Updated on
Summary
US Vice President Joe Biden has said that Al-Qaida is trying to bring down nuclear-armed Pakistan. The statement has come days after a war review tip-toed around Islamabad's role in fighting extremists.Our overarching goal and our rationale for being there is to dismantle, ultimately defeat al-Qaida... to make sure that terrorists do not, in fact, bring down the Pakistani government, which is a nuclear power, Biden said.The vice-president, in an interview with NBC's Meet the Press program, repeated threads of a one-year report on the US military surge in Afghanistan that pointed to progress but warned that more time was needed.Unveiling the policy assessment, President Barack Obama urged Islamabad to do more to rein in extremists holed up along the Afghan border but also renewed US commitment to major aid programs for Pakistan. Biden measured success against al-Qaida by noting it had been restricted to efforts like the botched underwear attack on a US-bound jetliner last Christmas and a failed amateurish bombing in New York's Times Square in May. They are planning much smaller bore but yet deadly attempts to go after the United States of America. We saw that in the underpants bomber last Christmas. We saw that in the Times Square effort, he said. We have significantly degraded and knocked off a lot of the main planners and organizers and trainers. Does that mean we've succeeded? No. Does that mean we're in much better shape than we were a year ago and two and three? Yes. Obama on Thursday said Afghan progress was sufficient to permit a responsible reduction of US forces to begin in July 2011, though the size of the likely drawdown appeared limited. The assessment comes one year after the president announced both a surge of 30,000 extra troops to Afghanistan and the conditions-based July troop drawdown.
