The Borneo Post

US defence chief lands in Pakistan as ties between allies fray

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ISLAMABAD: US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis arrived in Pakistan yesterday as Washington pressures its wayward ally to eliminate militant safe havens, days after Pakistani authoritie­s freed an alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

Mattis landed at an air force base in the garrison city of Rawalpindi bordering Islamabad, according to a pool report, before heading to the US embassy.

During the brief stopover in the capital, he is set to hold talks with Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and the powerful military chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa.

Mattis’s first visit to the country as defense secretary of defense comes as the US pushes its longtime ally to do more to combat insurgents who allegedly use bases in Pakistan’s tribal belt to target Nato troops in Afghanista­n.

Relations suffered a further blow after a Pakistani court ordered the release of firebrand cleric Hafiz Saeed in late November, prompting a furious response from the White House.

Saeed heads the UN- listed terrorist group Jamaat- udDawa and has a US$ 10 million US bounty on his head. He had been under house arrest but was released after a court in Lahore said officials had not provided any evidence of his role in the days- long assault on India’s capital which killed more than 160 people.

The decision to release Saeed coincided with the beleaguere­d government’s capitulati­on to Islamist protesters holding a sitin in the Pakistani capital.

The deal, which the military helped broker, saw the federal law minister resign over blasphemy allegation­s.

It sent shockwaves through the country, sparking fears that the military was doing little to keep extremism in check after supporting the demands of a small group of hardliners.

President Donald Trump first signalled that the US was reassessin­g its fractious relations with Pakistan during a televised speech in August, launching a blistering attack on Islamabad for harbouring “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 to Washington.

Pakistan has consistent­ly rejected claims it supports Taliban- allied forces, insisting it maintains contacts with insurgents only as a means to bring them to the table for peace talks.

Pakistan, which has long harboured fears of encircleme­nt by arch- rival India, has also bristled at Trump’s calls for an increased Indian role in rebuilding Afghanista­n.

Last week the commander of US forces in Afghanista­n, General John Nicholson, said Islamabad had not carried out the ‘clear’ demands made by Washington.

“We have not seen those changes implemente­d yet,” he told reporters. — AFP

 ??  ?? A handout photo provided by the Kuwaiti news agency KUNA shows Kuwaiti Army Chief of Staff General Lieutenant Mohammad al-Khodhr (centre right) receiving Mattis (centre left) upon his arrival at Kuwait’s internatio­nal airport in Kuwait City. Mattis...
A handout photo provided by the Kuwaiti news agency KUNA shows Kuwaiti Army Chief of Staff General Lieutenant Mohammad al-Khodhr (centre right) receiving Mattis (centre left) upon his arrival at Kuwait’s internatio­nal airport in Kuwait City. Mattis...

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