Pakistan Economy: News & Discussion

yang

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Thank you

I am sorry.Because of the financial crisis,if I look some news about a country that have some problems in their economy,then the"financial crisis " will leap to mind first.I think you are all right,the situation in Pakistan maybe a little complex.Generally,one of the symbols of the crisis is the continuous deflation,But,Pakistan have a high inflation.
In the last month ,I saw a lot news about Pakistan,her foreign exchange reserves were running out,and her credit was falling down.
So I think the situation has a connection to the crisis as well.As the foreign exchange reserves is losing,the aggregate supple of the resourse is reducing more quickly than the aggregate demand of the resourse .So a higher inflation emerged.
 

Triton

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Pakistan to get US $840 bln IMF tranche by March end

ISLAMABAD, March 24 (APP): Pakistan is likely to get second tranche of US $840 million from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) by the end of this month, official sources said. The International Monetary Fund, under Standby Arrangements, had approved US $ 7.6 billion to Pakistan out of which the first tranche of US $ 3.1 billion was received in November, 2008.

Following the successful quarterly review meetings held in Dubai recently, Pakistan would get US $ 840 million by end of March, sources said adding that the review meeting had appreciated Pakistan’s home grown economic stabilization policies.

“The IMF has expressed its satisfaction over the progress of Pakistan’s economic performance in first quarter of the year and also agreed the projected economic targets in the next six months of the current financial year and consented that the progress of Pakistan’s IMF programme is on track”, the sources added.

Pakistan also aims to lobby for enhancing IMF loans for the country, the sources said.

During the IMF Executive Board meeting scheduled to be held in April, Pakistan would also negotiate and lobby for enhancing five to eight times the IMF funding quota for the country, the sources added.

It may be recalled that IMF staff mission, led by Adnan Mazarei had visited Islamabad and Dubai to conduct the 2009 Article IV consultation and the first review under Pakistan’s Stand-By Arrangement (SBA).

The SDR 5.169 billion (about US$7.6 billion) SBA was approved by the Executive Board of the IMF on November 24, 2008 and a first disbursement of SDR 2.067 billion (about US$3.1 billion) was made on November 26, 2008.

The IMF mission held extensive discussions with government and central bank officials, focussing on Pakistan’s recent economic performance, the main challenges lying ahead, and the policies needed to build and consolidate macroeconomic stability in light of the uncertain and deteriorating global economic environment.

The mission was impressed by the authorities’ strong resolve to sustain prudent macroeconomic policies, strengthen and broaden the social safety net, and pursue reforms to enhance Pakistan’s medium-term growth prospects.

“The authorities’ program remains on track. Initial developments since the approval of Pakistan’s IMF-supported program have been generally positive, and all the program’s quantitative performance criteria for end-December 2008 were observed.
 

Triton

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Lol don't be amazed to see that typo in the headline Sir :drink: I thought of editing it, but then that's how it was printed in the original source. Anyway from the first sentence of the article itself you can get the right figure :)
 

Flint

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Pakistan eyes $30 bln help from "Friends" group
Fri Apr 3, 2009 12:27pm BST

By Augustine Anthony

ISLAMABAD, April 3 (Reuters) - Pakistan will ask its allies to provide up to $30 billion in aid over the next 10 years at a conference in Japan this month, the country's top economic official said on Friday.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan, a vital ally of the United States as it struggles to bring stability to Afghanistan and defeat al Qaeda, got a $7.6 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan in November to dodge a balance of payments crisis.

It is also seeking funds from friendly countries and other multilateral agencies and will make its case for substantial long-term help at a meeting of the "Friends of Pakistan" group in Tokyo on April 17.

"We are going to make projections worth $30 billion for long-term projects," Finance Ministry chief Shaukat Train told reporters.

"We are going to talk about what our economic vision is, what our economic needs are over the period of the next five to 10 years," he said.

Tarin did not elaborate but officials said earlier Pakistan would discuss financing requirements for long-term energy, infrastructure and skill development needs to put the economy on a sound footing.

