Close X
Thursday, December 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Accuses Pakistan Of Playing 'Double Game' On Fighting Terrorism

IANS, 03 Jan, 2018 12:44 PM
    The US has accused Pakistan of playing a “double game” on fighting terrorism and asked Islamabad to take decisive action against militants operating from its soil to “earn” the American aid.
     
     
    The tough message from the US came after an angry tweet from President Donald Trump on New Year’s day that America had been rewarded with “nothing but lies and deceit” by Pakistan in return for its over USD 33 billion aid in the last 15 years.
     
     
    Soon after the President’s tweet, the White House confirmed that the US had suspended its USD 255 million military aid to Pakistan.
     
     
    US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley came out in support of Trump’s decision to block aid to Pakistan and said, “There are clear reasons for this. Pakistan has played a double game for years.”
     
     
    “They (Pakistanis) work with us at times, and they also harbour the terrorists that attack our troops in Afghanistan. That game is not acceptable to this administration,” Haley told reporters at the UN headquarters in New York on Tuesday.
     
     
    The Trump administration expected far more cooperation from Pakistan in the fight against terrorism, she said.
     
     
    “Trump is willing to go to great lengths to stop all funding for Pakistan as they continue to harbour and support terrorism,” Haley said.
    The Indian-American diplomat said the aid issue was connected solely to Pakistan’s harbouring of terrorists.
     
     
    State Department Spokesperson Heather Nauert, speaking at her daily news conference, described Pakistan as an “important partner” and said Islamabad must do more to combat terrorism.
     
     
    “The United States expects Pakistan to take decisive action against the Haqqani Network and other militants who are operating from its soil,” said Nauert.
     
     
    “Pakistan is an important partner. We have a lot of issues in that region. Pakistan knows that, we all know that, and we try to work carefully together on some of those issues. I don’t want to say that Pakistan can do more, but Pakistan knows what it needs to do,” she said.
     
     
    Speaking about the US decision to withhold USD 255 million military aid to Pakistan, Nauert said the decision was taken in August and Pakistan would need to “earn” such assistance through sincere action.
     
     
    “They need to earn, essentially, the money that we have provided in the past in foreign military assistance, they need to show that they are sincere in their efforts to crack down on terrorists,” she said.
     
     
    Nauert said Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, who visited Pakistan in the last couple of months, had conveyed the same message to the country’s leadership.
     
     
    The White House also defended Trump and asked Pakistan to do more to combat terrorism.
     
     
    “We know that Pakistan can do more to fight and stop terrorism and we want them to step up and do that. That seems pretty simple,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters in Washington.
     
     
    Sanders said Pakistan had failed to fulfil its obligations in the fight against terrorism.
     
     
    “The President outlined a new strategy for Afghanistan and South Asia earlier this past year, in August. And at that time, he laid out and said that Pakistan is not fulfilling its obligations,” said Sanders.
     
     
    Trump in August announced his new South Asia policy and accused Pakistan of harbouring terrorists.
     
     
    “The President is simply following through on a commitment that he made, because this is a president who does what he says he’s going to do,” she said.
     
     
    Pakistan on Tuesday expressed “deep disappointment” over Trump’s allegations, saying the accusations struck with “great insensitivity” at the “trust” between the two countries.
     
     
    Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif in a tweet challenged Trump’s claim that the US had given Pakistan more than USD 33 billion dollars as aid over the last 15 years, saying verification by an audit firm would prove the US President wrong.
     
     
    Pakistan also summoned US Ambassador David Hale to register its protest after Trump’s tweet. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore
    Yelchur Sreenivas, 51, was robbed by Srinath Bari Ramdeo Bari and two accomplices near Towner Road as he was returning home on May 25 last year, the Strait Times reported on Thursday.  

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer
    You are aware that there was a longstanding request from the mother of Kulbhushan Jadhav to visit Pakistan and meet her son

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer

    Pakistan Court Orders Release Of Hafiz Saeed

    A Pakistan court on Wednesday ordered the release of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Saeed, blamed for the horrific 2008 Mumbai terror attack, from house arrest that began in January this year.  

    Pakistan Court Orders Release Of Hafiz Saeed

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US
    Ajit Pai said the FCC will vote on December 14 to rescind the so-called net neutrality rules championed by Democratic former President Barack Obama.

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox
    US-based YouTube star Vidya Vox says that, while growing up, she tried to shun her Indian heritage as she was often bullied in school. But she is now "100 per cent" proud of her roots and feels it is great to be an Indian in the US right now.

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper
    Savaan Mundae, aeronautics student from Buckinghamshire New University who was training to be a commercial pilot, died with his instructor Jaspal Bahra when their plane collided with a chopper. Both aircraft disintegrated on impact and plummeted to the ground.

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper