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Monday, March 28, 2011

Clinton hints at strained Pak-US ties

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described relations between the United States and Pakistan on Sunday as ‘very challenging,’ a tacit admission of strained ties between the key allies. Speaking after Pakistan boycotted a trilateral meeting on Afghanistan in Brussels in protest at a drone attack that killed 39 people, Clinton said Islamabad was caught between wanting to help and dealing with its own extremist threat. “It’s a very challenging relationship,” she said in an interview with the ABC programme ‘This Week.’ “But I think, on the other hand, we’ve also developed good lines of communication, good opportunities for cooperation, but it’s something we have to work on every day,” she said. Clinton noted the cooperation of the Pakistani government in securing the release of Raymond Davis as well as in the fight against al Qaeda. “We were very appreciative of getting our diplomat out of Pakistan, and that took cooperation by the government of Pakistan,” she said, adding, “We have cooperated very closely together in going after terrorists who pose a threat to both of us and to the Pakistanis themselves.” Washington always insisted that Davis had diplomatic immunity from prosecution. Intelligence sources in the northwestern city of Peshawar said 12 Pakistani Taliban militants were among those killed in the March 17 drone strike on a militant hideout in the North Waziristan tribal region. But the US ambassador was called in to meet with Foreign Secretary, Salman Bashir, who conveyed ‘a strong protest’ over the attack and demanded an apology and explanation from the United States. “Pakistan should not be taken for granted nor treated as a client state,” a Foreign Ministry statement said, adding, “It was for the White House and the State Department to hold back those who have been trying to veer Pakistan-US relationship away from the track.” afp

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

 

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