The "Friends of Pakistan" groups more than a dozen countries including the United States and Saudi Arabia.

Members agreed in Abu Dhabi in November that coordinated international cooperation with Pakistan was needed to help in the face of financial and security crises.

The international community is concerned economic chaos could play into the hands of al Qaeda and allied militant groups seeking to destablise the country.

While the "Friends" is a non-pledging forum, Tarin said Pakistan would also ask for up to $6 billion to meet a financing gap over the next two years at a donors' conference being held on the same day in Tokyo.

"We will be asking for between $4 billion and $6 billion for two years and it will mostly be in the shape of grants," he said.

The focus of that aid would be on poverty alleviation, health, education, security needs and a fund dedicated to the poor and violence-plagued provinces of Baluchistan and North West Frontier Province, Tarin said.

Pakistan got a first tranche of $3.1 billion of its IMF loan in November and a second tranche worth $848 million this week.

Pakistan also got $500 million from the World Bank this week.

The Asia Society think-tank said in a report on Thursday Pakistan needed up to $50 billion over the next five years to avoid an economic meltdown that risked turning the country over to militants.

Pakistan's nuclear weapons falling into the hands of militants is one of the world's nightmare scenarios.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/marketsNewsUS/idUKISL39951020090403
 

Rage

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EU, Pakistan sign accord to boost aviation cooperation



February 25, 2009


The European Union and the Government of Pakistan signed an aviation agreement in Brussels on Tuesday, February 24, to boost air services cooperation.

"The agreement signed today is good news for both Pakistani and EU airlines as well as for passengers as it removes the legal uncertainty from the existing bilateral air services agreements. I welcome this important step in the EU's air transport relations with Pakistan," said European Commission (EC) Vice-President Antonio Tajani who is responsible for transport.

The so-called "horizontal" aviation agreement does not replace the bilateral agreements in place between Pakistan and 18 EU Member States, but brings these in line with EU law, noted an EC statement.

Most importantly, it will remove nationality restrictions in bilateral air services agreements between EU Member States and Pakistan, thereby allowing any EU airline company to operate flights between Pakistan and any EU Member State in which it is established, in which a bilateral agreement with Pakistan already exists, and in which traffic rights are available.

"The agreement is an important step towards strengthening aviation relations and encouraging further traffic between the EU and Pakistan. Air transport is crucial for the relations between the EU and Pakistan, linking people, cultures and businesses," added the statement.


http://www.german-info.com/press_shownews.php?pid=847
 

Pintu

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According to The Associated Press, Pakistan seeks global aid upto $6 billion


The link and the report from The Associated Press follows:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jPvJtW2lhKCSNDHBUJHudVLddiewD97J1JIO0


Taliban-hit Pakistan seeks global aid

By STEPHEN GRAHAM – 23 minutes ago

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's beleaguered leaders are hoping for up to $6 billion in international support as they attempt to steer the Islamic world's only nuclear-armed nation through a rising storm of extremist violence and economic woes.

But there are doubts the expected pledges at a donor conference in Japan on Friday will do more than keep the country afloat for the next few years — or make its huge but ineffective army more inclined to crack down harder on the Taliban and al-Qaida.

"If money is given, it must be given for very specific projects that actually create economic assets for the country and create a flow of income," said Kaiser Bengali, a prominent Pakistani economist and adviser to the government. "Funding for budget support is putting money down the drain."

The donor conference will be the first of its kind for Pakistan, reflecting the depth of concern about the country's ability to weather problems fueled by the global economic slowdown as well as the faltering U.S. war effort in Afghanistan.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said Wednesday the country expects some 25 foreign backers, including the United States, China and Saudi Arabia, to pledge between $4 billion and $6 billion in emergency economic aid.

President Asif Ali Zardari will chair a separate ministerial-level session of the same countries, dubbed the "Friends of Democratic Pakistan," which has promised to provide longer-term development and security assistance including help to build dams, power stations, schools and clinics.

