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To get more consensus, government officials met with the leaders of all the major political parties Monday in Islamabad. At the start of the mostly private session, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the army would stay in Swat until the displaced can safely return, but warned that there must be a political solution in the long run. Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a congressional panel last week that there is evidence that Pakistan is adding to its nuclear weapons systems and warheads. Without directly mentioning the reports, Gilani sought to allay fears. "I want to tell the world in categoric terms that with the blessing of God, Pakistan's nuclear assets are safe and it will remain safe and any one, no matter how powerful and influential, eyeing on our national assets will not succeed," Gilani said.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik gave the 1,000-plus militant death toll on Sunday, but it was not possible to independently verify it. The territories bombarded over the past three weeks are now too dangerous for journalists to freely roam. The army also hasn't explained how it is differentiating militant deaths from civilian ones. It hasn't given a civilian death toll. Accounts from witnesses and doctors suggest dozens of civilians have been killed or wounded. The military also did not detail how many ground troops were involved in the latest advances on the Swat towns. But it has said that it has added an unspecified number of troops to the 12,000 to 15,000 already in the valley before the latest offensive began in Swat earlier this month.
[Associated
Press;
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