Pakistan to get Billions.
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bladerunner1
March 2008
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View profile »WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is planning billions in new assistance to Pakistan, yet the record of previous U.S. military and development aid to the strife-torn Muslim country has been marred by a lack of accountability and transparency, according to government reports.
Two administration officials said Thursday that President Obama will back a plan to triple non-military aid to Pakistan to $1.5 billion a year for five years and make military aid contingent on Pakistan's efforts to cut government ties to insurgents.
The plan will follow the approach by John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Richard Lugar of Indiana, the committee's top Republican.
The officials, who were familiar with the proposal, spoke on condition of anonymity because they did not want to upstage Obama. He will announce the plan Friday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Thursday.
"You can't succeed in Afghanistan if you don't solve the problem of western Pakistan," Richard Holbrooke, U.S. special representative to the region, said Sunday during a public forum in Brussels. He was referring to the impoverished, mountainous region on the Afghan border where Taliban militants operate with impunity.
Karin von Hippel, a Pakistan expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the U.S. must ponder, "How do we make sure that that money gets spent properly and doesn't get stolen?"
The only two audits of U.S. development aid to Pakistan in recent years, by the U.S. Agency for International Development's inspector general, found significant problems. Record-keeping in an $83 million education reform program was so inadequate that auditors could not say whether any good was achieved. An effort to rebuild schools and health clinics in an area devastated by a 2005 earthquake was found to be years behind schedule.
A Congressional Research Service report published in November questioned whether the U.S. could effectively deliver aid in the border areas. "Corruption is endemic in the tribal region, and security circumstances are so poor that Western non-governmental contractors find it extremely difficult to operate there," the report said.
On the military side, U.S. aid intended mainly for counterterrorism has been compromised by Pakistan's desire for arms suited more toward confronting rival India than fighting tribal militants, von Hippel said. For example, Pakistan got U.S. approval last year to redirect $226 million of its assistance towards upgrading F-16 fighter jets, which are of limited use against terrorists.
Also, elements of the Pakistani government have sometimes aided Afghan Taliban insurgents, including tipping them off to NATO operations, according to a June study by the RAND Corp.'s National Defense Research Institute.
The U.S. suspended aid to Pakistan in 1993 over its nuclear weapons program, then resumed aid upon winning a pledge of cooperation after the 9/11 attacks. Since 2002, the United States has provided Pakistan with approximately $12.3 billion, $8.6 billion of it military, according to the Government Accountability Office.
In June, the GAO reported that $5.6 billion of that money was intended for counterterrorism, but poor oversight meant the Pentagon could not determine whether it was properly spent.
The GAO criticized the Bush administration for failing to develop what auditors termed "a comprehensive plan" to fight terrorism in Pakistan's tribal areas that linked diplomacy, development, intelligence gathering and military power.
[Post edited by bladerunner1 on Mar 26, 2009 - CDT 11:08 PM]
bladerunner1
March 2008
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View profile »something tells me that we just gave pakistan another nuclear missle.
posters5
March 2002
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View profile »joseph001
February 2009
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View profile »Hello everyone! I am Joseph from London Newly visited this site. This site has very nice forums.
Joseph
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June 2006
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