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Published 13 Feb, 2013 10:08pm

Ex-envoy Munter assails US ‘callousness’ on Pakistan

WASHINGTON, Feb 13: The former US ambassador to Pakistan on Wednesday criticised Washington’s “callousness” over the killing of Pakistani troops as he called for both countries to rethink how they see each other.

Cameron Munter served as ambassador during some of the most difficult times of the turbulent US-Pakistan relationship, including the slaying of Osama bin Laden and a US border raid that killed 24 Pakistani troops in November 2011.

Mr Munter, who resigned last year, said the United States had shown a lack of generosity over the deaths of the Pakistani troops.Pakistan shut down Nato supply routes to Afghanistan until the United States apologised seven months later.

“The fact that we were unable to say that we were sorry until July cost our country literally billions of dollars,” Mr Munter said, pointing to the costly shift to sending supplies for the Afghan war via Central Asia.

“But worse than that, it showed a kind of callousness that makes it so difficult simply to begin to talk about those things, that I’ve always tried to stress, that we have in common,” he said at the Atlantic Council, a think tank.

Mr Munter steadfastly denied conspiracy theories and said the deaths near the Afghan border were a case of mistaken identity. He said that US-led forces “obliterated” the soldiers by firing from an AC-130, a powerful gunship.

“If you don’t have that in common — that you’re sorry when there is nothing left of the bodies of 24 of your boys — then it’s very hard for many people, especially those who want a relationship with us... to defend us to their peers,” Mr Munter said.

The Salala border post attack took place as Mitt Romney and other Republicans seeking the White House were attacking President Barack Obama for allegedly being too apologetic about the United States.

Mr Munter called for the United States to change its way of thinking but was also critical of Pakistan. He urged the two countries to get past “the tyranny of negative narratives”.

He said that Pakistanis, who in opinion polls voice widespread dislike for the United States, were wrong to take for granted that Washington simply wanted to use the country for its own interests and then discard it.

“It’s a bigotry, it’s a lazy way of thinking, and as long as Pakistanis do it, they’re going to cripple the relationship,” he said.—AFP

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