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Afghanistan backs Clinton warning on Pakistan

Militants torch NATO fuel tankers in NW Pakistan: police
Dozens of Taliban militants Thursday attacked a depot for NATO fuel tankers in northwestern Pakistan and fled after destroying six of the vehicles, police said. The militants overpowered security guards at the station in Peshawar and fired petrol bombs, rockets and mortars at the tankers, fleeing as they fired guns, local police official Nazif Rehman told AFP. "Four oil tankers were completely burnt and two were badly damaged after militants attacked the vehicles with rockets, petrol bombs and mortars," the official said. The militants fled after the attack, he said and added that there were no casualties. Taliban militants have carried out a series of strikes on trucks carrying supplies for US and NATO-led foreign forces fighting an insurgency in Afghanistan. The bulk of supplies and equipment required by the foreign troops across the border is shipped through northwest Pakistan's tribal region of Khyber.
by Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) April 23, 2009
Afghanistan on Thursday said it welcomed US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's assertion that the Pakistan government was ceding more and more territory to Islamic extremists.

"Afghanistan highly welcomes this position of Secretary Clinton to recognise the source of the threat in our region," Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta said Thursday in Warsaw after talks with his Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski.

"We Afghans are the main victims of international terrorism, we try to convey the reality of our region to the world," Spanta told reporters.

"On many occasion we try to encourage our allies to recognise the main training centre and protector of terrorists is grouped beyond Afghanistan's borders," he said.

"Without frank and honourable cooperation from the Pakistan side to succeed against terrorism, this is an illusion," Afghanistan's diplomatic chief said.

Clinton said Wednesday that Taliban advances pose "an existential threat" to Pakistan and urged Pakistanis worldwide to oppose a government policy yielding to them.

Pakistani officials said Wednesday that Taliban militants in Pakistan's Swat valley have moved closer to Islamabad in a bid to broaden their control despite a deal designed to allow sharia law to end extremist violence.

Sikorski meanwhile urged NATO allies participating in the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) mission in Afghanistan to beef up their contingents in order to speed Afghanistan's stabilisation.

"If other NATO and coalition countries do what we have done which is to increase forced by a quarter...without caveat, then the Afghan authorities and the nato commanders will have the tools to do the job," Sikorski said.

This month Polish President Lech Kaczynski approved the deployment of an extra 400 troops to Afghanistan, boosting the number of Poles with the NATO-led force there to 2,000.

The Taliban ruled Afghanistan until 2001 when the US led an invasion in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington by Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network. The Taliban had been playing host to bin Laden.

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Analysis: Dissident city in Iraq in danger
Berlin, April 21, 2009
A group of German lawmakers has warned of a humanitarian catastrophe in Iraq if Baghdad closes down a camp where some 3,500 Iranian dissidents have been living for the past two decades.







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