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Pakistan summoned the top US diplomat in Islamabad on Tuesday, 20 November, to protest President Donald Trump’s allegation that the country had harboured al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden despite getting billions of dollars in American aid.
According to a statement, Foreign Secretary Tahmina Janjua told the US diplomat, Paul Jones that "such baseless rhetoric... was totally unacceptable." The statement also claimed that the cooperation from Pakistan's intelligence service had provided initial evidence that helped Washington trace bin Laden.
Washington and Kabul have long accused Islamabad of harboring militants — a charge it denies.
Pakistan denies it knew bin Laden's whereabouts prior to the raid, which was carried out without its knowledge. It later arrested Dr Shakil Afridi, who had run a fake vaccination campaign in Abbottabad to help the CIA confirm bin Laden's whereabouts.
That statement created a furor in Islamabad.
New Prime Minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan, fired back, tweeting on Monday, 19 November, that Pakistan suffered 75,000 casualties and lost $123 billion in the "US War on Terror," despite the fact that no Pakistanis were involved in the attacks that took place on 11 September. He says the US has only provided a "minuscule" $20 billion in aid.
Janjua went so far as to say that "no other country had paid a heavier price than Pakistan in the fight against terrorism," adding that the US leadership acknowledged on multiple occasions that Pakistan's cooperation helped in "decimating" al-Qaeda.
"Baseless allegations about a closed chapter of history could seriously undermine" the cooperation that exists today between Islamabad and Washington, she added.
(Published in an arrangement with the Associated Press)
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