World | Pakistan
Next US president must end attacks, says Gilani
The next US president must halt missile strikes on insurgent targets in northwest Pakistan or risk failure in efforts to end militancy in the country, the prime minister warned on Tuesday.
Islamabad: The next US president must halt missile strikes on insurgent targets in northwest Pakistan or risk failure in efforts to end militancy in the country, the prime minister warned on Tuesday.
Yousuf Raza Gilani said visiting US Gen David Petraeus "looked convinced" when he warned him the strikes were inflaming anti-American sentiment, but that he got no guarantee that they would end.
Gilani's remarks underscore the challenge the next US president faces in shaping a policy to deal with the militant threat in nuclear-armed Pakistan and its new civilian leaders.
They also revealed the rising strain the missile strikes have placed on relations between the two nations seven years after the September 11 attacks forced them into an uneasy alliance.
"No matter who the president of America will be, if he doesn't respect the sovereignty and integrity of Pakistan ... anti-America sentiments and anti-West sentiment will be there," Gilani said as US voters chose between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain in the race for the White House.
As Gilani spoke, several thousand Pakistanis demonstrated against the missile strikes in a town in the border region and the southern city of Karachi, burning US flags, witnesses said.
Over the last two months, the US has launched at least 17 strikes on militant targets in semiautonomous tribal belt on Pakistan's side of the Afghan border.
The lawless region is home to scores of Al Qaida and Taliban fighters believed involved in attacks on American and Nato forces in Afghanistan, where violence is at its highest levels since the Taliban regime was ousted in 2001.
The strikes are widely seen as sign of increasing frustration in Washington at Pakistan's unwillingness or inability to tackle the threat from the region, which is believed to be a possible hiding place for Osama Bin Laden.
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