United States asks Pakistan to reinstate fired security adviser
Islamabad: The US has asked Pakistan to withdraw the sacking orders of Mahmoud Durrani as national security adviser, a move that laid bare the widening gulf between President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and the lack of coherence in tackling crucial issues like the Mumbai attack probe.
The issue has snowballed with officials disclosing that US Ambassador Anne Peterson met Zardari and Gilani on Thursday night at the presidency and "insisted on withdrawing dismissal orders of Durrani."
"Where's the government and who's running it? What type of government do we have? Where are the decisions being taken?" asked Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Hanif Abbasi, two days after Gilani sacked Durrani for not consulting him before announcing that the sole surviving Mumbai attacker Ajmal Kasab was a Pakistani citizen.
Gilani has been quoted as saying that Durrani did not take him into confidence before making the announcement in a media interview.
Further muddying the waters, sources close to Durrani said he had discussed the matter with Zardari, who allowed him to go ahead with the announcement.
As Abbasi sees it, the differences between the two top offices are obvious and there was no coherence in governance with everyone wanting to run the government in his own style.
The leader, however, added it was unfortunate that the NSA had given the news through the international media.
Discussing the many manifestations of the escalating controversy, defence analyst Lieutenant-General Talat Masood said the government needed to be very careful in such a situation.
Transparent
"We really should conduct transparent investigations into the (Mumbai) incident."
He was of the view that there was nothing to worry about if Ajmal Kasab belonged to Pakistan and the government should respond to it positively but after "putting its own house in order."
Citing the India example, Masood said Indian leaders Mahatma Gandhi, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi were killed by their own citizens. "If there are unruly people in Pakistan we should expose them," Masood told IANS.