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Courtesy NCPA - The National Council of Pakistani 
Americans
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FBI wants active role in Pakistan
By Umar Cheema, 
The Nation, 
Pakistan
ISLAMABAD: The Chief of Federal Bureau of 
Investigation (FBI) Tuesday 
held a crucial meeting with Interior Minister 
Makhdoom Faisal Saleh Hayat 
on his second leg of tour to Pakistan and 
discussed the expansion plan of 
agency's operations in the country to curb 
terrorist elements.
The FBI Director, Robert Mueller, who arrived 
here Tuesday from Saudi 
Arabia, 
also held extensive talks with the top 
brass of Intelligence Bureau 
and Federal Investigation Agency.
The US Ambassador to Pakistan, Nancy Powell, and 
the FBI's operational 
head in the country, accompanied Mueller in his 
one-hour meeting with the 
Interior Minister. Secretary Interior Tasneem 
Noorani, Additional Secretary 
Iftikhar Ahmad and another official were also 
present in the first round.
While the latter two officials were excluded from 
the last twenty-minute 
talks 
which is believed to be held on the most critical 
issues and Pakistan's new 
'assignments being delegated by the 
US 
to meet 
its "objectives" in the region 
under the garb of 
war on terrorism.
An official privy to the meeting, told The 
Nation, the US officials have 
sought 
Pakistan's co-operation to institutionalise the 
agency's role in the country 
by 
establishing an active co-ordination between FBI 
and IB as well as FIA.
The sources said the meeting decided to modernise 
the anti-terrorism cell 
in IB and FIA that would be run with full 
collaboration of FBI. 
It has been learnt that the FBI official head 
also informed the minister that 
his 
country is ready to make a significant downsizing 
in its staff stationed in 
Pakistan if it feels the said two agencies are 
sufficient enough in toeing 
the 
operational lines of FBI.
The minister agreeing on the idea, however, asked 
the visiting delegation to 
send a team of instructors to Pakistan to train 
the agencies' staff here that 
would be more effective for the trainees since it 
would help acquainting them 
with the domestic challenges pertaining to 
terrorism and how to curb them, 
sources said.
The govt believes this option as cost-effective 
and more beneficial since the 
special cadre of anti-terrorism would be trained 
on modern lines and yet with 
practical exposure at a place where they are to 
do their job.
According to the sources, the delegation also 
discussed the current exchanges 
of intelligence gathering. The US urged Pakistan 
to speed up the process in 
order to make the war on terrorism more 
effective.
Mueller is likely to leave for 
Afghanistan 
within 
a day to discuss the rising 
security concerns of the US in the war-torn 
country where US troops had 
been killed in an ambush by deserted Taliban.
FBI chief's ongoing tour of the countries is of 
immense importance where 
public resentment is consistently growing and 
sabotage activities have taken 
place time and again damaging the US interests in 
the regions.
http://www.nation.com.pk/daily/June-2003/4/main/top3.asp
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The National Council of Pakistani Americans is a 
Washington-based 
civil rights and public education organization.
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2003-06-07 Sat 19:15ct