US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday defended military sales to Pakistan after withering criticism from growing US partner India, which considers itself the target of Islamabad’s F-16 planes. Blinken met in the US capital with India’s foreign minister a day after separate talks with his counterpart from Pakistan. The top US diplomat defended a $450 million F-16 deal for Pakistan approved earlier in September, saying the package was for maintenance of Pakistan s existing fleet.
"These are not new planes, new systems, new weapons. It’s sustaining what they have," Blinken told a news conference with his Indian counterpart, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
"Pakistan s program bolsters its capability to deal with terrorist threats emanating from the region. It’ s in no one s interests that those threats be able to go forward with impunity," Blinken said.
Jaishankar did not criticize Blinken in public. But on Sunday, speaking at a reception for the Indian community in the United States, Jaishankar said of the US position, "You’re not fooling anybody."
"For someone to say, I’m doing this because it’s for counter-terrorism, when you’re talking of an aircraft like the capability of the F-16, everybody knows where they are deployed," he said, referring to the fleet’ s positioning against India.
Credit: Independent News Pakistan-INP