Texarkana Gazette

U.S. presses Pakistan on extremists

- By Josh Lederman

WASHINGTON—The United States will hold up $255 million in military assistance for Pakistan until it cracks down on extremist groups that threaten neighborin­g Afghanista­n, officials said Thursday, in the first concrete step since President Donald Trump vowed to ramp up pressure on Pakistan.

In his new strategy for the 16-year Afghan war, Trump singled out Pakistan for harboring Taliban leaders and other militants that are battling American troops in Afghanista­n. Trump’s tough words about Pakistan, a troubled U.S. security partner, infuriated Islamabad and triggered anti-U.S. protests that Pakistani police have had to use tear gas to disperse.

Although the Trump administra­tion had floated the possibilit­y of curtailing aid, hitting Islamabad with sanctions or severing its status as a major non-NATO ally, it had been unclear until Thursday exactly what types of measures the administra­tion would pursue, or how quickly.

“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 in his Afghanista­n speech. “But that will have to change.”

Trump’s administra­tion had faced a Sept. 30 deadline either to say that it planned to spend the $255 million, or lose it. Ahead of that deadline, the administra­tion told Congress that it will indeed use the money, but is putting a “pause” on spending it or on assigning any funds to specific sales of military equipment to the Pakistanis.

State Department officials said the funds won’t be released until the U.S. sees that Pakistan is more successful­ly addressing U.S. concerns about safe havens in the country for groups including the Haqqani network, which is allied with the Afghan Taliban and has been blamed for some of Afghanista­n’s worst attacks. The officials weren’t authorized to comment by name and requested anonymity.

But Pakistan has long maintained that its purported Taliban ties and tolerance of extremists groups are overblown, arguing it is already doing its best to help the U.S. stabilize Afghanista­n. And American officials wouldn’t describe any specific steps they were demanding that Pakistan take, nor would they say whether they’d even communicat­ed such steps privately to the Pakistanis.

The vague nature of the U.S. demands on Pakistan, coupled with the split-the-difference approach of putting the promised funds aside indefinite­ly, suggested the Trump administra­tion was still struggling to settle on its Pakistan policy even after the president unveiled it with fanfare in a prime-time address. On Afghanista­n, too, the plan is a work in progress, with Pentagon officials still determinin­g a final number for how many more U.S. troops will be sent to Afghanista­n.

“This is symbolic more than significan­t, on both sides,” said Ambassador Jim Jeffries, a former longtime diplomat now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “The Pakistanis will push the usual buttons of protests and complaints and diplomatic anger, but they will also think, ‘Boy, what else will Trump do?’”

Islamabad has already reacted angrily to Trump’s allegation that the country harbors extremists, with the country’s lower house of parliament passing a resolution this week denouncing his claim. Security analyst have also warned that isolating Pakistan could lead it to seek closer ties with Russia, Iran and China—rival powers whose influence in the region is a longstandi­ng concern for the U.S.

 ?? AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad ?? n Pakistani protesters burn an effigy of President Donald Trump on Thursday in Peshawar, Pakistan. Protesters objected to Trump’s allegation that Islamabad is harboring militants who battle U.S. forces in Afghanista­n.
AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad n Pakistani protesters burn an effigy of President Donald Trump on Thursday in Peshawar, Pakistan. Protesters objected to Trump’s allegation that Islamabad is harboring militants who battle U.S. forces in Afghanista­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States