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Pakistan this week postponed at least three meetings with the Trump administration. A meeting of Pakistan Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was also cancelled. Acting Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Alice Wells and Lisa Curtis, who heads the South Asia policy wing at National Security Council of the White House were scheduled to visit Pakistan this week.
Asif on Monday said suspension of official visits and talks are a mark of protest against Trump’s criticism towards it. Trump last week warned Pakistan of continued presence of terrorist safe havens and support to terrorist organisations.
“We continue to value our partnership with Pakistan and look forward to scheduling meetings at a mutually convenient time,” a State Department spokesperson told PTI. However, it is believed that the US is trying to revive the dialogue process through its embassy in Islamabad.
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Congressman Tom Cole described this as a winning strategy. “The President’s call for support and action from Pakistan and India has been long overdue. The bordering nation of Pakistan has been critical to our fight against terrorism for years, but President Trump’s strategy asks for more action against terrorists groups that can and have grown roots there,” Cole said.
In a recent interview to PBS News, a former State Department official Laurel Miller said that the Trump’s Afghan policy is going to significantly antagonise the Pakistanis. “That pushes the Pakistanis’ most sensitive buttons. What Pakistan is most concerned about with respect to an Indian role in Afghanistan is the prospect for Afghanistan to become a more India-friendly place and more Pakistan to be encircled in that way,” she said.