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    Experts: US aid 'snub' to Pakistan blow to America

    ISLAMABAD (AP) — The decision to suspend more than one-third of American military aid to Pakistan could end up hurting Washington more than Islamabad as the U.S. seeks to navigate an end to the Afghan war and defeat al-Qaida, former Pakistani officials and analysts warned Monday.

    Holding back the $800 million in aid is unlikely to pressure Pakistan to increase cooperation with the U.S. and could strengthen those in the government who argue that Washington is a fickle ally who can't be trusted, they said.

    "If you still need the relationship, which clearly the United States does, then it really doesn't make sense to take action at this time because it leaves the United States with less, not more, influence with the Pakistani military," said Maleeha Lodhi, a former Pakistani ambassador to the U.S. "Cooperation cannot be coerced by punitive actions."

    Despite billions of dollars in American aid since the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the relationship has long been tense because of Pakistan's reluctance to target Taliban militants on its territory who stage cross-border attacks against NATO troops in Afghanistan.

    The relationship took a nose dive on May 2 when U.S. commandos staged a covert raid to kill al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town not far from Islamabad. The raid humiliated the Pakistani military, which ordered U.S. trainers out of the country and reduced bilateral cooperation.

    President Barack Obama's chief of staff, William Daley, said Sunday that the U.S. was suspending $800 million in aid to the Pakistani military until the two countries can patch up their relationship.

    But Tariq Fatemi, another former Pakistani ambassador to the U.S., said he thought the American strategy to pressure Pakistan was destined for failure.

    "I think it is unwise to expect the Pakistanis to buckle under what is a publicly delivered snub," said Fatemi. "It will strengthen those elements in the armed forces that have always had grave misgivings of the relationship with the United States."

    Many Pakistanis have never forgiven the U.S. for slapping sanctions on the country in 1990 because of its work to develop a nuclear weapon. The decision came only a year after Pakistan and the U.S. were successful in a decade-long quest to drive the Soviets out of Afghanistan.

    The sanctions left many Pakistanis with a sense that the U.S. was only interested in a "transactional" relationship that it could abandon once its interests were served.

    Fatemi, the former ambassador, said the U.S. decision appeared to undercut claims by Obama administration officials that the U.S. was interested in a long-term relationship that encompassed much more than counterterrorism cooperation.

    Pakistan army spokesman Maj. Gen. Abbas said Sunday that the military had received no official notice from the U.S. that aid was being suspended. He also said that the loss of aid would have no effect on military operations against Islamist militants in the country because they were being conducted with Pakistan's own resources.

    "I think it hurts Washington more than it hurts Islamabad," said Lodhi, the former ambassador. "Assistance is influence, and when you withhold it or suspend it, you deprive yourself of influence."

    Pakistan army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani seemed to pre-empt the effect of the aid cut in a speech after the bin Laden raid — saying all U.S. military assistance now should be diverted to improve the country's economy and help common Pakistanis.

    "They want to end any impression that they are some kind of hired help," said Lodhi.

    Some analysts have predicted that the suspension of military aid could hurt the military's war against the Pakistani Taliban over the long run, especially since the country is suffering an economic slump.

    But Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani defense analyst, said that Pakistan's close relationship with China could offset the impact. Pakistan has long purchased military equipment and missiles from China at lower-cost rates and bought fighter aircraft from the country last year, she said.

    The Pakistani military is "trying to go the Chinese way," said Siddiqa.

    It is unclear what other actions Pakistan will take in response to the suspension of U.S. military aid. It could be less helpful in targeting al-Qaida fighters within the country and in pushing Afghan Taliban militants with whom it has historical ties to negotiate an end to the Afghan war.

    Pakistan is also believed to secretly support U.S. drone strikes against militants in the country's mountainous tribal region. That support has been shaken in the wake of the bin Laden raid and could be further imperiled by the suspension of aid.

    One of the most high-profile points of leverage that the Pakistanis have with the U.S. is the shipment of a large percentage of non-lethal supplies through the country to NATO troops in Afghanistan. Pakistan temporarily closed the border to NATO supplies last year after an accidental U.S. helicopter strike killed two Pakistani troops. It is unclear if the suspension of aid could provoke a similar response.

    "When you take this kind of action, you reinforce the transactional nature of the relationship," said Lodhi. "The moment you do that all bets are off because the response will not be a very positive one."

    But Lodhi also noted that Pakistan and the U.S. do share common interests in combatting terrorism and fostering a stable Afghanistan — even if the details don't always match up.

    "The common interest is there, but the question is can we walk back from the brink and find common ground to rebuild trust step by step?"

    ___

    Associated Press writer Kathy Gannon contributed to this report.

     

