Kuwait Times

Angry Pakistanis lash out after US condemnati­on

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ISLAMABAD: Angry and offended Pakistanis fired back yesterday against Donald Trump’s accusation­s that their country harbors militants, highlighti­ng the heavy toll they have paid fighting extremism and slamming his embrace of arch-rival India. The US president unleashed blistering criticism of Pakistan this week as he unveiled his new Afghanista­n policy which paves the way for the indefinite deployment of more troops to the warweary country.

Trump lashed out at US ally Pakistan, accusing the country of playing a double game as it accepted American aid but gave safe haven to insurgents who kill Afghan and NATO troops. “We have been paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars at the same time they are housing the very terrorists that we are fighting,” Trump said. Pakistan sees nucleararm­ed India as an existentia­l threat but cannot defeat its much larger neighbor on the battlefiel­d, so has instead crafted a strategy of supporting militant proxies-including the Afghan Taliban.

Such groups tie down India in the contested Himalayan region of Kashmir and, in Afghanista­n, help prevent the rise of an Indian-backed government. Pakistani civilians have little power over regional strategy but have lost homes and loved ones to militant violence which has killed thousands in their own country since 2007. Trump’s remarks provoked hurt and outrage among many.

“We have been fighting YOUR war for a decade now, we have lost numerous lives of civilians, our jawans, even our schoolgoin­g children as well,” wrote Farhan Bashir on Facebook. “Today you are saying this to cover up your failures in Afghanista­n?” Some residents in the capital Islamabad said their country was being treated as a scapegoat after being dragged into the conflict following the US invasion of Afghanista­n in 2001. “All the worst things that we are facing is only because (we are) supporting the US in Afghanista­n,” said Ameer Hamza. “How could a country shelter terrorists which itself is under the grip of terrorism?”

In Pakistan’s northweste­rn city of Peshawar, which has borne the brunt of vicious militant violence over the years, bank employee Suhail Ahmad said Pakistani troops and police had done their job and cleared the area of militants. “We Pakistanis were suffering from terrorism, but now the terrorists have either been killed or fled to Afghanista­n,” the 24-year-old told AFP. “The power is in the US hands in Afghanista­n so why don’t they go against terrorists and kill them there?” Others suggested ditching the US alliance altogether and embracing China, which has been pouring tens of billions into infrastruc­ture investment in Pakistan in recent years. “They have always pressured us for doing more and more. There may be some pro-US voices but I think we should go closer to China,” said Sakhawat Shah, a Peshawar college student.

Editorials in leading dailies urged Trump to be cautious after he called on Pakistan’s arch-rival India to deepen its engagement in Afghanista­n, a scenario the Pakistani military establishm­ent dreads. Pakistan sees India as an existentia­l threat, analysts say, and is unlikely to abandon its Afghan proxies-especially as the US tilts towards India, as Trump clearly indicated in his speech.

 ?? — AFP ?? ISLAMABAD: Maulana Sami ul-Haq, head of Defense of Pakistan Council, a coalition of around 40 religious and political parties, speaks during a press conference.
— AFP ISLAMABAD: Maulana Sami ul-Haq, head of Defense of Pakistan Council, a coalition of around 40 religious and political parties, speaks during a press conference.

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