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U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs |
Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government Information, Federal Services, and International Security |
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Title: Addressing the U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Relationship |
Date: 6/12/08 |
Time (EST): 2:30 PM |
Place: Dirksen Senate Office Building, Rm. 342 |
Political instability, a growing Islamic insurgency, a demoralized army, and an intensely anti-American population put Pakistan’s nuclear weapons at risk. Given these factors and Pakistan’s recent elections, U.S.-Pakistan relations should be examined anew. Additionally, Pakistan’s nuclear program and its ongoing tensions with Afghanistan present unique challenges to the US-Pakistan strategic relationship. Most broadly, this hearing would examine what the U.S. and its allies must do to develop a strategy for Pakistan that establishes long-term goals. Witnesses will focus their remarks on what the most effective longer-term U.S. policy options are regarding Pakistan, particularly with regards to securing Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and addressing Islamic extremism in Pakistan.
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Member
Statements |
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Witnesses
Testimony
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Panel 1
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The Honorable
Russell Feingold
[View
PDF]
, U.S. Senate
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Panel 2
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Don Camp
[View
PDF]
, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
, U.S. Department of State
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Panel 3
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K. Alan Kronstadt
[View
PDF]
, Specialist in South Asian Foreign Affairs, Defense and Trade Division
, Congressional Research Service
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Lisa Curtis
[View
PDF]
, Senior Research Fellow, Asian Studies Center
, The Heritage Foundation
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Dr.
Stephen Cohen
[View
PDF]
, Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies
, Brookings Institution
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Michael Krepon
[View
PDF]
, Co-Founder
, The Henry L. Stimson Center
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