US lawmaker: Pakistani aid critics created crisis
Source: Reuters
* Berman consulted with Pakistani military on aid bill * White House says Obama will sign measure * State Department: other countries face conditions too By Susan Cornwell WASHINGTON, Oct 8 (Reuters) - Pakistani critics are manufacturing a crisis over $7.5 billion in U.S. aid for political reasons, one of the U.S. authors of the assistance plan said on Thursday. The U.S. Congress last week approved the plan authorizing a tripling of developmental aid over five years. But fierce controversy in Pakistan about conditions in the bill could make it harder for U.S. lawmakers to appropriate the money going forward, a necessary step before the aid goes to Islamabad. "This is a created crisis, by people who either haven't read the bill or don't want to describe it accurately, and whose goal is either to destabilize the (Pakistani) government, or challenge some of the Pakistani military's priorities," Democratic Representative Howard Berman, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told Reuters. Berman is the House sponsor of the legislation that was drafted with Senate sponsors Democrat John Kerry and Republican Richard Lugar. It has no strings attached on development aid, but stipulates conditions for security aid, saying Pakistan must show commitment on fighting terrorism and dismantling nuclear networks. It also says the security forces of Pakistan should not subvert the political system. Pakistan's powerful military, which has ruled the country for more than half its 62-year history, has voiced serious concern about the legislation, and opposition politicians said it undermined national sovereignty. [ID:nISL478759] But Berman said that on security matters the bill outlined a joint strategy with Pakistan. He said members of Pakistan's military had been familiar with provisions of the measure as it worked its way through the U.S. House and Senate. "I've been in touch with them (the military) through this whole process," Berman told Reuters. "I've spoken with (Pakistani army chief) General (Ashfaq) Kayani, other people. It's a common strategy," he said. This joint strategy is "that we want to assist their efforts to take on the counterinsurgency, to disband terrorist groups within Pakistan, to protect their nuclear facilities from proliferation," Berman said. PRESSING PAKISTAN The controversy comes as the United States is pressing Pakistan's army to expand its operations against Pakistani Taliban fighters to include Afghan Taliban and al Qaeda militants in lawless border enclaves. Berman said that since April, both the government of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and the military "have shown a strong willingness to take on at least key elements of the insurgency, and with some success." Kerry's office issued a statement debunking what he said were "myths" circulating about the bill, denying for example that it had any language about unmanned drone aircraft Washington has used to attack militant targets in Pakistan. Kerry is traveling to the region next week, an aide said. U.S. President Barack Obama had urged passage of the aid measure to promote stability in a nuclear-armed country that is key to the U.S. war in Afghanistan. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Thursday that the president intended to sign it into law, because it was "important assistance for Pakistan." State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said assistance bills for some other countries, like Egypt and Colombia, had similar kinds of conditions. "We're not holding Pakistan up to any kind of different standard that we would any other country where the U.S. taxpayer is making an investment," Kelly said. But the storm of protest in Pakistan has raised some hackles in the U.S. Congress, with House Republican Leader John Boehner asking whether the administration had done its homework before promoting the bill. Democratic Representative Gary Ackerman said he had no interest in a partnership characterized by "suspicion, resentment and political manipulation." (Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed and Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Eric Beech) (For more on Pakistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK])
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