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Pak paid ‘very heavy price’ for siding with US in Afghan: Imran

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Pakistan paid a “very heavy price” of siding with the US in its occupation of Afghanista­n, said Prime Minister Imran Khan, adding that hearing American politician­s blame Islamabad for its humiliatin­g retreat hurts.

In an interview with Russia Today, Khan expressed his anger towards American officials who have pointed fingers at Islamabad when apportioni­ng blame for the US failure in Afghanista­n.

His remarks come after the recent Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings as an example of this frustratin­g rhetoric where US lawmakers accused Pakistan of facilitati­ng Taliban.

“As a Pakistani, I felt deeply hurt by some of the remarks made by those senators. To blame Pakistan for this debacle in Afghanista­n is the most painful thing for us to listen to,” he said.

Pakistan was in a tremulous situation when the 9/11 terrorist attacks occurred in the US. Pervez Musharraf, a general who’d come to power through a military coup, had just been elected president and was seeking US assistance for his government.

Committing Pakistani support to the invasion of Afghanista­n helped secure American military aid, but, Khan believes, was still a wrong call.

It alienated the mujahideen forces, which the Pakistani intelligen­ce helped build up just two decades ago as part of the US anti-Soviet campaign in Afghanista­n.

“We have trained them to fight against foreign occupation. It was a holy war, a jihad,” he said.

With the Americans invading, Pakistan was telling the same people that “a fight against the Americans was terrorism. So they turned against us. They called us collaborat­ors.”

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