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News ID: 91463
Publish Date : 19 June 2021 - 22:10

Pakistan PM Turns Down CIA Request to Use Bases

ISLAMABAD (Sputnik) – Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan told Axios in an interview that the CIA will “absolutely not” be allowed to operate from Pakistani soil after the U.S. completes its withdrawal from Afghanistan later this year.
CIA Director William Burns and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin have both visited Pakistan in recent months to discuss continued cooperation. However, the Pakistani government has rebuffed all attempts as a compromise.
Pakistan’s Inter-Service-Intelligence (ISI) agency was Washington’s gateway to Afghanistan for decades before the U.S. invasion in October 2001, providing an avenue by which the U.S. could funnel financial and materiel support to Afghan tribesmen fighting the socialist Afghan government and its Soviet allies in the 1980s, including those that later became the Taliban, and then to groups resisting the Taliban government that came to power after the socialist government collapsed in 1996.
According to the New York Times, the U.S. is once again searching for proxies in Afghanistan to support after the last U.S. troops leave on September 11, apparently reflecting a belief that the Taliban, now out of power, won’t take peace talks seriously and that the U.S.-backed Afghan government will quickly collapse in the face of a renewed Taliban offensive.
While the U.S. and Taliban reached a peace deal in February 2020 for the U.S. to end its 20-year occupation of the country and remove its remaining soldiers, a similar deal between the Taliban and the Afghan government has proven more elusive.
However, while Islamabad won’t cooperate with the U.S. any longer, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has signaled that his administration might seek out their help in achieving stability without the U.S.
“Peace will primarily be decided upon regionally, and I believe we are at a crucial moment of rethinking. It is first and foremost a matter of getting Pakistan on board,” Ghani told Der Spiegel last month.
“The U.S. now plays only a minor role. The question of peace or hostility is now in Pakistani hands,” he added.