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Pakistan, US move towards mending damaged ties

Published: 26 Sep 2012 - 10:50 am | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 12:40 am

NEW YORK: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday as the two nations inch towards repairing vital ties severely damaged by a series of crises.

“I would certainly say that they are moving upwards, in a positive direction,” a senior State Department official said, asked about how relations between the two nations were doing after several high-level meetings.

Ties between Washington and Islamabad plunged to new lows after the killing of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a US commando raid deep inside Pakistan in May 2011 and after the deaths of 24 Pakistani troops in a US airstrike in November.

The US official said the two sides were moving forward by focusing on “specific, incremental steps” to pursue their common interests.

Clinton greeted Zardari as “my friend” and introduced him to the new US ambassador to Pakistan, Richard Olson, whom she said she had just been sworn in so he could attend their talks.

She also thanked him for Pakistan’s handling of several days of violent anti-US protests, triggered by an amateur anti-Islam film made in the United States.

Zardari said it had been “a difficult time for all of us.”

Pakistan was rocked by days of protests in its major cities as demonstrations have swept Muslim countries in the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia over the film.

“One or two insane persons should not be allowed to endanger world peace in the garb of freedom of expression,” Zardari said in the meeting, according to a statement from the Pakistan embassy.

US officials said the offer of a $100,000 bounty by Railways Minister Ghulam Ahmed Bilour for the killing of the maker of the film “Innocence of Muslims” was denounced by the Pakistani leadership at the talks.

Clinton and Zardari also discussed the situation in Afghanistan, and how to cooperate in achieving stability there.

AFP