "The government needs to consolidate civilian rule
instead of handing over its responsibilities, like coordination between different
departments, to the military." "General Kayani is in the driver's seat. It is
unprecedented that an army chief of staff preside over a meeting of federal secretaries,"
Rifaat Hussain, a professor of international relations at Islamabad University
, was quoted as saying. A spokesman at the American Embassy in Islamabad said
that General Kayani will attend meetings at the Pentagon with the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates
on Monday. He will also attend the opening ceremony of the talks between Secretary
of State Hilary Clinton and Qureshi at the US State Department on Wednesday. The
most pressing issues in the talks are likely to be the eventual American pullout
from Afghanistan , and Pakistan 's concerns about India , the editorial says.
The spokesman for the Pakistani military, Gen. Athar Abbas, said that Pakistan
would be "conveying very clearly" its displeasure with India 's offer to help
train the Afghan Army at the behest of American and NATO forces. Another key agenda on General Kayani's priority list would be to successfully renegotiate an aid
package of 30 billion dollars with the US , the paper says. |
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