Author: The Associated Press
Publication: MSNBC.com
Date: May 6, 2006
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10774133/
Envoy says country offers 'safe haven' and
nudges government to do more
A top U.S. counterterrorism official said
Saturday that parts of Pakistan are a "safe haven" for militants
and Osama bin Laden was more likely to be hiding there than in Afghanistan.
Henry Crumpton, the U.S. ambassador in charge
of counterterrorism, lauded Pakistan for arresting "hundreds and hundreds"
of al-Qaida figures but said it needed to do more.
"Has Pakistan done enough? I think the
answer is no. I have conveyed that to them, other U.S. officials have conveyed
that to them," he told reporters at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul after talks
with Afghan officials.
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Crumpton said U.S. officials continue to believe
that bin Laden is somewhere along the Afghan-Pakistani border, and was more
likely to be on the Pakistani side.
"If we knew exactly where bin Laden was,
we'd go get him," Crumpton said. "But we're very confident he's
along the Pakistan-Afghan border somewhere," he said.
He added that there was a "higher probability"
that the al-Qaida leader was hiding on the Pakistan side.
Crumpton also gave Islamabad credit for last
year's capture of a top al-Qaida strategist with a $5 million bounty on his
head.
U.S. and Pakistani officials said earlier
this week that Mustafa Setmarian Nasar was arrested in the southwestern Pakistani
city of Quetta in November. Crumpton said that this showed that Pakistan is
working to arrest al-Qaida leaders.
Pakistan also has launched repeated counterterrorism
operations in its lawless tribal regions close to the Afghan border over the
past two years, in which hundreds of militants and soldiers have died.
"Our expectation is that they will continue
to make progress, and we know that it's difficult," he said. Pakistan
"can't remain a safe haven for enemy forces, and right now parts of Pakistan
are indeed that."