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  Today in the Northwest Frontier Province
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ContributorArmyDem 
Last EditedArmyDem  Nov 11, 2008 01:43pm
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News DateTuesday, November 11, 2008 07:00:00 PM UTC0:0
DescriptionPosted by Joe Klein
Tuesday, November 11, 2008 at 9:29 am

Fred Kaplan has a good piece about some glimmerings of hopeful news that Barack Obama may be able to take advantage of in a difficult world--and here's another: Pakistan may actually be our ally again in the fight against the Taliban.

Yes, Pakistan has putatively been on our side against Al Qaeda since the 9/11 attacks--but that support has been tentative, at best, since the Pakistani military and intelligence services have been primary backers, indeed founders, of the Taliban. The safe haven for Al Qaeda and the Taliban in Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province has made the war in Afghanistan near-impossible to win and is a tacit act of aggression--if such a thing is possible--against the U.S. and NATO troops deployed in the southern and eastern provinces of Afghanistan, which is why the CIA has intensified its Predator drone strikes against suspected terrorists in the Pakistan border areas over the past few months.

The good news is that the new Pakistani government of Asif Ali Zardari seems to understand that the combined Taliban/Al Qaeda forces in the unruly northwest have now targeted the Pakistani government itself. That may well have been the message gleaned from the Marriott Hotel bombing in Islamabad a few months ago--which may have been an assassination attempt on several top Pakistani leaders scheduled to have dinner at the hotel. In any case, as Jane Perlez and Pir Zubair Shah report in the New York Times today, the Pakistani Army has began a brutal and difficult campaign against the terrorists. If this means that the Pakistani military, and particularly the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency no longer consider the more extreme Taliban factions allies, we could be at a turning point in this dreadful war. But that is a big if. The Pakistanis have promised to take action against the Taliban before.
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