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Obama warns Pakistan against funding militants

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama has said the US should confront Islamabad on its funding of "mujahideen" groups in the valley and the terror camps running under its nose.

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NEW YORK: In some blunt talking on Pakistan's role in fomenting terrorism in Kashmir, Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama has said the US should confront Islamabad on its funding of "mujahideen" groups in the valley and the terror camps running under its nose.
      
Ahead of his meeting with visiting Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, Obama said "historically Pakistan has tolerated or in some cases funded the Mujahideen" because they think it's somehow helpful to them in Kashmir which continues to be a "constant instigator" of tension between Islamabad and New Delhi.
     
"We have to have an honest conversation about how counterproductive that is," Obama said in an interview published in the Wall Street Journal on Monday.
       
Asked whether US should play a role in negotiations been Pakistan and India, he said, "use that as an example of how we need to think comprehensively about the region.
 
"If one of the central concerns of Pakistan is its security posture towards India, then we need to put that on the table for discussion as we try to solve the problems in Afghanistan".
       
Asked about the scheduled meeting between Gilani and President George Bush in Washington, Obama said the US must emphasise the importance of closing down terrorist camps.
       
"It's not just in the interest of Afghan security, or US security, it is in the interest of Pakistani security that we shut down those bases down," he said.
      
"I know that the new premier is coming to Washington. I'll be very interested hearing what he has to say. Obviously, they're a new government. There just getting their sea legs. But I think it's very important that we emphasise to them how serious we take these base camps," he said.
      
At the Unity Convention of minority journalists in Chicago, Obama said for a victory in Afghanistan, "more effective cooperation" is needed from Pakistan to get rid of the safe havens for terrorists.
    
"They've (al Qaeda and Taliban) got safe havens there (in Pakistan's tribal areas) that US troops can't follow -- that is a huge problem," Obama said.
     
"We're going to need more troops in Afghanistan. But we're also going to need more effective cooperation from the Pakistani government in rooting out these safe havens," the Illinois Senator said.
     
The Democrat Senator has had some tough words for Islamabad since last August on tracking down the al Qaeda and the Taliban stressing that if he is elected, he will strike unilaterally against militant targets based on "actionable intelligence".
    
"... we've got to get Afghanistan right. If you've got al Qaeda, you've got the Taliban in training camps and safe havens just a few miles inside the Pakistan border that can act with impunity, then it is going to be hard for us to stabilise Afghanistan.
       
"And those folks are in a position then to plot how to kill Americans. We've got to get the Pakistani government involved in a much more significant way than they are right now," he added.
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