Pentagon moves to scrap $300 million in aid to Pakistan
WASHINGTON (AFP) – The US military plans to cancel $300 million in aid to Pakistan due to Islamabad's lack of ''decisive actions'' in support of American strategy in the region, the Pentagon said Saturday.
The US has been pushing Pakistan to crack down on militant safe havens in the country, and announced a freeze on aid at the beginning of the year that an official said could be worth almost $2 billion.
The Defense Department has sought to cut aid by $300 million ''due to a lack of Pakistani decisive actions in support of the South Asia Strategy,'' Lieutenant Colonel Kone Faulkner said in an email to AFP.
''We continue to press Pakistan to indiscriminately target all terrorist groups,'' Faulkner said, adding that the latest aid cut request was pending Congressional approval.
Pakistan has fought fierce campaigns against homegrown militant groups, and says it has lost thousands of lives and spent billions of dollars in its long war on extremism.
But US officials accuse Islamabad of ignoring or even collaborating with groups, which attack Afghanistan from safe havens along the border between the two countries.
The White House believes that Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency and other military bodies have long helped fund and arm the Taliban for ideological reasons, but also to counter rising Indian influence in Afghanistan.
It also believes that a Pakistani crackdown could be pivotal in deciding the outcome of the long-running war in Afghanistan.
US frustration has boiled over before: President Donald Trump's predecessor Barack Obama authorized drone strikes on Pakistani safe havens and sent US commandos to kill jihadist kingpin Osama bin Laden in his Abbottabad hideout.
But Trump's aggressive language has especially angered Pakistani officials.
''The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools,'' Trump wrote on Twitter at the beginning of the year.