Gulf News

‘Pakistan’s neighbourh­ood affects relations with US’

Instabilit­y in Afghanista­n will first affect Islamabad, and China has been a friendly neighbour

- BY JUMANA AL TAMIMI Associate Editor

The issue of Afghanista­n, a country torn by decades of war, is the major obstacle for ongoing efforts to improve relations between Pakistan and the United States, Islamabad officials have said.

Other hurdles include the growing “friendly neighbourh­ood” between Pakistan and China, with Washington concerned by Beijing’s growing influence, they added.

Despite 17 years of war in Afghanista­n, peace has not returned to the country that was first on the list in America’s war on terrorism. “It is mainly Afghanista­n,” said Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Director-General of the Institute of Strategic Studies Centre in Islamabad, to a question on the hurdles in the way of growing Pakistani-American relations.

“We would like to continue to cooperate with the US, we still want to do that, but we can’t take the blame for Afghanista­n,” he said.

Washington has repeatedly called on Islamabad to do more to fight terrorism, but Pakistan has said it has already done its share.

After US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to Pakistan last week, and his talks with Pakistan leadership on fighting terrorism, media outlets came out a day later with a statement by the new Prime Minister Imran Khan saying “we will never again fight someone else’s war’.

One paper added “Pakistan First” to its headline.

Pakistan denied Washington’s accusation that some militant groups, who are targeting the American troops in Afghanista­n, are hiding in Pakistan or using bases in the country.

Islamabad says it has eliminated all the hideouts of militant groups and their members, paying a heavy price in its war on terrorism.

According to Pakistani officials and analysts the price has been the lives of 6,000 soldiers and 23,000 civilians, along with $123 billion of economic losses in Pakistan war to eradicate terrorism on its soil.

‘Wars won on table’

Meanwhile, Minister of Informatio­n Fawad Chaudhry, in a meeting with a visiting UAE media delegation to Pakistan recently, said wars were not won on battlefiel­ds.

“Wars are won on the table, wars are won by diplomacy,” said Fawad Chaudhry, a member of the newly formed cabinet. “And here, the US has failed in offering the peaceful solutions to the people of Afghanista­n, and to the region also.”

The US and the Afghan Taliban have been talking indirectly to each other for “a long time”, analysts say. Islamabad itself hosted, in 2015, a round of talks between Afghanista­n’s government and the Taliban. Pakistan, the US and China attended as observers.

The chairman of the Institute of Strategic Studies board’, Khalid Mahmoud, said that Pakistan wants to have good relations with the US, and will exert every effort to achieve such a goal, but the Pakistani-American relationsh­ip “has to be seen in the context of the global USChina-Russia relations”.

Relations between the two neighbouri­ng nations, Pakistan and China, are strong and friendly, especially in the economic and financial fields. But there were lots of “misunderst­andings and propaganda”, he said.

 ?? Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News ?? Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry
Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry
 ?? Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News ?? Khalid Mahmoud
Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News Khalid Mahmoud

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