< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Barak Obama ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / September 2008 / September 7, 2008
Pak-US ties resilient, will withstand difficulties: Haqqani

Top News

Chiranjeevi welcomes newcomers with clean record into politics

Tony Blair vows for a coordinated effort to tackle global meltdown

Pak Govt. hasnt provided funds for pleading Aafias case

Bruce Springsteen bags Billboards Top Tour award

American tax payers ready to let Big Three automakers go under

Dhoni refutes rift over team selection

Party advertised on Facebook ends in chaos after 60 gatecrash the event

Modern plagues share certain features with ancient ones

Pak-US ties resilient, will withstand difficulties: Haqqani

Pakistans Ambassador to the United States, Hussain Haqqani has ruled out a cooling of ties between Islamabad and Washington in the wake of the recent attacks by international forces in Pakistans tribal regions, saying bilateral ties are resilient and would withstand the difficulties coming in the way.

Washington, Sept.7 : Pakistan's Ambassador to the United States, Hussain Haqqani has ruled out a cooling of ties between Islamabad and Washington in the wake of the recent attacks by international forces in Pakistan's tribal regions, saying bilateral ties are resilient and would withstand the difficulties coming in the way.

Addressing the Carnegie Endowment for Peace here, Haqqani said that Pakistan expects the United States to persuade its NATO allies and Afghanistan to look upon it as a partner.

As far as U.S. policy towards Pakistan was concerned, the envoy said Washington needed to recognize that Pakistan is a significant and important country under all circumstances.

"It is a nuclear armed nation that has demonstrated its nuclear weapon capability. It is a nation of 160 million people, a majority Muslim country, and a strategically located nation on the crossroads of the Middle East, South Asia and Central Asia," the Daily Times quoted Haqqani, as saying.

"Pakistan is important in its own right and it is time to engage Pakistan on a long-term basis," he added.

He also said that there is no short-term solution to the menace of terrorism, and that dealing with this menace required much more than just a military component.

"It will include political, ideological, and socio-economic components and those fighting terrorism will need to reach the phenomenon's roots," he argued.

Turning to Pakistan's relations with both India and Afghanistan, Haqqani said these ties should not be viewed through the same single lens.

"We need more Pakistanis to understand the American perspective and be sympathetic to it rather than enrage more Pakistanis against the US," he said.

ANI

November 22, 2008

November 21, 2008

November 20, 2008

November 19, 2008

November 18, 2008

November 17, 2008