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CAOS Gen. Kayani Meets Gates & Mullen

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CAOS Gen. Kayani Meets Gates, Mullen



WASHINGTON, Oct 20, 2010 - US and Pakistani military leaders discussed how to better coordinate combat operations along the Afghan border, the Pentagon said Wednesday, in the aftermath of a cross-border NATO raid that strained relations with Islamabad.

At the start of three days of US-Pakistan talks, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and powerful army chief General Ashfaq Kayani agreed in a 30-minute meeting on the need to improve cooperation on the Afghan-Pakistani border, Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said.

"We're both very active along the border and they talked at some length about how we can better coordinate our operations on our respective sides of the border," Morrell told reporters.

Cooperation between military commanders already had improved on the border "but this incident clearly indicates that there's more work to be done," said Morrell, referring to the helicopter raid that left two Pakistani soldiers dead.

Gates also repeated Washington's regret over the incident, and "expressed his condolences to the families" of the Pakistan soldiers who died, he said.

The US defense secretary stressed that the shooting of the border guards was "unintentional" and that the American military was working with the Pakistanis to make sure it never happens again, he said.

The top US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, also attended the meeting along with the third ranking official at the Pentagon, Michele Flournoy, US undersecretary of defense for policy.

Gates expressed "appreciation" for Pakistan's military campaign against extremists on its soil and underlined Washington's desire to build a long-term partnership that did not focus solely on security issues, Morrell said.

The Pentagon chief told the Pakistanis that the United States wanted "to elevate this relationship from the day-to-day ups and downs that it has historically experienced," he said.

Morrell also confirmed that the two discussed possible sales of US military equipment and other military assistance to Pakistan.

The two sides "talked about security assistance to Pakistan," he said, without offering details.
 
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Military Leaders Discuss U.S.-Pakistani Partnership

By Karen Parrish

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Oct. 20, 2010 – Defense Department leaders met today with Pakistan’s army chief of staff to discuss military-to-military partnership and security assistance as part of the Third U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue under way this week.

Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen and Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy met with Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and members of his staff this morning.

Morrell said during the meeting Gates expressed the department’s appreciation and recognition of the Pakistani military’s contributions and sacrifices in combating terror in Pakistan and conducting counterinsurgency operations there.

“[Gates] said that we are, of course, committed to the security and development of Afghanistan over the long term, but beyond Afghanistan and the important role Pakistan plays in the ultimate successful outcome in that country, we wish to build a long-term, wide-ranging [relationship] with Pakistan on its own merits,” Morrell said.

Morrell said Gates also apologized for the inadvertent attack on a border guard post that killed three Pakistani soldiers in September.

“He said it was unintentional, and we are working with [Pakistan] to ensure it never happens again. He expressed his condolences to the families of the fallen soldiers,” Morrell said.

Morrell said the meeting also covered the need to better coordinate operations along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

“We’ve been doing a much, much better job of that for many, many months now,” he said, “but this incident clearly indicates there is more work to be done, and there was a resolve and commitment to do the hard work that it takes to better coordinate our actions on both sides of the border.”

The discussion also featured security assistance topics including coalition support funds, the Pakistani counterinsurgency capabilities fund and foreign military sales, Morrell said.

According to a Pakistani military press release, Kayani and other officials from his country also will meet with other U.S. officials during their three-day visit to the United States.
 
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