Ties between the US and Pakistan strained after Donald Trump last year hit out at Pakistan for providing safe havens to "agents of chaos" that kill Americans
![]() |
Pakistani forces patrol a neighbourhood after a terror attack (File)
HIGHLIGHTS
1.
Donald Trump said
Pakistan doesn't "a damn thing" for the US
2.
He alleged Pakistan
helped Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden hide
3.
Mr Trump has said Pakistan
gave safe havens to "agents of chaos"
The US has suspended $1.66
billion in security assistance to Pakistan after President Donald Trump's
directive, the Pentagon has said, in what experts believe is a strong signal of
American frustration. The Pentagon's statement came days after Mr Trump said
Pakistan does not do "a damn thing" for the US, alleging that its
government had helped Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden hide near its garrison
city of Abbottabad.
"$1.66 billion of security
assistance to Pakistan is suspended," Col. Rob Manning, spokesman of the
Department of Defence, told reporters in an e-mail response to questions on
Tuesday. No further breakdown of the suspended security assistance to Pakistan
was provided.
According to David Sedney, who
served as Deputy Assistant Secretary Defence for Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Central Asia during the previous Obama administration, the blocking of military
assistance to Pakistan, which began in January this year, is a strong signal of
American frustration.
"But, so far Pakistan has
taken no serious steps to address the core US concern - that Pakistan tolerates
and often encourages groups which use violence against Pakistan's
neighbours," Mr Sedney said. "Pakistan's leaders have promised
cooperation, but beyond words, serious cooperation has not happened, therefore
President Trump is frustrated and so are most Americans," he said in
response to a question.
"This frustration does not
ignore the suffering that Pakistani people have undergone. It just asks
Pakistan to recognise that it should act to help stop the suffering of others,"
said the Senior Associate at the Centre for Strategic and International
Studies, a think tank.
Mr Sedney was part of the
Pentagon when Osama bin Laden was killed in a raid by US commandos in
Pakistan's Abbottabad.
Over the last few days, Mr Trump
has said that people in Pakistan knew about the presence of Laden. "I
agree with the views of Carlotta Gall of the New York Times who reported in her
book 'The Wrong Enemy' that a very small group of very senior Pakistani
military leaders knew about bin Laden's presence in Pakistan. I have not seen
any evidence that his presence in Abbottabad was widely known by many in
Pakistan," Mr Sedney said.
While Pakistan has suffered
terribly from terrorism, Islamabad has also enabled terror groups that attack
its neighbours, he said.
Ties between the US and Pakistan
strained after Mr Trump, while announcing his Afghanistan and South Asia policy
in August last year, hit out at Pakistan for providing safe havens to
"agents of chaos" that kill Americans in Afghanistan and warned
Islamabad that it has "much to lose" by harbouring terrorists.
In September, the Trump
administration cancelled $300 million in military aid to Islamabad for not
doing enough against terror groups like the Haqqani Network and the Taliban
active on its soil.
Source:https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/in-signal-of-us-frustration-with-pakistan-donald-trump-cancels-1-66-billion-aid-1950834?pfrom=home-livetv
No comments:
Post a Comment