Pakistan has been put on "notice" by President Donald Trump whose get-tough approach could potentially include sanctioning Pakistani government officials with ties to terrorist groups such as Haqqani Network, a top White House official said today.
National Security Council spokesman Michael Anton also said that with Pakistan the "business as usual as it has been up to now is over."
"The important takeaway for the Pakistani government last night is that, you know, they should understand that they're on notice from this president, from this administration," Anton was quoted as saying by Politico.
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Anton said the US could conceivably impose sanctions on terrorist groups including the Haqqani network, which has links to elements in the Pakistani government, as well as on any Pakistani officials who are tied to these kinds of groups.
The official said that the onus for improving the relationship is now on Pakistan.
Anton said the president had benefited from an outsider's perspective on the US-Pakistan relationship, eschewing the conventional wisdom that "however much the Pakistanis double- deal you and lie to you and don't cooperate, you have no choice but to just keep the status quo."
"How do we get the Pakistan to behave better? The answer is we have leverage points over Pakistan that the strategy contemplates we will use. Ultimately whether they behave better or not is completely up to them," Anton said.
"They may calculate that it's more important to remain allied with terrorists, it's more important to give terrorists safe haven, it's more important to do all the nasty things that they've been doing that we don't like than it is to have a good relationship with the US," he continued.
"If so, that's a choice that they will make and then we will make choices based on their choice," Anton said.
Observing that the US gives the Pakistani government substantial security aid, Anton said, and in return receive, at best, "indifference to border crossing and terrorist safe havens and sanctuaries" in Pakistan's tribal regions along the Afghan border.
"In the worst case," Anton said, the Pakistani government has been guilty of "active direct support" for terrorist groups, the media outlet reported.
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