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Friday April 26, 2024

US may withhold $255m Pak aid: NYT

By our correspondents
December 30, 2017

WASHINGTON: When Pakistani forces freed a Canadian-American family this fall held captive by militants, they also captured one of the abductors. The US officials saw a potential windfall: He was a member of the Taliban-linked Haqqani network who could perhaps provide valuable information about at least one other American hostage, reports New York Times on Friday.

The Americans demanded access to the man, but Pakistani officials rejected those requests, the latest disagreement in the increasingly dysfunctional relationship between the countries. Now, the Trump administration is strongly considering whether to withhold $255 million in aid that it had delayed sending to Islamabad, according to American officials, as a show of dissatisfaction with Pakistan’s broader intransigence toward confronting the terrorist networks that operate there.

Relations between the US and Pakistan, long vital for both, have chilled

steadily since the president declared over the summer that Pakistan “gives safe haven to agents of chaos, violence and terror.”

The US said in August that it was withholding the $255 million until Pakistan did more to crack down on internal terrorist groups. Senior administration officials met this month to decide what to do about the money, and American officials said a final decision could be made in the coming weeks.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the sensitive discussions, did not detail what conditions Pakistan would have to meet to receive the aid. It was not clear how the US found out about the militant’s arrest, but an American drone had been monitoring the kidnappers as they moved deeper into Pakistan.

A State Department official said conversations with Pakistan are ongoing and declined to provide further comment. The Pakistani government did not respond to a message seeking comment.