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THE STANS
Disputes threaten post-2014 US-Afghan pact: Kabul
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Oct 02, 2013


Bomb kills two Pakistani troops on quake relief duty
Quetta, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 02, 2013 - A bomb on Wednesday killed two soldiers and wounded three others working to help survivors of a deadly earthquake that hit Pakistan's restive southwest last week, officials said.

The explosion came in Jhalvari area, eight kilometres (five miles) from Mashkey town, one of the many areas of Baluchistan province devastated by the September 24 earthquake.

Infrastructure in the rugged, sparsely populated province is minimal and the army and paramilitary Frontier Corps have been heavily involved in relief efforts, along with non-governmental organisations.

But many of the areas hit by the 7.7-magnitude quake are strongholds of ethnic Baluch insurgents fighting for greater freedom for the province, and military relief teams have come under attack several times.

"An improvised explosive device went off near a military vehicle, killing two soldiers and wounding three others," a senior security official told AFP.

He said that the troops were busy in relief operations at the time of explosion, which was confirmed by the top local administration official, Hari Pal.

Insurgents have launched several attacks on rescue teams, fired rockets at army helicopters and issued threats since the quake hit the province.

Baluchistan is Pakistan's largest province, and is believed to have large oil and gas reserves, but it remains very poor and deeply unstable.

On top of the separatist insurgency, which began in 2004, the province is also the focus of rising sectarian violence as well as suffering Islamist militancy.

Last week's deadly quake is known to have killed at least 376 people and made more than 100,000 homeless. Another 6.8-magnitude tremor struck the area again on Saturday, killing at least 22 more people.

A planned deal to let US forces stay in Afghanistan beyond 2014 to fight Al-Qaeda remnants is under threat because of disagreement over the Americans' right to conduct military operations, Kabul says.

President Hamid Karzai is now directly leading the talks after they ground to a halt despite US pressure to complete the security agreement by the end of this month, said Karzai's spokesman Aimal Faizi.

The US plans to pull out the bulk of its 57,000 troops in Afghanistan by the end of 2014, but it has tentative plans to retain some bases and a smaller force of around 10,000 after that.

"The US wants the freedom to conduct military operations, night raids and house searches," Faizi told reporters late Tuesday.

"According to them, there are 75 Al-Qaeda operatives in Afghanistan, which is very strange as this agreement will be for 10 years to have the right to conduct military operations anywhere in the country.

"Unilaterally having the right to conduct military operations is in no way acceptable for Afghans."

Faizi said the two sides could also not agree on how the bilateral security agreement (BSA) should define an attack on Afghanistan that would trigger US protection.

"We believe that when terrorists are sent to commit suicide attacks here, that is also aggression," Faizi said, alluding to Pakistan-based militants whom Afghanistan believes are supported by Pakistani intelligence services.

"We are a strategic partner of the US and we must be protected against foreign aggression. For us and for the US, that's the conflicting point. We are not of the same opinion and we need clarity from the US side," he said.

Karzai has repeatedly said he will not be rushed into signing the pact, and that it may not be finalised until after his successor is chosen in April elections.

"If signed by the current president, he will be definitely held accountable in the history of Afghanistan if things go wrong," Faizi said.

On Monday US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel described the pact as "critically important" as the US and its NATO allies plan the drawdown that will see most foreign troops leave the country by December 2014.

"I hope we'll have that agreement by the end of October, because we just can't move without it," Hagel said.

The collapse of a similar agreement with Iraq in 2011 led to the US pulling all its troops out of the country, which is currently suffering its worst sectarian violence since 2008.

Kabul believes Washington will not chose the "zero option" for Afghanistan, and has dismissed parallels with Iraq.

"We want to sign this document but we want to make sure our demands and our conditions are met," Faizi said.

Karzai officially suspended talks on the deal in June in fury at the Taliban militants, after they opened a liaison office in Qatar that was presented as an embassy for a government in waiting.

But political contacts continued over the draft and Karzai recently took personal control of the Afghan negotiations.

Any agreement faces another obstacle as the president has vowed to seek approval from a loya jirga (grand assembly) before signing it.

The gathering could cause lengthy further delays as tribal elders, religious scholars and civil society groups debate a continued US military presence on Afghan soil.

The hardline Taliban regime was driven from power by a US-led coalition in 2001 for sheltering the Al-Qaeda leaders behind the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington.

Since then the Islamist rebels have fought a bloody insurgency against US-led NATO forces and the fledging Afghan army.

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