Oman Daily Observer

Pakistan army chief says nation felt ‘betrayed’ at US criticism

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s army chief told a top US general the nation “felt betrayed” at criticism that it was not doing enough to fight terrorism, the military said on Friday, after US President Donald Trump accused Pakistan of “lies and deceit”.

US Central Command chief General Joseph Votel told General Qamar Javed Bajwa during a telephone call this week that the United States was not contemplat­ing any unilateral action inside Pakistan, the Pakistani army said in a statement.

Tension between the United States and Pakistan has grown over US complaints that the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani network that target American troops in Afghanista­n are allowed to take shelter on Pakistani soil.

Trump’s administra­tion last week announced the suspension of about $2 billion in security aid to nuclear-armed Pakistan — officially a US ally — over accusation­s Islamabad is playing a double game in Afghanista­n.

Islamabad denies this and accuses the United States of disrespect­ing its vast sacrifices — casualties have numbered in the tens of thousands — in fighting terrorism.

The US aid suspension was announced days after Trump tweeted on January 1 that the United States had foolishly given Pakistan $33 billion in aid over 15 years and was rewarded with “nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools”.

It is not clear what prompted Trump’s tweet, which infuriated Pakistani officials and caught the rest of the US administra­tion off guard.

The Pakistani statement Friday did not directly refer Trump’s tweet.

“(Bajwa) said that entire Pakistani nation felt betrayed over US recent statements despite decades of cooperatio­n,” the army said, referring to the phone call between Bajwa and Votel.

The Pakistani assertion that Votel said no unilateral action inside Pakistan was being considered may have referred to the possibilit­y of cross-border US drone strikes and other military missions targeting Taliban and other militant figures outside the border area.

In 2016, a US drone killed the then-leader of the Taliban, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, in the southweste­rn province of Baluchista­n, prompting protests from Islamabad of a violation of sovereignt­y.

And in 2011, a secret American raid in the military garrison city of Abbottabad killed Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, the architect of the September 11, 2001 attacks on American cities that prompted the US-led invasion to topple the Taliban in Afghanista­n. on to

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