Both tracks are separate from Washington's plans to afford Pakistan $1.5 billion in aid for the next five years, and a $7.6 billion bailout granted by the International Monetary Fund in November to avert the country's most recent balance-of-payments crisis.

But critics also say the government knows only too well that the international community is terrified of the prospect of a breakdown of the Pakistani state — and hence lacks real leverage over its course.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the message of political support from the "Friends" of Pakistan was even more important than the sums they pledge.

"Without Pakistan, there is no hope," of defeating extremism in the region, he said Wednesday in a TV interview. "Pakistan is a key player. Pakistan is the country that will make the difference."

Pakistan's one year-old pro-Western government has emphasized the need for development to bring hope and jobs, especially to impoverished regions along the Afghan border where al-Qaida and its allies appear to be tightening their grip.

But it faces major economic problems, exacerbated by the global economic slowdown but rooted in structural problems that successive governments — which were also often bailed out by foreign sponsors — have failed to address.

The central bank forecast this month that economic growth for the year through June will slump to between 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent, far below the 5.5 percent the government has projected — and too slow to create enough jobs for its fast-growing population of about 170 million people.

Efforts to boost the growth rate and ease the impact on Pakistan's myriad poor are hamstrung by the need to fight double-digit inflation fed by unsustainable government borrowing.

The government has had to slash its own development budget because of a huge overspend and is resisting calls to tax the narrow landowning elite that dominates its politics.

Industry, including Pakistan key textiles sector, is also hampered by severe power shortages that are not expected to ease until next year at the earliest.

Basit said funds pledged Friday would be used to top up the government's empty coffers and shore up the country's foreign currency reserves in the short term.

Looking further ahead, Pakistani officials are preparing to pitch projects before the "Friends" group in five key areas: development, energy, institution-building, security, and trade and finance.

Zardari has announced that Pakistan is seeking help to set up specially trained and equipped police counterterrorism units across the country, but few other details have been made public.

Pakistan is concerned about President Barack Obama's recent declaration that there will be "no blank check" from the U.S. — a reflection of doubts in Washington about Islamabad's commitment to eliminating al-Qaida and battling the Taliban.

Officials here argue the world is morally obliged to bail it out because of the losses it is suffering as a front-line state against international terrorism.

"We want help," Qureshi said. "What we do not want is intrusion or micromanagement."
 

pyromaniac

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Foreign Donors Pledge $5.2 Billion in Aid for Pakistan

International donors meeting in Japan have pledged more than $5 billion to help the Pakistani government shore up its shaky economy and shrink the pool of militant recruits. President Asif Zardari said the world continues to underestimate the threat posed by militants in Pakistan.

The one-day Tokyo donors conference was aimed at meeting what Pakistani officials said was a $4 billion shortfall in government spending on programs for poverty alleviation, education and healthcare.

Foreign Minister Mahmood Qureshi told a private Pakistani news channel that the more than 25 nations at the conference were eager to meet Pakistan's needs.

"There was a unanimous commitment to support Pakistan, there was a very strong expression of solidarity with Pakistan and a statement of political support for Pakistan," he said.

He said donors pledged more than $5.2 billion - most of it to be spent during the next two years.

Pakistan's government has struggled to fund some spending programs in the last year. With the economy reeling from the global financial crisis and officials struggling to meet debt payments on foreign loans, last November the government accepted a two-year, $7.6 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. The conditions of the loan have forced officials to make difficult cuts in some government programs, but initial indicators show the country's economy has improved in recent months.

Nevertheless, more than one-third of Pakistanis live in poverty - a situation that analysts say makes for a significant pool of people vulnerable to recruiting by militant organizations.

President Asif Ali Zardari told aid donors at the Tokyo conference that militants threatening both his country and Afghanistan also pose a great danger to the rest of the world.

"There is a want to help Pakistan," said Mr. Zardari. "But I still fear that the understanding of the danger of what Pakistan faces still does not register fully in the minds of the world."

