Pakistan critical country for US: Mullen

Observing that Pakistan is a "critical country" for the US in the long run, a top American General has said Washington wants to have a long term partnership with Islamabad not just military but across the board.

Washington: Observing that Pakistan is a "critical country" for the US in the long run, a top American General has said Washington wants to have a long term partnership with Islamabad not just military but across the board.
Chairman of the US Chief of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen said America`s trust deficit with Pakistan is quite low and that the US is "digging itself out of a hole that it dug into."

America had abandoned Pakistan for 12 years from 1990 to 2002 "so the trust deficient is pretty significant", Mullen claimed.

"This is a country that is a critical country. I believe we have to have a long-term partnership with, and we`re just starting that," he said.

The top American General said his frequent visits to Pakistan were aimed at building up relationship between the two countries, specially between the two armies.

He said the popularity of Pakistan military had jumped quite significantly recently after its crackdown on the militants.

"A year ago the popularity of the Pakistani military in terms of fighting the insurgents was in pretty low numbers, on the order of 10 to 15 to 20 percent. Now, it`s routinely above 80 percent.”

"That`s a pretty dramatic turnaround and it has made its ability to fight much easier and much more acceptable to the Pakistani people," Mullen said. "I think in our relationship with Pakistan, the measure will be in the long run is are the Pakistani people do they support a strong relationship with the US, of America and that I think is still out there to be decided," Mullen said.

"We are digging ourselves out of a hole that we dug ourselves into over that period of time. And we are by no means home on that relationship," Mullen said.

Mullen who has been to Pakistan over a dozen times in the last one year, said: "It is all about the relationship between our countries, which is what I am spending my time on, most of that being with the head of their Army, who is the senior military officer and most influential officer in the Pakistani military."

Observing that it is much more than just military because there is a civilian component here as well, Mullen asserted that Pakistan is a critical country for the US in the
long-run.

"In fact, there are those who would argue we are still digging ourselves out of a hole and we have not even gotten to ground zero yet. They are critically important in that region -- their relationship with India is a big deal and they have a significant, and they believe existential, threat from India," he said.

Noting that US` relationship with Afghanistan is also critical, Mullen said, "They are a sovereign country in which resides the al Qaeda leadership. So I think the relationship is critical and will need to continue to grow. And it`s not just mil- to-mil; it`s got to be across the board."

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates described as disturbing
but not surprising the results of the survey that revealed
that only 9 per cent of Pakistanis see the United States as a
partner while 64 per cent look at it as an enemy.

"First of all, one of the reasons that the Pakistanis
have concerns about us is that we walked away from them
twice," Gates said at a Pentagon news conference.

"We walked away from them after the Soviets left
Afghanistan, and we walked away from them through the 1990s,
because of the Pressler amendment. So our military-to-military
relations were significantly interrupted," Gates said.

He said it is going to take the US some time to "rebuild
confidence" of the Pakistani people that it is a long-term
friend and ally of Pakistan.

Bureau Report

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