Pakistan
says U.S. not listening: drone strikes must stop
Pakistan
has spelt out in no uncertain terms that U.S. drone aircraft strikes
against militants inside its territory must stop, but Washington is
not listening, the country's foreign minister said.
26
April, 2012
"On
drones, the language is clear: a clear cessation of drone strikes,"
Hina Rabbani Khar said.
"I
maintain the position that we'd told them categorically before. But
they did not listen. I hope their listening will improve," she
told Reuters in an interview late on Wednesday.
The
attacks by the unmanned aircraft from Afghanistan, which U.S.
officials say are highly effective against militants, fuel
anti-American sentiment in Pakistan because they are seen as
violations of sovereignty that inflict civilian casualties.
Khar's
sharp comments on the drone strikes came ahead of a two-day visit to
Islamabad by the United States' special envoy for Afghanistan and
Pakistan, Marc Grossman.
Ambassador
Grossman was due to hold bilateral meetings with Pakistani officials
and take part in a "core group" meeting with officials from
both Pakistan and Afghanistan, where the United States is hoping to
revive stalled peace talks with the Taliban.
Ties
between Pakistan and the United States, allies in the war on
militancy, have lurched from crisis to crisis as they spar over
security, assistance and the future of Afghanistan.
An
unannounced raid on Pakistani soil by U.S. special forces who killed
al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden last May plunged relations to a low,
and tensions were further stoked in November when a NATO attack
across the border from Afghanistan killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
After
a review of ties with Washington, a Pakistani parliamentary committee
laid out a series of demands, including an end to U.S. drone strikes.
Khar
said other methods should be used to take out militants in the border
region between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"We
have to look at effective tools which are mutually acceptable. The
cost of using tools which are not mutually acceptable is far, far too
high. We're looking at alternatives," she said, without
elaborating.
The
commander of the frontline corps in Pakistan's northwest told Reuters
last week that one alternative would be for the United States to
share intelligence so that its ally's F-16 fighter jets could target
militants there.
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