Jun. 4, 2012 -
09:03PM | By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
WASHINGTON — The United States should apologize for an air raid
that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers if it wants Pakistan
to reopen key supply routes into Afghanistan , Foreign Minister Hina
Rabbani Khar said in an interview published June 4.
Angered over the lethal
November attack, Islamabad shut the supply
routes vital for U.S. and
allied troops, forcing the alliance to rely on longer, more expensive northern
routes through Russia and Central Asia .
“A representative
parliament of 180 million people has spoken on one subject,” Khar told Foreign
Policy magazine, referring to new guidelines for U.S.-Pakistan ties approved by
Pakistani lawmakers which call for an apology.
A U.S. apology is
“something which should have been forthcoming the day this incident happened,
and what a partnership not only demands, but requires,” she said.
The on-again, off-again
relationship between Islamabad and Washington is at a new low, and with U.S. elections looming in November, President
Barack Obama is unlikely to say sorry to Pakistan and make himself
vulnerable to attacks from his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney.
A NATO summit in Chicago ended two weeks
ago without a deal on the NATO supply lines.
Khar, however, said that
despite the political challenges, the United States should live up to its
principles of doing “what we consider to be right rather than what is more
popular.”
She noted that Pakistan also
has political obstacles of its own.
“For us in Pakistan ...
the most popular thing to do right now is to not move on NATO supply routes at
all. It is to close them forever,” she said.
“If I were a political
adviser to the prime minister, this is what I would advise him to do. But I'm
not advising him to do that ... because what is at stake is much more important
for Pakistan
than just winning an election,” she said.
The roads through Pakistan , now
shuttered for over six months, are a crucial logistical link for NATO as it
plans a large-scale withdrawal of combat troops and hardware by the end of
2014.
Yet U.S. officials
have so far rejected Pakistani proposals to charge steep fees of several
thousand dollars for each alliance truck crossing the border.
Khar also criticized Washington ’s use of unmanned drones to target militants
in Pakistan 's
lawless tribal area, a program Obama has accelerated.
“If you are creating 10
more targets for every target you take, are you doing a service or a disservice
to your eventual goal of winning the war?” she asked.
Another thorn in the
side of the contentious U.S.-Pakistani relationship has been Shakeel Afridi,
the Pakistani doctor who helped the CIA find late Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden by running a fake vaccination program, and who was sentenced to 33 years
in prison for treason.
“Clearly, my advice at
this point is that we don't need to blow this out of proportion at all,” Khar
said. “But I would certainly not want this particular issue to cast a shadow
over the relationship.”
The interview was
conducted in Doha
during the May 29-31 U.S.-Islamic World Forum organized by The Brookings
Institution.
No comments:
Post a Comment