US President Barack Obama intends to expand the strikes against terror across the border of Afghanistan to Pakistan, which many of his team members believe has emerged as the ground zero of terrorism.
US President Barack Obama intends to expand the strikes against terror across the border of Afghanistan to Pakistan, which many of his team members believe has emerged as the ground zero of terrorism.
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The new policy, to be unveiled by Obama at the White House this evening, would endorse more drone attacks inside Pakistan much beyond their traditional strike zones of the tribal regions of Pakistan, media reports said.
The new strategy, now being called Af-Pak policy, would focus equally on Afghanistan and Pakistan, the reports said on the eve of the release of the much-awaited report.
Confronting a faltering war, Obama plans to dispatch thousands more military and civilian trainers to Afghanistan by fall in addition to 17,000 already announced this month.
It will "provide capability for the Afghan government and military until they're able to do it themselves," an unidentified official was quoted as saying by Politico.
Obama is likely to endorse an amendment by Senators John Kerry and Richard Lugar that calls for additional foreign aid money - $1.5 billion a year - for Pakistan, with strings attached with the goal of reducing terrorism.
The Washington Post reported that the administration in association with the Congress will develop new "benchmarks and metrics to measure our performance and that of our allies," including the Afghan and Pakistani governments.