Among the top donors, the United States and Japan pledged $1 billion each, followed by Saudi Arabia with $700 million and the European Union committing $640 million.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/pakistan/2009/pakistan-090417-voa01.htm
 

Rage

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US weighs up to 400 million dollars for Pakistan

US weighs up to 400 million dollars for Pakistan


Wednesday, 29 Apr, 2009 | 12:20 AM PST |


The White House hopes to send emergency aid within days amid deep worries
about Pakistan's stability, says US lawmakers.—Reuters/File


WASHINGTON: The White House hopes to send up to 400 million dollars in emergency aid to Pakistan within days amid deep worries about the nuclear-armed country's stability, lawmakers said Tuesday.

‘Certainly, we are discussing with the administration what is needed, and I think that all of us are very concerned about what's happening in Pakistan,’ Democratic House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told reporters.

Republican Senator Jon Kyl said the monies would be a down payment on 1.4 billion dollars in Pakistan aid included in an 83.4-billion-dollar emergency spending bill that may not clear the US Congress before July.

‘I just returned from Pakistan, and the situation there is deteriorating,’ Kyl told reporters, warning that ‘if we were to wait until roughly close to the 1st of July, it could be too little, too late.’

‘The administration is looking right now at pulling a small part of that money out, somewhere between 200 million dollars and 400 million dollars, for both counterinsurgency and economic assistance, that we could pass really quickly, in just a matter of days,’ said Kyl.

Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer said President Barack Obama's Democratic allies would be ‘strongly supportive’ of such a move.

‘Bottom line with Pakistan: It is terribly worrisome. It's probably the place that most people worry about the most right now,’ Schumer said.

Obama's special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan, veteran diplomat Richard Holbrooke, made the case for urgent aid in meetings with top Democrats in recent days, a Democratic congressional aide said.

The aide, who requested anonymity, said it was not clear how much support existed in the US Congress for speeding financial assistance to Pakistan amid concerns that US aid does not reach the Pakistani people.

Another Democratic aide, who also requested anonymity, said Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Hoyer, and other key lawmakers were to meet later Tuesday to discuss the matter and could reach a decision then.

‘If something needs to be done, I think the answer to your question is we're going to address it,’ Hoyer said.

‘Pakistan in many ways is of higher concern right now than Afghanistan,’ he said. ‘And Afghanistan is something that has a high level of concern as well.’

‘I think everybody's concerned about what's happening there, what's happening with the Taliban. The stability of Pakistan is very, very important to not only the region but to the United States as well.’ The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources, reported that the package could reach into the hundreds of millions of dollars and that, barring congressional action, Obama could seek to push the money through presidential actions that may not require congressional support.




DAWN.COM | World | US weighs up to 400 million dollars for Pakistan
 

Rage

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I think we, as a matter of priority, must have the USINPAC to lobby and stall this move in Washington for as long as possible. So long as Pakistani aid is not monitored, indeed its expenditure directed or even executed from an overarching suprastructure, the monies will continue to either: a) find their way into the grubbing hands of their greedy politicians; or b) be used to purchase conventional arms against India from Chinese or other sources as they have been previously. I wonder in disbelief that $12.1 billion in aid from the IMF and the FoP is not sufficient to alleviate Pak's troubles, without having to fast-track even other sources of revenue. Particularly with an Army that has been caught napping on its heels, is still bandying about the pathetic extenuation that they are insecure about their eastern border with India and is still undecided about how much of a threat the Taliban actually pose, fast-tracking aid to Pakistan will only encourage its Frontier Corps to pursue the Taliban in half-a&sed fashion, so that they can use the monies to pursue another agenda: their own modernization at the expense of us, themselves, regional security and the US taxpayer- rather than for the purpose it is being fast-tracked for: counter-insurgency and immediate economic assistance. Anyone with a contact to the lobby? Perhaps we could write to intimate them about this proposal and let them deal with it as they see fit.
 

