Khawaja Asif decries US as 'friend who always betrays'

Islamabad accuses United States of disrespecting its vast sacrifices in fighting terrorism

Foreign Minister Khuwaja Asif. PHOTO: AFP

ISLAMABAD/LAHORE:
Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif has said the United States was behaving towards Pakistan as “a friend who always betrays” after Washington suspended aid and President Donald Trump accused Islamabad of lies and deceit over many years.

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan also said it was time for Pakistan to “delink” from the United states and run down US diplomatic and intelligence presence in what is a sensitive strategic area.

Washington accused Pakistan of playing a “double game” by assisting Afghan Taliban and Haqqani network militants causing chaos 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.

You carried out 57,800 attacks on Afghanistan from our bases: Khawaja Asif tells US

Anti-American sentiment and tense US-Pakistan ties are some way off their recent nadir in 2011, when Osama bin Laden was killed in a secret US raid inside Pakistan, but the harsh rhetoric is likely to make it harder to mend future ties.

“The US behavior is neither that of an ally nor of a friend,” Asif told a private TV channel late on Thursday. “It is a friend who always betrays.”

Small groups of students chanting “Death to America” and “Death to Trump” burnt American flags and torched photos of Trump after Friday prayers in Islamabad and Lahore. The organised protests ended swiftly.

On Friday, Foreign Office criticised what it called “shifting goalposts” after the US confirmed it would suspend all security assistance, believed to total at least $900 million, until Pakistan stopped assisting militants.

US is Trumpeting India's ‘lies and deceit’: Khawaja Asif

Other official government statements in response to Trump’s tweet have been measured but Foreign Minister Asif and several other prominent politicians have lashed out repeatedly.

Imran said Trump’s tweet and other US comments were part of “deliberate attempts to humiliate and insult the Pakistani nation” and called for retaliation.

“It is time for Pakistan to delink from the US,” he said in a statement, which called for an immediate removal of “excessive US diplomatic, non-diplomatic and intelligence personnel from Pakistan”.

Imran also called for a suspension of land and air transport routes through Pakistan that the US uses to resupply NATO troops in Afghanistan, a move Pakistani officials privately say is unlikely unless relations drastically deteriorate.


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

The aid suspension was largely expected by Islamabad but Pakistani officials were taken aback by Trump’s withering tweet and the tone of US announcements.

“The FBI, his political opponents, African-American football players are used to Trump criticizing them like this on Twitter -- we are not used to it,” said one minister.

“We were seriously shocked.”

Politicians such as Asif and Imran have been delivering anti-American statements partly to placate domestic audiences, analysts say, with one eye on general elections due in mid-2018.

“This is the election period and for the first time in Pakistan’s history, anti-Americanism will become an issue in an election campaign,” said writer and analyst Zahid Hussain.

“Ready to eat grass”

There is a long history of anti-Americanism in Pakistan and after the Osama bin Laden raid, which many Pakistanis saw as violation of the country’s sovereignty, relations neared breaking point in 2011.

That year, NATO forces bombed a Pakistani army checkpoint, killing 24 soldiers, and CIA contractor Raymond Davis shot dead two people in Lahore.

In Peshawar, many people cited the aid suspensions as another reason for Pakistan to sever ties with Washington.

“We are ready to eat grass, but only if our leaders become honest and make bold decisions against the Americans,” said Jalal Noor Khan, 48, a food merchant.

The flag burnings in Lahore and Islamabad were organised by student organizations with links to hardline religious groups. About 60 students were protesting in Islamabad and another 100 in Lahore.

“The US flag and Trump’s photos are under our feet. It’s a message to them that they will face the same if they did anything wrong against Pakistan,” said Rana Zeeshan, one of the student organisers of the Lahore protest.

“We will erase the US from the world’s map.”
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