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U.S. envoy Holbrooke visits northwest Pakistan
Wed Feb 11, 2009 8:22am EST
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By Izaz Mohmand
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke on Wednesday visited northwest Pakistan's tribal region, where security forces face an intensifying Islamist insurgency, officials said.
Holbrooke arrived in Pakistan late on Monday at the beginning of his first visit since his appointment as envoy to a region moving to center stage of U.S. foreign policy.
He met government and military leaders in Islamabad on Tuesday and headed toward the Afghan border on Wednesday.
"He went to the headquarters of the Mohmand Rifles and was given a briefing about military operations," said government official Syed Ahmed Jan, referring to a paramilitary force in Mohmand, one of seven ethnic Pashtun tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.
President Barack Obama named Holbrooke as his special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan last month, handing one of the most arduous U.S. security challenges to the man who brokered the 1995 agreement that ended the Bosnian war.
Holbrooke faces a host of challenges in dealing with the war in Afghanistan and an intensifying insurgency in northwest Pakistan while trying to ensure renewed tension between old rivals India and Pakistan doesn't exacerbate the problems.
Pakistani forces have extended an offensive into Mohmand that began in August in another tribal region to the north, Bajaur, as part of a campaign to regain control of the northwest.
Pakistani jets bombed militant positions in Bajaur on Wednesday and four militants and a soldier were killed in a clash elsewhere in the region, a military official and residents said.
Despite the at times bitter fighting, doubts remain in some quarters over Pakistan's commitment to tackling militancy in a country where a majority of people oppose support for what they see as America's war.
"LISTEN AND LEARN"
Frustrated by perceived Pakistani inaction, the United States has launched dozens of missile attacks on militants by pilotless drones in North and South Waziristan, from where militants attack across the border into Afghanistan.
The strikes have angered Pakistan, which says they are counter-productive to efforts to win over the tribes and isolate the militants.
Holbrooke is also due to visit Afghanistan and India.
A U.S. embassy spokesman declined to comment on what Holbrooke was doing on Wednesday.
"As Ambassador Holbrooke said, he is in Pakistan to listen and learn the ground realities of this critically important country," said embassy spokesman Lou Fintor. "This was the focus of his discussions," he said, referring to Holbrooke's talks on Tuesday with leaders including President Asif Ali Zardari, army chief General Ashfaq Kayani and military intelligence chief Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shujaa Pasha. Continued...
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