Sailor

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I'd have to agree with this Rage. How the hell can the money be assured to be going to the right places? The big question I'd like to ask is......What are the right places?
Is it to buy food for the poor? Is it to pay the public service? What is it intended for?

There is one suggestion I could make........Every Taliban who hands in an AK-47 will receive $250 US dollars.
 

Rage

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UPDATE 1-US House to speed war funds amid Pakistan concerns

Wed Apr 29, 2009 10:15pm BST


* Vote could come in mid-May

* Situation in Pakistan 'deteriorating'

* Counterinsurgency Capabilities Fund sough (Adds new quotes from congressional hearing, details)



By Susan Cornwell and David Morgan


WASHINGTON, April 29 (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers will accelerate efforts to provide more cash for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and aid to struggling Pakistan, which officials say is ill-equipped to cope with the spread of Islamist militancy.

A Democratic leader told Reuters on Wednesday the House of Representatives could vote in mid-May on President Barack Obama's request for $83.4 billion to pay for the wars this year. The measure includes more than $400 million for counterinsurgency assistance for the Pakistani military as well as $1.4 billion in economic aid for Islamabad.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told Reuters he expected the bill to be on the House floor "probably not next week but the week after."

Hoyer said a day earlier that officials were considering whether to vote separately on some aid to Pakistan as early as next week, amid U.S. concern about Islamabad's efforts to fight an advancing Taliban insurgency.

Facing resistance from congressional appropriators to pulling apart the war funding bill, lawmakers decided instead to try to get the entire bill to the House floor faster. Under normal procedures, the legislation would not have been expected to come to a vote until later in the summer.

Hoyer spoke as senior Pentagon and State Department officials told the House Armed Services Committee that supplemental approval was necessary for a new Counterinsurgency Capabilities Fund that is expected to funnel $3 billion to Islamabad over the next five years. The $400 million sought in this year's supplemental would be the first installment.

The Obama administration wants the money to help train the Pakistan army in counterinsurgency tactics that officials say are necessary to thwart militants who have carried out a wave of attacks inside Pakistan over the past two years.

U.S. fears of spreading militancy in Pakistan reached a high point last week when the Taliban established operating bases within 60 miles (96 km) of Islamabad.

"Pakistan currently does not have sufficient capacity to undertake counterinsurgency operations effectively or implement the clear, hold, build strategy that will be required to address the insurgent threat," Richard Boucher, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, said in written testimony to the armed services panel.


'WE'RE GOING TO HELP THEM'

U.S. military officials say the Pakistan army's operations against Islamist militants in northwestern tribal areas have proved ineffective because the army uses conventional tactics that rely on tanks, heavy artillery and other assets that are of little use against a guerrilla enemy.

Counterinsurgency strategy calls for smaller, more lightly armed units that often travel by helicopter and rely on surveillance and local intelligence to eradicate insurgents.

Up to now, the United States has provided counterinsurgency assistance only to Pakistan's paramilitary Frontier Corps and the military's special forces units.

Pakistan has rebuffed U.S. efforts to train the regular army in counterinsurgency partly because military officials see the conventional threat from India as a main danger.

Pakistani leaders are also wary of close high-profile cooperation with the U.S. military, fearing it could fuel anti-American sentiment in the country.

But Boucher said the regular army recently voiced interest in embracing counterinsurgency methods.

"They want to expand their counterinsurgency capabilities. They've made that clear with us," he told reporters without providing details. "And we're going to help them."

"Right now, it is more important than ever to strengthen our military partnership with Pakistan," Michele Flournoy, U.S. undersecretary of defense for policy, told the committee.

"The situation in Pakistan is deteriorating. The insurgency along Pakistan's western border has been steadily expanding and militants are increasingly in a position to threaten the Pakistani heartland." (Editing by Peter Cooney)




UPDATE 1-US House to speed war funds amid Pakistan concerns | Markets | US Markets | Reuters
 

vijaytripoli

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this is disgusting . they are giving $400 million or so in not-so-secret American aid to secure the arsenal to Pakistan, and they never let
Washington see how, or where, it was spent.
chau
 

Su-47

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Another example of how Pak is holding Uncle Sam by the balls. Unless USA makes monitors the application of these funds, a lot of it will enter the swiss bank accounts of Pak politicians, and the rest will be used to fund groups like Taliban and Lashkar-e-taiba.

