April 23, 2009 2:02 PM

Clinton: Pakistan Grasping Taliban Threat

(CBS/AP)  Pakistan is beginning to recognize the severity of the threat posed by an extremist insurgency that is encroaching on key urban areas, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Thursday.

Clinton told a House appropriations subcommittee that the Obama administration is working to persuade the Pakistani government that its traditional focus on India as a threat has to shift to Islamic extremists.

"Changing paradigms and mind-sets is not easy, but I do believe there is an increasing awareness of not just the Pakistani government but the Pakistani people that this insurgency coming closer and closer to major cities does pose such a threat," she said.

On Wednesday, Clinton told another House committee that in her view the Pakistani government is "basically abdicating to the Taliban and the extremists."

She said Thursday that the administration's special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke, has had "painful, specific" conversations with a wide range of Pakistanis about the need to act more effectively against the insurgents.

"There is a significant opportunity here for us working in collaboration with the Pakistani government to help them get the support they need to make that mind-set change and act more vigorously against this threat," she said, adding, "There are no promises. They have to do it."

Clinton encountered skepticism from some committee members who expressed doubt about succeeding in Pakistan. Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., told her he worries that the administration's policy agenda - domestic and foreign - could be "devoured" by the Pakistan-Afghanistan problem.

"I have absolutely no confidence in the ability of the existing Pakistan government to do one blessed thing," Obey said.

Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., the committee chairwoman, expressed similar concerns.

"The escalating terrorist violence in Pakistan and that government's inability and unwillingness to confront the extremist threat undermine any progress we have made in Afghanistan and complicates future efforts there," Lowey said. "I fear that we are losing the window of international consensus and commitment to help the region gain a strong foothold on its long climb out of conflict."

One measure of progress in Pakistan, Clinton said, is the extent to which the Pakistani military is shifting its troops from the Indian border to the Afghan border, where the Taliban threat has been expanding.

Clinton was appearing before the appropriations panel that is reviewing the administration's request for $7.1 billion in additional funds for the State Department this budget year. Of that total, $497 million would be for State Department support of Pakistan and $980 million would be for Afghanistan. About $482 million would be for Iraq.

Clinton said that local job creation is a key purpose of the extra funds requested for State Department work in Afghanistan.

She told the panel that a main goal is to improve security at the local level in Afghanistan by putting more people to work. And she said the administration believes that many in the Taliban insurgency who are fighting against U.S. and Afghan forces are motivated more by money than ideology.

"The U.S. is having a very hard time understanding exactly why it is that one of the world's larger armies, armed with nuclear weapons, cannot fight and win a war against these rag-tag militants," said one Western military official, who spoke to CBS News on condition of anonymity.

Clinton defended President Barack Obama's effort to engage diplomatically with Iran, calling it a reasonable alternative to what she called a failed Bush administration policy.

"We tried the policy of total isolation for eight years," she said in a rising voice, "and it did not deter Iran one bit. The nuclear program has continued unabated. They weren't supporting Hamas before. They are supporting Hamas now."

Clinton said it remains unclear whether international pressure on Iran will compel it to change course.

"Sanctions are a tool for us to leverage pressure on the Iranian regime to change behavior that we obviously consider serious threats," she said. "And so we are talking with our partners about additional sanctions as part of an incentives-disincentives approach to Iran. It's a difficult balancing act."

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by pensacola8-2009 May 4, 2009 9:23 AM EDT
I recall the days of Ronald Reagan where he complained about hardliners in the Soviet Kremlin always obstructing peace talks and weapons reduction talks.

I recall the days of G.W. Bush where VP Cheney himself was the hardliner that obstructed the effective foreign policy relations with nations having differences with us.

Hillary Clinton is in synch with Obama and Biden. It is a dream come true.

Those longing for the days of GOP obviously have been playing with their home lobotomy kits, again.
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by j40405 April 24, 2009 12:30 AM EDT
The Taliban are nothing but terrorist and should be dealt with as such. There can be no negotiation and no compromise with them, ever!!!
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by ToolMangler1 April 23, 2009 10:17 PM EDT
Pakistan has waited far to long to perceive the real threat in their midst. Now that the Taliban hav established a 'Beach head" in the Swat valley 'Talibanistan' is almost a reality. At thast point we will have to make it glow in the dark to safeguard the rest of the world and our selves.
All of this could have been prevented if the Shrub had left Iraq alone and minded the store in Afghanistan (while getting Bin Laden and Al Zawahiri)
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by stn_sage April 23, 2009 8:45 PM EDT
This type of condescending, demeaning attack on the current Pakistani government is NOT going to cement relations and create lasting bonds of friendship! But, it's just about what
you'd expect from Hillary Clinton!

OH, so she thinks they may be on-the-road to understanding the geopolitics of THEIR own
country?! Good! I'm sure they'll be gratified to find out they have Hillary's confidence!

If HRC is going to be Secretary of State, she better start developing and using diplomatic
skills!
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by mjlewis6 April 23, 2009 5:26 PM EDT
Call the next confrontation with Iran....REAGAN'S WAR....the one he promised but never followed up on in the wake of our Tehran embassey takeover and hostage crisis that lasted 444 days until Reagan made campaign pledges to do something about Iran...
The Great Communicator was a big ZERO in foreign relations and too much credit is heaped at his feet for the collapse of the Soviet Union. That was Gorbachev's doing by embarking on showing how democratic the different Soviet states were....and was he surprised when they opted OUT......zero to do wth Reagan...and more to do with Pope John Paul II and his influence with Gorbachev......

Let's pull up the old REAGAN PLAN for dealing with Iran....bet it is a lot like his Trickle Down Theory of Economics..... or Dubya Bush's plan to use Social Security on the Stock Market........
Reply to this comment
by tomadams99 April 23, 2009 1:44 PM EDT
Do we call this one Hillary's War? Because that is what it is going to be.
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