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Viewing cable 09ISLAMABAD2760, PAKISTAN MEDIA REACTION: NOVEMBER 17, 2009

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09ISLAMABAD2760 2009-11-17 12:15 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Islamabad
VZCZCXYZ0000
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHIL #2760/01 3211215
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 171215Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5988
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK IMMEDIATE 0336
RUEHNO/USMISSION USNATO IMMEDIATE 5993
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC IMMEDIATE
RHMFISS/HQ USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL//CCPA// IMMEDIATE
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 1772
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 8044
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 2041
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
UNCLAS ISLAMABAD 002760 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KMDR KPAO OIIP OPRC PGOV PREL PK
SUBJECT:  PAKISTAN MEDIA REACTION: NOVEMBER 17, 2009 
 
Summary:  Several major newspapers highlighted reports that top 
editors and executives of 21 leading international media 
organizations urged the government of Pakistan to take necessary 
steps to ensure the safety of all foreign media personnel working in 
the country.  Newspapers published the U.S. Embassy's statement 
contradicting press reports as "false and malicious" that U.S. has 
shifted Tehrik Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakimullah Mehsud and 
others to Afghanistan.  All dailies highlighted a NYT report that 
NSA Jones delivered President Obama's letter to President Zardari 
urging Islamabad to expand military offensive against Taliban and Al 
Qaeda.  Commenting on the LA Times report about the CIA's funding 
for ISI, "Daily Times" opined that "this stream of payment is a 
clandestine counterpart to the rewards publicly offered by the U.S. 
State Department."  TV networks reported a bomb explosion in Quetta 
that killed one person, and wounded a senior policeman on Tuesday 
morning. End Summary. 
 
TOP STORIES 
 
News Story: Editors Criticize Article Against WSJ Reporter "Dawn" 
(11/17) 
 
"Top executives and editors of 21 leading international media 
organizations have collectively voiced concern over publication of 
an article in a Pakistani national newspaper, accusing Mathew 
Rosenberg, a correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, of working 
for foreign intelligence services and even the U.S. military 
contractor Blackwater. In a joint letter addressed to Information 
Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira, they said the development had caused 
alarm among international media organizations working in the country 
and urged the government to take all possible steps to ensure the 
safety of all media personnel in future." (Story also covered in 
'The News,' 'Jang') 
 
News Story: U.S. Embassy Denies Report On TTP "The News" (11/17) 
 
"The U.S. Embassy has contradicted a news item appearing in section 
of the press which alleged that the U.S. had shifted 
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Chief Hakimullah Mehsud and other 
Taliban leadership to Afghanistan. Terming the allegations false and 
malicious, the statement said the United States extended support to 
the decisive military action being taken by the Pakistan military 
forces against militants in South Waziristan and elsewhere." (Story 
also covered in 'Jang,' Express,' 'Pakistan,' 'Islam,' 'Mashriq,' 
'Al-Akhbar') 
 
News Story: U.S. Steps Up Pressure On Pakistan "Dawn" (11/17) 
 
"The United States has stepped up pressure on Pakistan to expand its 
fight against Taliban and Al Qaeda militants, warning that the 
success of its new Afghanistan strategy depends on it, The New York 
Times reported on Monday. President Obama sent a letter to President 
Asif Ali Zardari saying he expected the Pakistani leader to rally 
political and national security institutions in a united campaign 
against extremists, the Times reported, citing a U.S. official who 
was briefed on the letter's contents."  (Story also front paged in 
all newspapers) 
 
News Story: Nothing To Be Done At The Prodding Of Others: Qureshi 
"Dawn" (11/17) 
 
"Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Monday that U.S. 
President Barrack Obama in his letter to President Asif Ali Zardari 
had not asked Pakistan to 'do more.'  Talking to newsmen in Multan, 
the Minister said it was Pakistan which had to decide the course of 
the military operation against militants." (Story also front paged 
in all newspapers) 
 
TERRORISM/MILITARY ISSUES 
 
News Story: Gilani Rules Out Talks With 'Beasts' "Dawn" (11/17) 
 
"Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told the National Assembly on 
Monday it was no time to talk to militants he called beasts and said 
the ongoing military operation in South Waziristan would be 
conclusive." 
 