So basically US Taxpayers are paying the Taliban to fight the US Army. And then people wonder why USA can't win in Afghanistan.
 

Rage

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Update 2- US Senate takes up aid to Pakistan bill

By Anwar Iqbal and Masood Haider
Tuesday, 05 May, 2009 | 12:21 AM PST |


The bill proposes to give Pakistan $7.5 billion over five years —$1.5 billion a year —
and an additional $7.5 billion over the following five years.—Reuters/File



WASHINGTON: The US Congress made a friendly gesture to President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday, introducing a bill to triple American aid to Pakistan on the day he arrives in the US capital on a four-day visit.

Two influential senators – Democrat John Kerry and Republican Richard Lugar – introduced the Pakistan Enduring Assistance and Cooperation Enhancement or the PEACE Act of 2009, in the Senate on Monday afternoon after a long delay.

‘The legislation intents to help transform the relationship between the US and Pakistan from a transactional, tactically-driven set of short-term exercises in crisis-management, into a deeper, broader, long-term strategic engagement,’ said a statement issued by the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.

The bill, first introduced in the 110th Congress, proposes to give Pakistan $7.5 billion over five years —$1.5 billion a year —and an additional $7.5 billion over the following five years.

Senator Kerry, the 2004 presidential candidate who now chairs the Senate committee, is a strong supporter of US economic assistance to Pakistan.

In an earlier interview to Dawn about his efforts to increase US assistance to Pakistan, Senator Kerry argued that the military alone could not defeat the extremists. The final victory, he said, could only be achieved by removing the root-cause: economic deprivation and unemployment.

Senator Kerry also opposed imposing new restrictions on Pakistan in return for US economic assistance, recalling that similar restrictions imposed in 1990 did cause an irreparable damage to US-Pakistan relations.

Mr Kerry, however, backed the requirements that seek total commitment from Pakistan in the fight against extremists and advocate strict accountability of the funds given to Islamabad.

He also backed placing some restrictions on the military assistance but said these were not new.


The announcement came two days before US President Barack Obama hosts presidents Zardari and Hamid Karzai for a trilateral summit aimed at improving relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In a news conference on Wednesday, President Obama pushed for more cooperation between these two key allies in the fight against extremism and expressed concern about the fragility of Pakistan’s eight-month-old civilian government which has made concessions to the Taliban.

Although details of the bill introduced in the Senate are still coming, it does not seem to contain too many contentious requirements.

The Pakistanis, however, fear that another bill to be introduced later in the House of Representatives would be more difficult for them.

Besides Pakistan’s compliance in the fight against terrorists, the House bill also requires Islamabad to mend its relations with India, stop all Kashmiri militant groups from operating from the Pakistani soil and to give an undertaking that it will not allow its territory to be used for any armed attack against or inside India.

Another provision could enable the United States to seek direct access to Dr A. Q. Khan.



DAWN.COM | World | US Senate takes up aid to Pakistan bill
 

Rage

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Alright, the following are the websites and email adress of the USINPAC [the US India Political Action Committee] that wields considerable clout in Washington:


[email protected]

USINPAC - US India Political Action Committee | Indian American Community | www.usinpac.com


I will attempt to come up with a letter of solicitude, urging the USINPAC to lobby vociferously against this deal, and to be co-signed by the members of this board if you are all so willing. Sometimes, a little concern can go a long way in getting rid of complacency. Any suggestions on a letter proforma and/or tentative drafts of the final letter will be appreciated and can be posted on this board.
 

