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Washington, Oct 03: The US Vice Presidential candidates on Friday described an "unstable" Pakistan as "extremely dangerous" in their first live debate, with Democrat John Biden contending that its tribal areas and Afghanistan were the "central front" of the war on terror and not Iraq as projected by the Republicans.
At the face off with political novice Sarah Palin, 44,
ahead of the November election Biden, known for his deft
understanding of international relations, warned that the next
attack on the US is "going to come from al Qaeda planning in
the hills of Afghanistan and Pakistan".
He declared that his government "will go after" terror
mastermind Osama Bin Laden if there is "actual intelligence".
In the first presidential debate last week, Democrat
Barack Obama too said if the US had al Qaeda leaders and bin
Laden in sight and Pakistan was unable or unwilling to act,
"then we should take them out."
Asked which was the greater threat, a nuclear Iran or
an unstable Pakistan, Biden, 65, said "they`re both extremely
dangerous. Pakistan already has nuclear weapons. Pakistan
already has deployed nuclear weapons. Pakistan`s weapons can
already hit Israel and the Mediterranean.
"Iran getting a nuclear weapon would be very, very
destabilising.... So they`re both very dangerous. They both
would be game changers," he said during the feisty debate in
St Loius, Missouri.
Biden said while Republican Presidential nominee John
McCain was insisting "that the central war in the front on
terror is in Iraq. I promise you, if an attack comes in the
homeland, it`s going to come as our security services have
said, it is going to come from al Qaeda planning in the hills
of Afghanistan and Pakistan. That`s where they live. That`s
where they are."
"There have been 7,000 madrassas built along that
border.... that`s where bin Laden lives and we will go at him
if we have actually intelligence," he added.
Paulin too agreed that a nuclear Iran or an unstable
Pakistan were "both extremely dangerous" but said even al
Qaeda had declared Iraq as the central front in the war on
terror.
In the Friday debate, Obama said Pakistan had failed
to take strong action against militants despite the billions
of dollars from the US after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
"They have not done what needs to be done to get rid
of those safe havens," Obama said. "If the United States has
al-Qaida, bin Laden, top-level lieutenants in our sights, and
Pakistan is unable or unwilling to act, then we should take
them out."
McCain, however, was less aggressive. "You don`t do
that. You don`t say that out loud. If you have to do things,
you have to do things, and you work with the Pakistani
government," the 72-year-old Vietnam veteran said.
Bureau Report
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