Neither did Saudi govt demand nor Pakistan will send troops: Sartaj
Islamabad part of 34-nation alliance and will share intelligence and supply arms; sending troops to any country apart from UN platform against our foreign policy; NA panel satisfied with country’s balanced stance on Saudi-Iran conflict
ISLAMABAD: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz on Tuesday said Pakistan will not send its troops to Saudi Arabia for the 34-nation anti-terror alliance.
Briefing the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs on the government’s policy on Saudi-Iran tension, he said Pakistan was a part of the alliance but neither was it sending ground forces to Saudi Arabia nor had the Saudi government demanded ground troops from Pakistan.
He said sending forces to any country was against the foreign policy of Pakistan. “Pakistan never sends its forces for any coalition apart from the United Nations,” he added.
Sartaj said Pakistan had adopted a balanced policy and in collaboration with other countries it will try to defuse the tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran at the OIC Conference, which was going to be held in Jeddah.
He said Pakistan will share intelligence with Saudi Arabia and supply arms to counter terrorism. “An emergency meeting of the OIC foreign ministers has been summoned in Jeddah where Pakistan will present important proposals to reduce the Iran-Saudi tension,” he said.
The adviser said Pakistan wished for a peaceful settlement of the Syrian conflict and supported all efforts for resumption of dialogue. The standing committee endorsed the government’s policy towards Saudi-Iran tensions.
Later, talking to the media, Awais Leghari said the committee had lauded Pakistan’s balanced stance on the Saudi-Iran conflict. He said Pakistan had to play a crucial role in reducing the tension between the two Islamic countries.
The briefing was called after opposition lawmakers demanded that they should be taken into confidence on the issue.
Instead of parliament, the government decided to hold an in-camera briefing on the issue for the members of Foreign Affairs Committee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Last week, Opposition Leader in the National Assembly, Syed Khursheed Shah, and members of the National Assembly belonging to different political parties had drawn the attention of the House towards the Saudi-Iran tension and asked the government to give a policy statement and hold a discussion on the matter.
Khursheed said important changes could occur in the region due to the conflict between the two Islamic countries.
He had asked the government to brief the House on its policy on the issue, as Pakistan was also a part of the Saudi-led 34 member alliance of Muslim countries to combat terrorism.
-
'Mortified' Princess Eugenie, Beatrice Plan Interview To Finally Speak Truth In Sarah Ferguson, Andrew-Epstein Scandal -
Lewis Hamilton Spent Years Trying To Catch Kim Kardashian's Attention? -
Royal Strategy Revealed As King Charles, Prince William Issue Statements On Andrew Row -
Inside Will Smith's Struggle To Revive His Career After Infamous Oscar Incident -
What’s Coming Out Of Meghan Markle’s War Against Prince William? Inside People’s Unease -
Australia Seeks Urgent Meeting With Roblox Over 'Disturbing' Content Complaints -
Epstein Case: Ghislaine Maxwell Invokes Fifth, Refuses To Testify Before US Congress -
Ferrari Luce: First Electric Sports Car Unveiled With Enzo V12 Revival -
Chappell Roan Parts Ways With Wasserman Music Over CEO's Ties With Epstein -
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor Publically Shamed After Brother And Nephew Change Decades Old Royal Rule -
Jon Stewart On Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Performance: 'Killed It'' -
Savannah Guthrie Receives Massive Support From Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Garner After Desperate Plea -
Celebrities Take Sides As Brooklyn Beckham’s Feud With David, Victoria Heats Up -
Prince Harry Reacts As Beatrice, Eugenie's Names Surface In Epstein Emails -
Cyprus Joins European AI Race: What It Means For Greek LLMs And Regional Innovation -
Amazon Soon To Launch 'AI Content' Marketplace, Says Report