Gen.  Ashfaq Parvez Kayani statement was issued after the chairman of the US  Joint Chiefs of Staff accused Pakistan’s military-run spy agency of  links to a powerful militant faction fighting in Afghanistan. 
ISLAMABAD:  Pakistan’s army chief General Ashfaq Kayani vowed to defeat terrorism  and rejected the notion of Islamabad “not doing enough” in the  anti-Taliban fight, the military said on Thursday.
His comments followed remarks by Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff,  accusing Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency of having  ties with Afghan Taliban in Pakistan’s northwest tribal belt.
The  White House also criticised Pakistan’s efforts to defeat the Taliban  operating on the border in a report this month refuted by Islamabad.
The  army chief “strongly rejected negative propaganda of Pakistan not doing  enough and Pakistan army’s lack of clarity on the way forward,” the  military said in a statement, a day after Mullen met top generals in  Islamabad.
Kayani said that the “army’s ongoing operations are a  testimony of our national resolve to defeat terrorism”, according to the  statement.
In an interview with private TV channel Geo, Mullen –  the highest ranking officer in the US armed forces – said: “ISI has a  long standing relationship with the Haqqani network, that does not mean  everybody in ISI but it is there.”
The statement did not mention the Haqqani network.
The  army defended its stance against terrorism in general and acknowledged  that a “trust deficit between the institutions as well as the people”  existed between the US and Pakistan.
But Kayani and Mullen  re-stated their aims of building “reciprocal respect towards each  other’s sovereignty” and the statement said “security ties will not be  allowed to unravel between the two armed forces”.
The Haqqani  network is an al-Qaeda-allied organisation run by Afghan warlord  Sirajuddin Haqqani and based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal  district.
The group has been blamed for some of the deadliest  anti-US attacks in Afghanistan, including a suicide attack at a US base  in Khost in 2009 that killed seven CIA operatives.
Kayani said  public support was key to success in the war against terrorism but said  that controversial US drone strikes “not only undermine our national  effort against terrorism but also turn public support against our  efforts”.
Mullen’s trip is the latest shuttle diplomacy mission  after a fatal shooting by a CIA contractor in January triggered a row  between the US and Pakistan over intelligence sharing and raised  tensions over the controversial US drone war.
In recent weeks,  however, Kayani has spoken out against the strikes. In mid-March, he  issued a strong statement denouncing on such attack after it killed  nearly 40 people. While the US insisted the group consisted of  militants, Kayani said dozens of mostly innocent tribesmen died.
That  strike came the day after the US secured the release of American CIA  contractor Raymond Davis by paying the families of the two shooting  victims’ so-called “blood money.” The Davis case badly strained  relations, with Pakistan refusing to take a stand on whether Davis had  diplomatic immunity from prosecution as the US embassy claimed.






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