Terror killed Pakistani, Indian and Afghan children: US
WASHINGTON: The State Department on Friday provided a heartfelt and more humanist perspective on the outcomes of the ongoing conflicts in South Asia.
State Department Spokesman John Kirby wrapped the official and more conventional way of responses to questions in a deeply touching manner.
“There have been Indian children and Pakistani children and Afghan children that have been maimed and murdered at the hands of terrorists for many, many years — not just the last 15 years,” Kirby said replying to a questions about the conflicts and added, “There’s a heck of a lot of women without soldier husbands anymore, and widowers without wives anymore. The killing has gone on for long enough.”
The spokesperson was told that the leaders of Pakistan and India were not interested in resolving their issues because their families don’t get affected directly.
Kirby disagreed and said, “That is just not our view in talking to leaders across the spectrum of both governments. They do care.”
Emphasizing the need for encouraging both countries to continue dialogue, he said: “Obviously, there are still differences of opinion that exist between them, and we want them to work through those differences.”
Kirby continued: “That’s all we are asking, that’s all we are hoping, that’s all we are expecting from leaders in India and Pakistan to do as well. But we don’t believe for a minute that they don’t take the challenges before them seriously or the lives and security of their children.”
He also maintained that the US stance on the Kashmir issue had not changed either.
“We want this to be worked out between both sides — the issue of Kashmir. And generally, we obviously want to see the tensions that exist right now be brought down and for dialogue to take its place — meaningful dialogue to try to address these issues bilaterally between the countries,” Kirby said.
Asked if the administration would support the bill in the Congress and an online petition that the US should declare Pakistan a “terrorist state”, Kirby said, “I have not seen anything specifically about the bill, and obviously we don’t.”
Refusing to go into the details, Kirby said there was a common threat and common challenge in the region and the US will continue to work with Pakistan, Afghanistan and India.
“So we are going to continue to work with the governments in the region to try to address these common threats and challenges, and we have always said that more can be done about the safe havens and that’s — we’re going to, again, try to work as co-operatively as we can to that end,” he said.
-
Elon Musk Amplifies Cillian Murphy Meme Using Expressionless Face Emoji -
King Charles Warned About Perverting Justice Against Andrew Else Risk Suffering Through ‘last Resort’ -
Kate Middleton, Prince William Issue Direct 'challenge' To Meghan Markle -
Husband Leaves Princess Beatrice At Home To Watch Football Match? -
'Spider-Man: Brand New Day' Trailer: Tom Holland Longs For Zendaya Attention In First Teaser -
Meteor Over Ohio Causes Powerful Sonic Boom Heard As Far As Pennsylvania -
Prince William, Kate Middleton Represent King Charles As They Welcome Foreign Guests -
Leonardo DiCaprio, Vittoria Ceretti's Romance Takes 'serious' Turn After Oscars Night -
Victor Alli Shares Unique Take On John Stirling's Devotion To Francesca -
Prince William Finally Plans To Remove Harry, Archie, Lilibet From Line Of Succession -
Joel Madden Talks About 'sacred' Marriage To Nicole Richie: 'I Don't Fight' -
Meningitis B: Cases Surge As Health Officials Launch National Response To ‘explosive’ Outbreak -
Regulator Bans AI Ad Over ‘erase Anything’ Claim -
AI Understands Human Emotions—But Should You Trust It? -
Kim Kardashian Reveals 'my Ride Or Die For Life' After Multiple Warnings From Lewis Hamilton Former Girlfriends -
Zendaya Gushes Over ‘Dune: Part 3’: ‘I’m Very Excited’