BFF-28 Pakistan summons US ambassador over Trump tweet

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PAKISTAN-US-DIPLOMACY-MILITANCY-POLITICS

Pakistan summons US ambassador over Trump tweet

ISLAMABAD, Jan 2, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Pakistan has summoned the US
ambassador, an embassy spokesman said Tuesday, a rare public rebuke after
Donald Trump lashed out at Islamabad with threats to cut aid over “lies”
about militancy.

Ambassador David Hale was asked to go to the foreign office in the
Pakistani capital on Monday night, after Islamabad responded angrily to the
US President’s allegations that it provided safe havens for militants in the
latest spat to rock their alliance.

A US embassy spokesman confirmed Hale met officials, but added: “We don’t
have any comment on the substance of the meeting.”

There was no immediate response from foreign office officials.

Trump used his first tweet of 2018 to tear into Islamabad.

“The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion
dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but
lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools,” Trump said in the early-
morning New Year’s Day tweet.

“They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little
help. No more!”

Pakistan hit back swiftly, saying it had done much for the United States,
helping it to “decimate” Al-Qaeda, while getting only “invective & mistrust”
in return in angry comments from its foreign and defence ministers.

Islamabad has repeatedly denied the accusations of turning a blind eye to
militancy, lambasting the United States for ignoring the thousands who have
been killed on its soil and the billions spent fighting extremists.

After the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in the United States,
Washington forged a strategic alliance with Islamabad to help in its fight
against militancy.

But US leaders have often complained that Pakistan, long accused by
Washington and Kabul of supporting the Taliban, has done too little to help.

MORE/MR/ 1212 hrs

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Of foremost concern is Islamabad’s attitude toward the powerful Haqqani
network, whose leader Sirajuddin Haqqani is the deputy leader of the Afghan
Taliban. The group is accused of some of the most lethal attacks on US forces
in Afghanistan, and was dubbed by America’s former top military officer Mike
Mullen as a “veritable arm” of Pakistani intelligence.

For many years it found safe haven in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous
northwestern tribal areas.

However the Pakistani military launched an operation there in 2014, and now
insists it has eradicated all safe havens in the country.

US-Pakistani ties, long contentious, have taken a nosedive under Trump, who
first signaled that the Washington was reassessing the fractious relationship
in August, when he accused Islamabad of harboring “agents of chaos.”

The remarks triggered a series of high-level diplomatic meetings in the US
and Pakistan, but Islamabad has given few signs of concessions.

The Trump administration told Congress in August it was weighing whether to
withhold $255 million in earmarked aid to Islamabad over its failure to crack
down more effectively on terror groups in Pakistan.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1212 hrs