News Story: Islamabad Taking Militant Challenge Very Seriously: 
State Department "Daily times" (11/17) 
 
"Recognizing Pakistan's recent anti-Taliban actions, the U.S. on 
Monday said it had confidence in Islamabad's ability to take on the 
challenge. U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly, when asked in 
a daily briefing to comment on the backdrop of a news story in The 
New Yorker about Washington pressuring Pakistan on further 
anti-Taliban actions, stressed that Islamabad itself was taking the 
challenge very seriously." 
 
News Story: 4 Killed In Yet Another Suicide Attack On Peshawar 
Police "Daily Times" (11/17) 
 
"At least four people were killed and 43 injured when a suicide 
bomber targeted Badabher police station on Monday. In the fifth 
suicide attack in eight days to hit the city, the attacker set off 
his bomb after being challenged at a check-post near the police 
station on Peshawar's outskirts." (Story also front paged in all 
newspapers) 
 
News Story: Osama Is Alive, Rahimullah Tells Geo "Daily Times" 
(11/17) 
 
"Osama bin Laden is alive, revealed The News' Resident Editor in 
Peshawar Rahimullah Yusufzai in Geo News program Aaj Kamran Key 
Saath on Monday. He said the US would continue an operation in the 
name of al-Qaeda until Osama is captured or killed. He said al-Qaeda 
members from Pakistan and Afghanistan could not operate in Britain 
or the U.S." 
 
News Story: Four Insurgents Killed In Swat "The News" (11/17) 
 
"Security forces claimed to have killed four insurgents near 
Gulibagh in the volatile Swat district while the body of a militant 
commander was found dumped in the Sambat area of Matta Tehsil, the 
Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said." 
 
News Story: New U.S. Policy May Include Exit Strategy "Dawn" (11/17) 
 
 
"The United States is seeking a framework to bring troops home from 
Afghanistan and an exit strategy may factor in the new U.S. policy 
for the Pak-Afghan region as well, says a senior White House aide. 
The major policy statement by White House senior adviser David 
Axelrod was backed also by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton 
who said the Obama administration held 'no illusions' about 
transforming Afghanistan into a functional modern democracy." 
 
Editorial: The CIA-ISI Connection, an editorial in the Lahore-based 
liberal English language daily "Daily Times" (cir. 10,000) (11/17) 
 
"A report in The Los Angeles Times says the American Central 
Intelligence Agency (CIA) has funneled hundreds of millions of 
dollars to the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan since 
9/11, accounting for as much as one-third of the latter's annual 
budget. In addition, the ISI collected tens of millions of dollars 
through a classified CIA program that pays for the capture or 
killing of wanted militants. This stream of payments is a 
clandestine counterpart to the rewards publicly offered by the US 
State Department.... The report seems to have enough truth in it to 
make the entire edifice of the story credible. The ISI is routinely 
blamed for supporting the Taliban, even after 9/11, but things 
appear somewhat different now....  The new conjuncture therefore 
suggests that at least as far as the Pakistani militants are 
concerned, the ISI is in the forefront of the struggle against 
terrorism. Whether, for strategic reasons stretching back to the 
abandonment of Afghanistan in 1989 by the U.S. and the West, the ISI 
nevertheless continues to support the Afghan Taliban remains a moot 
point." 
 
Editorial: 'Do more' Mantra, "The Nation" an editorial in the 
center-right national English daily "The Nation" (cir. 20,000) 
(11/17) 
 
"There seems to be a new onslaught of pressure by the U.S. on 
Pakistan, despite the fact that the U.S. has never had so much 
official compliance from the Pakistani state as it does at present. 
Yet the U.S. is not satisfied and the reason is fairly apparent by 
now. It would appear that the military has not got itself into a 
quagmire in SWA, unlike NATO and the U.S. military in Afghanistan. 
This means that the U.S. Will find it much harder to convince the 
world that Pakistan's nuclear assets must be handed over to 
international, that is American, control. Yet the U.S. had 
everything else in place for this purpose including a special team 
to grab these assets.... Now the U.S. wants to formally create a war 
zone in the whole of Pakistan. That is effectively the message 
General Jones carried for President Zardari according to The New 
York Times...." 
 
