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Balochistan, Afghanistan key pressure points for Indo-Pak relations: Wikileaks

The Pakistani Prime Minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani told a key US lawmaker that India would have to decrease its footprint in Afghanistan and stop 'alleged' interfering in Balochistan in order to gain his country's trust, according to the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.

Updated on: Dec 09, 2010 12:22 PM IST
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The Pakistani Prime Minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani told a key US lawmaker that India would have to decrease its footprint in Afghanistan and stop 'alleged' interfering in Balochistan in order to gain his country's trust, according to the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks. Details of the Feb 16, 2010 meeting between the Pakistani Prime Minister and Chairman of the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Senator John Kerry, were leaked recently by the whistleblower website, Dawn News reported on Thursday.

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The cable, sent by then US ambassador to Pakistan, Anne W. Patterson, to the State Department in Washington, noted that the meeting focussed on the state of India-Pakistan relations. Gilani told the US lawmaker that Pakistan was sincere in its efforts to improve relations with India and pointed to recent meetings between the foreign secretaries as evidence of its sincerity. He noted that Pakistan and India had also resumed backchannel discussions. Gilani said that improving bilateral relations with India was in his country's best interest as it would enable Pakistan to focus all of its attention on securing its western border.

He, however, noted that in order to gain public support for this process, the US had to "treat India and Pakistan equally". According to the cable, Gilani said "India will need to gain Pakistan’s trust", and indicated that reducing the Indian footprint in Afghanistan and halting Indian support of militants in Balochistan would be "steps in the right direction".

Prime Minister Gilani agreed to present Kerry’s proposal to other Pakistani leaders. He was amenable to the idea of a rapprochement with India, but expressed concern that the public would not support the idea. Senator Kerry said that in order to gain public support for this initiative, the government of Pakistan needed to clearly outline the long-term economic benefits of improved bilateral relations -- such as an improvement in social development and increased investments and trade -- to the Pakistani people.

 
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Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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