    222 comments

    • Castlehaven  •  10 mths ago
      All of the quoted "experts" are Pakistanis. What would you expect them to say? Where is the balance in this story?
      • Noggy 10 mths ago
        I've got a quote for these so-called experts...we don't take kindly to being used or manipulated. And we should point out to those who fail to see the big picture that the AQ and the Taliban's militant factions are sitting in Pakistan's backyard...not ours. So who really needs who more? It would seem that the Pakistani military is so prideful it has lost all sense of reason. Makes one really wonder if they were harboring Bin Laden while taking our tax dollars. And for the reporter writing this piece...what about striking balance by presenting more than just the Pakistani viewpoint of this situation. I would love to hear an American official's take on this moneypit.
      • modyboss 10 mths ago
        by reading all these comments i got to a conclusion that we can never be friends with these bastards and pork americans .YOU HATE US BUT WE HATE YOU MORE THAN YOU HATE US .LONGLIVE PAK-CHINA FRIENDSHIP
    • chgonwburb  •  10 mths ago
      One third makes no difference. Let's go for three thirds.
    • Physal  •  10 mths ago
      if you pay them, you would not get cooperation, if do not pay them you will not get any cooperation... at least with the lather, we know where we stand.
      • Physal 10 mths ago
        meant latter
      • William 10 mths ago
        Cheaper too. . . .
      • Physal 10 mths ago
        A COUNTRY THAT DOES NOT HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY TO MAKE RADIATION DETECTION EQUIPMENT, DOES NOT HAVE THE RIGHT TO OWN, OPERATE OR DENOLOPE NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY
    • Forsaken  •  10 mths ago
      Most of the "Aid" money was syphoned off for personal gain by the higher ups in Pakistan. Needless to say the people never benefitted from the taxes my great grandchildren will be paying to pay off the interest on those pay outs to them.
      • Tristangwb 10 mths ago
        Worse, aid always comes with strings attached. I'll give you X as long as it's to pay for what I what I tell you to buy. So, let's say we bomb a motorway, fine, we'll give you aid to rebuild it but it must be an american contractor. It's a closed circuit and abroad only the elite contacts of the US benefit by getting a commission to pass off the deal as positive to the population who end up getting nothing. Some naïve person here will now say they get a motorway, yes, but they had one before it was bombed by the US and who used it, not your local population, can't afford a car.
    • Jim  •  10 mths ago
      end all aid now.
      • bld 10 mths ago
        we need to stop all aid except countries who are real friends.and we get our books in order.
      • Paul 10 mths ago
        Stoping all aid wont help the books the US debt is 2500 times bigger than all aid given out by us
      • Noggy 10 mths ago
        I don't believe we should stop all foreign aid but I do believe we need to do a better job in determining if our investment in these countries has been equal to what we are getting in return. If not...then we really are nation building at the expense of our own and that is not sustainable and never will be.
    • JDK  •  10 mths ago
      1/3 are you sh@tting me. So we are giving these people over $1.2 Billion a year in financial aid? Oh theres gonna be some serious #$$% change all right!!!!
      • SohoBobo 10 mths ago
        How you plan do that? With exclamation points?
    • Andy  •  10 mths ago
      If you pay someone to cut your grass, and they refuse to cut your grass, and use the money you give them to buy spray paint and scrawl graffiti all over your house, do you keep paying them?
    • ROGER W  •  10 mths ago
      Sounds like you only asked Pakistanis what they thought, we speaking as someone who is helping foot the bill i say, #%%% off Pakistan, we dont need friends like them, they lie,cheat and are not even close to being a loyal friend. I say cut them off completely..I for one am tired of paying other countries all this money..why dont we take care of business here first?
    • Taxpayer-700B  •  10 mths ago
      This is a big mistake. The US should suspend all aid to Pakistan. They're playing us for chumps. They know the money is supposed to support their efforts to squash Al Quaida, and if they were ever successful in that endeavor, the money would stop. So we can either continue to pay them to pretend they're fighting Al Quaida, or we can not pay them to do the same. They're worried about destroying the "relationship". With friends like that, who needs enemies?
    • ppdxfsa  •  10 mths ago
      "I think it hurts Washington more than it hurts Islamabad," said Lodhi, the former ambassador. "Assistance is influence, and when you withhold it or suspend it, you deprive yourself of influence."

      Assistance is bribery, and when the loser nation does not fulfill it's end of the "agreement" then you cancel it.
    • Michael  •  10 mths ago
      The American people should stop supporting terrorists.
    • Ken  •  10 mths ago
      I never had to pay anyone to be my friend or be loyal. If the money that paid them this far has not given us what we paid for like intel about our enemy like bin laden and other related info that tells me I'm financing the worst of my enemies.
    • Phil  •  10 mths ago
      Screw em!
    • Al Davis  •  10 mths ago
      When will our idiot politicians learn? Never is my guess.
    • T-shirt  •  10 mths ago
      Frightening that the U.S. A form of black mail - we are held hostage paying millions upon millions to a country that never improves, never steps up to help us. %%$$
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      love the statement that the us and pakistan pushed ussr out of afganistan...I was under the impression that the talliban had more to do with that!
    • rodf  •  10 mths ago
      The Paki's can go whiz up a rope. They play both sides of this and are not our 'friends'.
    • Beachcomber  •  10 mths ago
      This article, like most MSM "news" articles is nothing but an internationalist propaganda piece. Suspend 100% of aid to Pakistan and put them on notice if they want to be our enemy we WILL show them exactly what that means. No instead we are like the little kid who pays the schoolyard bully to be his "friend". That kid has no respect, is laughed at to his face, and his protection money is just wasted. And why do we have such a large military and nuclear arsenal if we are going to pay some $$$# ant country like Pakistan money like this only to have them stab us in the back? Those in Washington DC who continue to give OUR money to such countries should be brought up on charges of TREASON.
    • JC  •  10 mths ago
      Aid in whatever form should be suspended for many countries; bring the money back home. It's time for our Government to put effort in our economy, our people, our troops back home. We need to invest in AMERICA. Show taxpayers that their money is working for them. We need a responsible Government who takes care of the home front FIRST. AMERICA should be the focus NOW. We've reached our goal, which was to eliminate Bin Laden, now he's gone, bring the money back to AMERICA.
    • dennis  •  10 mths ago
      If it were my choice a 100% reduction in aid, and start a repayment plan for all the aid money they have taken and not used for the cause it was given, and stop all trade with them, no more importing from Pakistan. once they have proven that they want to be part of the global fair trade orginazation then allow imports from there, only if it can not be produced with in the USA borders.
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