The Americans are doing so well - soon it will be 4 out of 4 Pakistanis (except for those on the payroll)
3 in 4 Pakistanis now consider US an enemy as resentment grows
3 in 4 Pakistanis now consider US an enemy as resentment grows
Approximately
3 in 4 Pakistanis now consider the US an enemy according to a new Pew
research poll released on June 27th. The polls show increasing
hostility towards the US and new lows in the already strained
relationship between the two countries.
RT,
28
June, 2012
The
Pew Research poll conducted by the Pew Global Attitudes Project has
published stark numbers. The poll, entitled “Pakistani Public
Opinion Ever More Critical of US”, says 74% of Pakistanis now view
the US as an ‘enemy’ up from 69% last year, while support for
President Barack Obama continues to be exceptionally low. A majority
of Pakistanis hold the view that Obama has been just as bad a
president as George W. Bush was in his last year in office.
Furthermore, approximately 4 in 10 Pakistanis believe that US
military and financial aid is having a negative impact on their
country; only 1 in 10 believes the impact has been positive.
Tensions
have been extreme between the two countries due to unceasing US drone
attacks inside Pakistani territory. Pakistan shut down a highly
strategic NATO supply route through its territory into Afghanistan
last November in response to a NATO air strike that killed 24
Pakistani troops on the Afghan border.
The
US has argued that the air strikes are necessary to counter the
insurgency movements in Afghanistan. However, resentment towards the
tacit alliance with the US allowing the drone strikes has fueled a
domestic insurgency in Pakistan, leading to broad outrage at the
resulting loss of Pakistani life.
“Pakistan
has lost somewhere between 5000 to 6000 soldiers and paramilitary
soldiers, but more than that, we’ve lost more than 35,000
civilians, and these people died because of terrorist bombings,”
Ahmed Quraishi, President of the Paknationalists forum, told RT in an
interview.
However,
Washington’s view differs, with many in the United States
government seeing Pakistan as a willing recipient of US humanitarian
aid and funding, but an uncooperative US partner in the region. In
May, a US senate panel voted to cut aid to Pakistan if Islamabad did
not re-open the NATO supply corridor in a frustrated attempt to
resolve the months-long dispute.
"We're
not going to be giving money to an ally that won't be an ally,"
Senator Lindsey Graham, the panel's top Republican, told reporters at
the Senate vote.
However,
there is division on how far Pakistani loyalty to US should extend,
and the high cost that Pakistan is paying for allowing US aid.
“They
want the Pakistanis to do the dirty work for us, and the Pakistanis
have simply said ‘we supported you for 11 years, and we can’t do
it anymore, you’re killing our stability.’ They have to stop the
civil war in the country, they have to stop the war that’s going on
in their own territory because of their helping the United States, so
they have number of problems which I think amount to a mess, and
they’re going to be left high and dry when we leave,” said SB
Michael F. Scheuer, a former CIA intelligence officer.
“There
is one mistake that we have committed we put all our eggs in the
American basket,” Ahmed Quraishi continued. “And part of the
deterioration of our strategic position of the past decade since 2001
is because of this fact, that we completely relied on the
Americans…They’ve ditched us before as well, but we made this
mistake, and we’re now trying to correct that mistake.”
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