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Pakistan
wants more military ties with Iran
Islamabad, April 27: Pakistan's
military ruler General Pervez Musharraf called for stronger ties
with Iran "in all fields" and said there was good scope
for more military cooperation between the two neighbours.
A Pakistan Foreign Ministry statement also quoted him as telling
a visiting senior Iranian official the two countries must cooperate
to help end the prolonged civil war in their common neighbour Afghanistan,
where the two countries recognise rival administrations.
Differences over Afghanistan and violence between rival Muslim
militants in Pakistan had in recent years soured traditionally close
ties between Tehran and Islamabad. Musharraf, who holds the title
of Chief Executive, told the Iranian President's national security
adviser and secretary of the Supreme National Security Council,
Hassan Rouhani, that Pakistan "Sincerely desired to further
strengthen these ties with Iran in all fields," the Pakistani
statement said.
"The Chief Executive also underscored the need for greater
economic cooperation between Pakistan and Iran and observed that
the volume of (bilateral) trade ... was far below its potential
and needed to be substantially increased," it said.
"Similarly, there was good scope for increasing the cooperation
in the field of defence," he was quoted as saying. The statement
gave no details about possible defence cooperation, which is now
restricted to training facilities for Iranian officers in Pakistani
institutions.
Pakistan is one of only three countries to recognise the radical
Islamic Taliban movement's Government in Afghanistan, along with
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Iran recognises Burhanuddin
Rabbani, who was driven from Kabul in 1996 but fights on from the
North, as the Afghan ruler. Musharraf said Pakistan and Iran "Need
to cooperate to bring durable peace to Afghanistan", the Pakistani
statement said.
Eyebrows were raised in Pakistan by recent top-level visits between
Iran and India, Pakistan's arch-rival whose Prime Minister Atal
Behari Vajpayee was in Tehran earlier this month. But the Pakistani
statement quoted Rouhani telling Musharraf relations between their
countries were "deep-rooted and would not be affected by Iran's
relations with any other country."
On Wednesday, Rouhani and Pakistani Interior Minister Moinuddin
Haider agreed to expand cooperation to halt cross-border smuggling,
drug-trafficking and the movement of criminals, a Pakistani statement
on their meeting said.
The two men "Agreed on evolving joint strategies for tightening
border vigilance and exchanging information about the activities
of drug-smugglers operating along the Pakistan-Iran border",
it said. The countries are on the route used to smuggle narcotics
such as heroin to the West from the region, particularly Afghanistan.
Pakistan also complains that cheap Iranian petrol is being smuggled
into its southwestern province of Baluchistan. (Reuters)
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