COAS departs for US on first official visit

—– General Munir is scheduled to meet senior military and other government officials of US, says ISPR

RAWALPINDI: Chief of the Army Staff General Asim Munir departed on Sunday for his first official visit to the United States, said a statement from the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).
The military’s media wing, in the brief statement, said General Munir is “scheduled to meet senior mili-tary and other government officials of USA”.
The visit comes after senior US officials visited Pakistan last week. A senior Biden administration official dealing with refugee issues conducted a four-day trip to Islamabad in the first of a series of visits by American officials amid deteriorating ties between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Julieta Valls Noyes, the US assistant secretary of state for the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration stayed in the federal capital until Thursday.
On conclusion of her visit on December 7, US Special Envoy for Afghanistan Tom West kicked off his trip to Islamabad. After his visit, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Elizabeth Horst, who is responsi-ble for Pakistan, arrived here on December 9.
The flurry of visits by American officials comes against the backdrop of Pakistan’s move to evict all ille-gal Afghans, rising tensions with the Afghan Taliban over the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the upcoming general elections in February. “Pakistan and the United States continue to hold consultations on a range of issues. To advance these consultations, exchange of visits also takes place,” Foreign Office spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch said in a statement while giving context of the visits.
Pakistan has launched a crackdown against the Afghans living in the country illegally, following the ex-piry of the October 31 deadline. Since then, the US has been in touch with Pakistan to ensure that Af-ghans, who were illegible for immigration to the US were spared.
There are about 25, 000 Afghans, who according to Washington, are in Pakistan and waiting for their immigration to the US. Those Afghans worked with the US during its military campaign in Afghanistan. But after the US withdrawal, they are stuck in Pakistan, awaiting the completion of the immigration process.
The US has been working with Pakistan to find a workable solution to avoid such Afghans being de-ported to Afghans. There are also concerned that other than such Afghans, there are individuals such as musicians, artists, journalists and others who may be evicted.
The US is keen that such vulnerable Afghans are not touched either. Pakistani officials have said that their cases will be scrutinised accordingly and made it clear that in the first phase, those Afghans are being sent back who don’t have any legal status.
Tension between Pakistan and the Taliban government has been running high as Kabul refused to take decisive action against the TTP. The US is believed to have been worried that any escalation in tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban government would destabilise Afghanistan. –Agencies