Su-47

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maybe USINPAC can join hands with the Jewish lobby in USA to block this move. Israel sure ain't thrilled about pak getting more money. I think the Jewish lobby, which is the strongest lobby in USA, will work with USINPAC on this one. Together, the two lobbies will have significant influence.
 

Rage

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Alright gents, this is a tentative final draft of the letter to be dispatched forthwith to the USINPAC. Any suggestions/modifications to be made to the letter, please incorporate into a reprinted version of the letter on this thread highlighted in bold, or alternatively send me a PM with the necessary changes.

To make this efficient, I will request InViNcIbLE to print the usernames of all the members on this board in the undersigned. Anyone with opposition to his/her username appearing in the undersigned can send a request via PM to InVi to that effect. I will also request InVi or SIngh to submit this letter on our behalf through their official DFI email address at 12 midnight Eastern Daylight Time (Washington) today [Tuesday, May 05, 2009] :


---

Letter of solicitude to USINPAC expressing regret over the proposed enhancement of military aid to Pakistan by the Kerry-Lugar bill, and urging remedy of the same:


To: The members of the US Indian Political Action Committee

Re: The proposed Kerry-Lugar bill


Dear Sir/Madam,

I write to express my dismay and solicitude at the bill being tabled in the Senate by Senators Kerry and Lugar entitled the hbEnhanced Partnership With Pakistan Act on tripling aid to Pakistan as part of the 'Pakistan Enduring Assistance and Cooperation Enhancement' (PEACE) initiative. The legislation seeks to triple non-military assistance to Pakistan to $1.5 billion annually for the next ten years, detached from military aid which itself will be increased on an ad hoc basis. A recent U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report concludes that America, despite its more than $12.3 billion in aid to Pakistan since 9/11, has "not met its national security goals to destroy terrorist threats and close the safe havens in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas". If previous precedent and the acknowledgement of President Barak Obama himself are tetament, it is reasonable to assume that these funds - or a section of them at the very least - marshalled at the American taxpayers' expense and intended to be used solely and explicitly for the purpose of the War on Terror- will be diverted towards a conventional arms build up by Pakistan against India. Furthermore, as is widely reported and believed to be true, an influential section of the Pakistani polity and military still continue to adhere to the policy of 'strategic depth' in arming the Taliban against regional rivals, and there has been to date no word on a commitment from the Pakistani Administration on ending support for terrorist activities against India being pursued from its soil- as was stipulated as an express requirement in the bill in both its original and present forms. The ramifications of this for the regional military balance in South Asia and the national security and strategic prerogatives of India are inexorable.

There are reports that the Pakistani community in Washington is lobbying extensively to convert this bill into legislation since the original bill which was to be put forth for deliberations later this year was viewed as far more difficult to see through. It is with genuine concern and humble entreaty therefore that I urge you and the members of the USINPAC to campaign vocieferously against this deal and ensure that it is not passed into law, or failing therewith to ensure that the most astringent measures are ascribed to it.

Sincerely,

The Undersigned: Concerned Indian citizens foremost and members of the DFI:

Signatures



---


Here are a few additions that the dfi team has dug up and should be included :--

1 A recent U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report concludes that America, despite its more than $12.3 billion in aid to Pakistan since 9/11, has "not met its national security goals to destroy terrorist threats and close the safe haven in Pakistan's FATA" (Federally Administered Tribal Areas)

2. exact name of the bill :---- ENHANCED PARTNERSHIP WITH PAKISTAN ACT.

3. NO promise from the pakistani side about ending terrorism against india or commitment that its soil will not be used to launch offensives against indian establishment.
4. pakistan s refusal to drive out the taliban completely from its terrority.


let's take this initiative members willing to include their names in the signatures please tank this post.
 

Pintu

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This is effort is great and needs to be supported, and I from my part offering my extensive support in this matter as a supporter of this cause.

Regards
 

Yusuf

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let's take this initiative members willing to include their names in the signatures please tank this post.
"Tank"ing the post will have a new meaning all together. :blum3::blum3:

Thanks.
 

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