After
a harshly worded New Year's Day tweet
The cutoff is not permanent, Nauert said, and only affects military assistance. Civilian assistance is not affected.
Nauert told reporters that the suspension will remain in effect until Pakistan "takes decisive action" against groups, such as the Taliban, that are "destabilizing the region and targeting U.S. personnel." Although Pakistan "certainly has been helpful in some instances," she said, "they are not taking steps they need to take to fight terrorists."
The aid suspension will include equipment and the transfer of security-related funds, with possible exceptions for U.S. national security reasons.
Nauert was not immediately able to provide a total dollar amount for the cutoff. "We are still working through the numbers," she said.
In his first tweet of 2018, Trump said the U.S. "has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools. They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little help. No more!"
Ahead of Nauert's remarks, military spokesman Maj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor
told a Pakistani news channel on Wednesday
"Aid cuts will not hurt us,"
Pakistan's finance ministry head Miftah Ismail told Reuters.
There have been
hints of a Pakistan aid cut by the Trump administration for months.
Back in August
Later that month, the administration notified Pakistan that
it was delaying a payment of $255 million in military aid
The military aid, known as foreign military financing, "promotes the development of Pakistan's long-term [counter-insurgency/counter-terrorism] capabilities and improves Pakistan's ability to participate in maritime security operations and counter-maritime piracy,"
according to the State Department
The U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley
told reporters Tuesday that the U.S. would withhold the $255 million payment
This is not the first time the U.S. has cut assistance to Pakistan. In the 1990s, Washington imposed aid-cutting sanctions related to Pakistan's nuclear program and a military coup that deposed an elected prime minister.
The George W. Bush administration waived those sanctions and
reinstated aid following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001,
Since 2002, U.S. aid to Pakistan has totaled nearly $34 billion but declined in recent years,
according to the Congressional Research Service
Relations between Pakistan and the U.S. long have been strained, and tensions have only grown since the summer, when the Trump administration announced its policy on Afghanistan and South Asia.
Pakistan, which serves as a key transport route for supplies to U.S. forces in Afghanistan, denies harboring terrorists. Officials say the country has made enormous sacrifices to support the U.S. war on terror.
"We have contributed and sacrificed the most in fighting international terrorism and carried out the largest counterterrorism operation anywhere in the world,"
Pakistan's U.N. Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi said Wednesday
"You carried out 57,800 attacks on Afghanistan from our bases, your forces were supplied arms and explosives through our soil, thousands of our civilians and soldiers became victims of the war initiated by you,"
Pakistan's Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif tweeted in Urdu on Wednesday morning.
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