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US military training program starts in Pakistan: official

The politically sensitive program had been stalled for months by negotiations between the US and Pakistani military.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 23, 2008
A small contingent of US military trainers have begun a training program aimed at turning Pakistan's Frontier Corps into an effective counter-insurgency force, a US military official said Thursday.

About 25 US military personnel last week began training Pakistani army trainers at a location in Pakistan outside the troubled tribal areas where the Frontier Corps operates, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"It has started. It is a train-the-trainer mission," the official said, emphasizing that the Americans would not directly directly train the Frontier Corps, only their Pakistani army instructors.

Recruited from the tribal areas and led by Pakistani army officers, the 80,000-member Frontier Corps historically has been poorly armed and trained.

The aim is "basically to train the Frontier Corps in counter-insurgency warfare to make them more effective in the tribal areas," the official said.

The politically sensitive program had been stalled for months by negotiations between the US and Pakistani military.

The official attributed the delay to difficulties in getting the facilities needed to conduct the training.

"What is important here is that the Pakistani government recognizes they have a challenge with extremists inside their own country," said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman.

"Clearly they are looking for a variety of means to address it," he said.

The Washington Post, meanwhile, reported that Pakistan plans to supply Chinese-made AK-47 assault rifles and other small arms to tens of thousands of anti-Tabliban fighters in tribal militias called "lashkars."

Pakistani officials told the Post that the plan to arm the militias was their idea and they were paying for it.

It is reminiscent, however, of the successful US effort in Iraq to turn Sunni militias against Al-Qaeda in western Iraq, at the time an insurgent stronghold.

The US military, as well as the White House and State Department, has been conducting a major strategy review that for the first time that encompasses both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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Suspected US strike kills 11 in Pakistan: officials
Miranshah, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 23, 2008
Suspected US spy drones fired missiles early Thursday into a school set up by a top Taliban commander in a tribal area bordering Afghanistan, killing 11 people, security officials said.







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