“My experience is that knocking them [the Pakistani government and military] hard isn’t going to work,” said Mullen. “The harder we push, the further away they get.” For the crackdown on the Taliban to be successful, he said, “it has to be their will, not ours.”
What encourages U.S. officials is that recent events have been a wake-up call for a Pakistani elite in denial about the Taliban threat. One top civilian official said that he was less worried now than three weeks ago, because the military and civilian leaders in Islamabad have realized the danger they face. The Pakistani military has begun an effort to push back the Taliban, with mixed results. The Taliban responded fiercely to an assault Tuesday in Buner and seized three police stations, kidnapping dozens of police and paramilitary troops.
“My biggest concern is whether [the Pakistani government] will sustain it,” Mullen said. He has told his Pakistani counterpart, Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani, that “we are prepared to assist whenever they want.” During his recent visit, Mullen toured two Pakistani counterinsurgency training camps and came away impressed.
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