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International talks to help Pakistan deal with militants: US

Seven Pakistani soldiers, 25 militants killed in clashes: army
Seven Pakistani soldiers and 25 Taliban militants were killed Wednesday in fierce fighting in a Pakistani tribal region bordering Afghanistan, the army said. The fighting erupted in the Bajaur district, where the Pakistani military launched a major operation last month that has left 800 people dead and 300,000 civilians displaced. "There was a fierce clash between security forces and miscreants in Bajaur in which 25 miscreants were killed and seven soldiers embraced martyrdom," chief military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told AFP. A senior military official said separately: "Both sides exchanged heavy rocket and mortar fire. "Close air support was also called in to attack militant positions." Earlier Pakistani warplanes pounded a militant tunnel network in the Bajaur district, killing 20 Taliban insurgents, local security officials said. "At least 13 people were killed in repeated raids overnight in Rashakai, Khazana and Takhata towns where the militants had underground tunnels," a local security official said on condition of anonymity. "The bombing was very heavy and planes carried out repeated sorties" until dawn on Wednesday, residents said. Local officials said attacks resumed on Wednesday morning in two other towns in Bajaur, killing another seven militants. Islamabad has come under intense pressure from Washington to crack down on Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants who have created safe havens in Pakistan's troubled tribal regions along the Afghan border.
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Sept 24, 2008
Efforts are under way to stage high-level international talks in New York this week to debate "common strategies" to help Pakistan defeat the Islamist militant threat, a US official said Wednesday.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who is attending the UN General Assembly in New York, plans to meet Friday with her counterparts from Pakistan, European, Asian and Gulf Arab countries, the senior official said.

The official told reporters on the condition of anonymity he would not name the countries that are expected to participate, though he expected new Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to attend.

"I don't think I want to give out the (full) list yet because we're kind of still pinning down participation, but to get an initial group together that may then be expanded over time," the official said.

The meeting is designed to "talk through the big challenges Pakistan faces," he said.

The goal is "try to work out common strategies, understand Pakistani plans and commitments -- what they're going to do in areas like education, or the economy, or stability and security and look at how our assistance programs can support those efforts," he said.

The United States first discussed the idea with countries like Britain and the United Arab Emirates, he said.

"It's not to deal with the immediate economic issues," he said.

"We see this group as a bit more of a long term effort, not just a donors conference, but a strategy group to make sure their efforts and our efforts complement each other" he said.

The State Department said Washington is also studying a proposal from Kabul for a joint force of Afghan, Pakistan and coalition troops to operate against insurgents on the Afghan-Pakistan border.

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Bush orders Afghan strategy review: Pentagon
Washington (AFP) Sept 24, 2008
President George W. Bush has ordered a review of US strategy in Afghanistan, a senior Pentagon official said Wednesday, amid rising insurgent violence and tensions with Pakistan.







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