February 3, 2022
2 mins read

Partnership ‘wrong term’ for Pak-China ties: US

US State Department spokesperson Ned Price made the remarks in answer to a question from a reporter if Pakistan was feeling “abandoned by the US” in opting to work closely with China…writes Arul Louis

Partnerships may be a “wrong term” to describe China’s relationship with Pakistan, warms US State Department spokesperson Ned Price.

He said at his briefing on Wednesday: “We’ve made the point all along that it is not a requirement for any country around the world to choose between the US and China. It is our intention to provide choices to countries when it comes to what the relationship with the US looks like.”

At the same time, he affirmed, “Pakistan is a strategic partner of the United States. We have an important relationship with the government in Islamabad, and it’s a relationship that we value across a number of fronts”.

He made the remarks in answer to a question from a reporter if Pakistan was feeling “abandoned by the US” in opting to work closely with China.

Contrasting US relationships with that of the US, he said: “We think partnership with the United States conveys a series of advantages that countries typically would not find when it comes to the sorts of partnerships that – ‘partnerships’ may be the wrong term – the sorts of relationships that the PRC (Peoples Republic of China) has sought to have around the world.

“I will leave it to the Pakistanis and the PRC to speak to their relationships.”

That reporter also asked for a comment on Congress Party leader Rahul Gandhi’s reported statement in the Lok Sabha that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government’s “strategic mistakes” brought China and Pakistan together.

Price said: “I certainly would not – would not endorse those remarks.”

Between 2002 and 2020, Pakistan received a total of $34.25 billion in aid, of which 8.28 billion was security assistance and $14.57 billion was “Coalition Support Funds” for assisting the US and its allies in their operations in Afghanistan, according to the Federation of American Scientists.

Pakistan does not have to repay most of the assistance from the US in contrast to China’s aid, which in fact are mostly all loans.

In 2018, the administration of former President Donald Trump and Congress cut a total of $800 billion in aid to Pakistan.

The Pentagon cited a lack of cooperation with the US South Asia strategy, which was interpreted as a failure to act against terrorists attacking US and allied forces.

US officials have warned that China’s programmes of purported assistance have hidden price tags that could engulf the recipients in unrepayable debts.

Under the crushing load of Chinese debts under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor of China’s massive Belt and Road Initiative Islamabad asked Beijing last year to restructure $30 billion in loans.

(Arul Louis can be reached at arul.l@ians.in and followed @arulouis)

ALSO READ: Expert says China exporting corruption driven investment in Bangladesh

Previous Story

Moscow slams Washington’s sanctions policy

Next Story

Jakhar’s revelation triggers new crisis in Punjab

Latest from -Top News

Putin, World Leaders Mourn Ahmedabad Plane Crash

At least 169 Indians and 53 British nationals were travelling in Air India’s flight AI171 from Ahmedabad to London’s Gatwick airport….reports Asian Lite News Condolences from leaders across the world continue to

‘Devastating’: UK PM on Air India Flight Crash

At least 169 Indians and 53 British nationals were travelling in Air India’s flight AI171 from Ahmedabad to London’s Gatwick airport….reports Asian Lite News World leaders, including British Prime Minister Keir Starmer,

Visa row paralyses Nepal Parliament

Opposition presses for probe into Home Ministry links, visa scam exposes deep-rooted corruption at Kathmandu airport A political deadlock in Nepal’s federal parliament has now entered its third week, with sessions of

Student fury over poll delay in Bangladesh

Awami League’s student wing warns of creeping extremism, minority attacks, and pro-Pakistan tilt under Muhammad Yunus-led interim regime as 2026 election plans spark fierce backlash across Bangladesh. A political storm is brewing

Congress questions US invite to Pakistan on Army Day

Congress MP Jairam Ramesh slams the US for hosting Pakistan’s army chief, questions India’s diplomatic stance, and demands a full security debate post-Pahalgam in Parliament’s monsoon session. Congress MP Jairam Ramesh has
Go toTop

Don't Miss

It’s clouds again over Blinken-Lavrov talks

United States has nothing to announce at the moment about

Garcetti Calls India Mission a Privilege

Nostalgic Garcetti calls US-India ties among the greatest ever…reports Asian