Editorial: Nuclear Assets Must Be Strongly Safeguarded, an editorial 
an editorial in the Lahore-based populist center-right Urdu daily 
"Khabrain" (cir. 50,000) (11/17) 
 
"Moreover, reports are also appearing about the infamous U.S. 
organization Blackwater.  Although according to the civilian and 
military leadership Pakistan's nuclear assets are completely safe, 
but there should be strong security arrangements around sensitive 
areas so that an unpleasant incident is avoided. This is necessary 
because the U.S. or another country might take some extraordinary 
steps using such an incident as pretext." 
 
Editorial: U.S. Should Take Pakistan On-Board, an editorial in the 
Islamabad-based rightist English daily "Pakistan Observer" (cir. 
5,000) (11/17) 
 
"For the new strategy, Obama would not only have to consider the 
opposing views within his administration about the level of 
additional troops to be deployed in Afghanistan but should also lay 
down targets and a time frame for an exit strategy. What the U.S. 
needs is a grand idea that could help stabilize the situation, 
pacify the Taliban, build the capacity of Afghan security forces and 
above all provision of more resources for reconstruction of the war 
torn country." 
 
Editorial: Millions of People in the Region Looking Towards 
Pakistani Leadership, an editorial in the Karachi-based, pro-Taliban 
Jihadi Urdu daily "Islam" (cir. 15,000) (11/17) 
 
"The sensational statement by U.S. General David H. Petraeus, in 
which he said that his country is launching drone attacks in 
Pakistan in connivance with our own government, has exposed the 
hypocrisy of our rulers. It means that our government has given the 
U.S. a license to kill innocent Pakistanis. We think that until our 
rulers refute Gen Petraeus' statement, their sincerity with the 
country and the Pakistani nation will remain questionable." 
 
Editorial: Petraeus' Statement on Drone Attacks Again Puts Rulers in 
The Dock, an editorial in the popular rightist Urdu-language daily 
"Ausaf" (cir. 10,000) (11/17) 
 
"Prime Minister Gilani has expressed his optimism that the Obama 
administration will take Pakistan on board regarding any change in 
the United States' Afghan policy. But we think that our leadership 
must avoid assigning any powers to Washington to bring about any 
changes in this region. In fact, as a responsible state Pakistan 
deserves the right to play most important role in South Asia and we 
should leave no stone unturned to maintain this privileged position 
of our country." 
 
Editorial: TTP In Orakzai, an editorial in the Karachi-based 
center-left independent national English daily "Dawn" (cir. 55,000) 
(11/17) 
 
"With the TTP's strongholds in South Waziristan, the erstwhile 
'centre of gravity' of militancy, going down like ninepins, another 
tribal agency is beginning to take centre stage in the 
counter-insurgency under way in Fata and northwest Pakistan - 
Orakzai Agency.... Aerial pounding alone, however, will not do much 
to disrupt the TTP that may be regrouping in Orakzai. Past 
experience has shown that without boots on the ground, the militants 
are by and large able to run their affairs unimpeded." 
 
Editorial: Curbing Militancy, an editorial in the populist, often 
sensational national English daily "The News" (cir. 55,000) (11/17) 
 
"Militants are under fire across the north. Apart from the 23 killed 
in Orakzai and South Waziristan, 22 bodies are reported also to have 
been recovered from Swat and Buner. It is somewhat reassuring to 
learn that the effort against the Taliban continues in Malakand and 
that an effort now seems to be on to clamp down on militants 
everywhere.... But to ensure there is no possibility of the Taliban 
re-asserting themselves some months or even years down the line more 
needs to be done." 
 
Opinion: Arrival of U.S. Squad?, an op-ed by Muhammad Akbar Alam an 
editorial in the Lahore-based independent Urdu daily "Waqt" (circ. 
5000) (11/17) 
 
"As usual, the U.S. Embassy spokesman and our Foreign Ministry have 
denied a report on the arrival of a special U.S. squad in Pakistan. 
The U.S. spokesman has termed the report  as baseless.... The U.S. 
Embassy is responsible for safeguarding its country's interests and 
therefore issuing a denial and terming a report baseless is its 
duty. As far as our Foreign Ministry is concerned, from the minister 
down to the junior level, there is no dearth of pro-U.S. officials 
there, for whom it is a routine to remain vigilant about reports 
that go against U.S. interests and then issue denials.... One point 
that the Seymour Hersh story does not elaborate upon is: who will 
announce the atomic emergency [prompting the special squad into 
action]? Islamabad or Washington?  I fear that the U.S. might make 
such an announcement itself with the false claim that Pakistan asked 
it for help. Once the special squad completes its mission, it will 
be said that Pakistan neither asked for help nor declared a nuclear 
emergency, hence there should be an investigation into the matter." 
 
