Pentagon not to pay Pakistan $300 million
in military reimbursements
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[August 04, 2016]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon will
not pay Pakistan $300 million in military reimbursements after U.S.
Secretary of Defense Ash Carter decided not to tell Congress that
Pakistan was taking adequate action against the Haqqani network, a U.S.
official said.
Relations between the two countries have been frayed over the past
decade, with U.S. officials frustrated by what they term Islamabad's
unwillingness to act against Islamist groups such as the Afghan Taliban
and the Haqqani network.
"The funds could not be released to the Government of Pakistan at this
time because the Secretary has not yet certified that Pakistan has taken
sufficient action against the Haqqani network," Pentagon spokesman Adam
Stump said on Wednesday.
The $300 million comes under the Coalition Support Fund (CSF), a U.S.
Defense Department program to reimburse allies that have incurred costs
in supporting counter-terrorist and counter-insurgency operations.
Pakistan is the largest recipient.
"This decision does not reduce the significance of the sacrifices that
the Pakistani military has undertaken over the last two years," Stump
said.
According to Pentagon data, about $14 billion has already been paid to
Pakistan under the CSF since 2002.
The decision by the Pentagon is a sign that while it sees some progress
by Pakistan in its military operations in North Waziristan, much work
remains.
Pakistan rejects harboring militants but says there are limits to how
much it can do as it is already fighting multiple Islamist groups and is
wary of a "blowback" in the form of more militant attacks on its soil.
"Pakistan does not draw any distinction between any terrorists and we
have taken up the fight against terrorism and the terrorist elements
within Pakistan," Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria told reporters
in Islamabad on Thursday.
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Defense Secretary Ash Carter holds a news conference at the Pentagon
in Arlington, Virginia August 20, 2015. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"These reimbursements enable the United States to support Pakistan's
ongoing counterterrorism efforts in a manner that serves shared
interests of both the countries."
Relations between the United States and Pakistan were tested in May
by a U.S. drone strike that killed Afghan Taliban chief Mullah
Akhtar Mansour on Pakistani soil.
There has been growing resistance in the U.S. Congress to sending
money to Pakistan. Many lawmakers have expressed concern about its
nuclear program, commitment to fighting terrorist organizations and
cooperation in the Afghanistan peace process.
In March, Republican Senator Bob Corker said he would use his power
as the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to bar any
U.S. funding for Islamabad's purchase of $700 million of Lockheed
Martin Corp <LMT.N> F-16 fighter jets.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali. Addtional reporting by Patricia Zengerle
and Asad Hashim in ISLAMABAD; Editing by Michael Perry, Robert
Birsel)
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