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In the city of Karachi, around 100 people burned the Stars and Stripes. "Hang the U.S. spy, the killer of three Pakistanis," read one placard. The issue of American diplomats or their security details carrying weapons inside Pakistan was a hot-button subject last year among certain politicians and sections of the media purportedly worried about the country's sovereignty. They were frequently presented as a threat to ordinary Pakistanis. "'American Rambo' goes berserk in Lahore,'" read the headline in The Nation, a right-wing newspaper that often publishes anti-U.S. conspiracy theories. Despite the sensitivities of the case, it seems unlikely it will seriously affect ties between the two nations because the relationship is vital for both. Washington needs Pakistan's support to stabilize Afghanistan and defeat al-Qaida, while Islamabad relies heavily on U.S. aid and diplomatic support. Robbers on motorbikes pulling up alongside cars and holding them up is a common crime in Pakistani cities. Americans and other foreigners have also been frequently targeted by Islamist militants in Pakistan. In the northwestern city of Peshawar in 2008, gunmen shot and killed a U.S. aid worker as he drove to work. Suspected militants also opened fire on the vehicle of the top American diplomat in the city the same year, but she survived the attack.
[Associated
Press;
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