 
Opinion: Af-Pak Policy A Mistake, an op-ed by Shahid Javed Burki in 
the Karachi-based center-left independent national English daily 
"Dawn" (cir. 55,000) (11/17) 
 
"Pakistan is not Afghanistan. By coupling the two countries together 
and calling it 'Af-Pak,' the United States' intention was to make 
policymaking simpler. It may have had the opposite effect.... 
Treating Pakistan in the context of an Af-Pak strategy would be a 
colossal mistake. The West under the leadership of President Barack 
Obama needs two different strategies, one for Pakistan and the other 
for Afghanistan." 
 
Opinion: Talking The Walk, an op-ed by Akbar Nasir Khan in the 
populist, often sensational national English daily "The News" (cir. 
55,000) (11/17) 
 
"So what makes Ms. Clinton different? It is her attempt to "turn the 
page" and write a new chapter on people-to-people diplomacy. Even if 
you believe the more it changes, the more it stays the same, she did 
make it look like a good idea. Good or bad, time will tell.... Ms. 
Clinton also emphasized the communication gap between the two 
nations and vowed to work on it from the American end. I think it 
might be better for us to work on it from our side as well. How 
would it help us if we keep on going with the 'baby talk' and they 
have to come to our level to make us 'understand'? Would it change 
anything? We have to mature to be taken seriously. She can say that 
she spent eight years as a senator opposing the Bush administration 
and its policies but she cannot expect us to 'understand' that 
overnight. We do need to be heard because we have been on the 
receiving end in real sense, facing consequences of the policies 
that have put us through these testing times." 
 
Opinion: Talking To 'Good' Taliban, an op-ed by Iftekhar A. Khan in 
the center-right national English daily "The Nation" (cir. 20,000) 
(11/17) 
 
"The U.S. is surreptitiously seeking Saudi help to negotiate with 
the 'good' Taliban in Afghanistan.... While bullish military 
generals demand for more troops, their civilian counterparts advise 
against it. Even the hawkish Defence Secretary, Roberts Gates, is 
weighing the strategy of compromise with the Taliban. Conceivably, 
the U.S. is on the verge of losing the war in Afghanistan, hence the 
furtive moves to negotiate with the 'good' Taliban. However, the 
problem is how to distinguish between the 'good' and the 'bad' 
Taliban, as both share the common goal of ridding their country of 
the occupation forces. Anyway, when the U.S. considers negotiating 
with the Taliban, it will exert immense pressure on us (Pakistan) 
against making peace agreements with the tribesmen in FATA. But what 
is good for the imperialist power may not be good for us." 
 
MISCELLANEOUS 
 
News Story: USEFP Celebrates Education Week "Daily Times" (11/17) 
 
"To observe International Education Week 2009, the United States 
Education Foundation Pakistan (USEFP) on Monday started a series of 
informative events for local students and counselors. Dr Grace 
Clarke, the USEFP executive director, was the chief guest in the 
ceremony opening the series of events." 
News Story: 'Blackwater' Tries To Teach 'Lesson' To The Nation's 
Staffer "The Nation" (11/17) 
 
"A photojournalist of Nawa-i-Waqt remained into the custody of 
police for more than 45 minutes on the directives of high-ups of 
capital police only for taking snaps of a suspected rented house of 
Backwater Sunday night. According to details, the police intercepted 
photographer Sajjad Haider at a picket near Super Market when he was 
driving his car PV55." 
 
News Story: Iran, India Discuss Pipeline, Terror "Dawn" (11/17) 
 
"India and Iran on Monday discussed the fallout of terrorism in 
Pakistan on their own security and set up a group of experts to meet 
within two weeks to nudge the $7.4 billion Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) 
gas pipeline among other projects, Iranian diplomats said." 
 
(All circulation figures are based on estimation) 
Patterson