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Washington: A top US Congressman has opposed the decision of the House of Representatives to increase American aid to Pakistan from $700 million to $900 million alleging that Pakistan continues to support terror groups that target US troops in Afghanistan.
"Pakistan cannot be trusted. It has played us now for a total of $33 billion of our money since 2001," Republican Congressman Ted Poe, chairman of the Sub committee on Terrorism, Non-Proliferation and Trade of the House Foreign Affairs Committee wrote on Tuesday in an op-ed in US News.
Poe's move to retain the US aid to Pakistan to $700 million for the fiscal 2017 as for 2016 was voted down by the House of Representatives.
Poe said he is disappointed by House's decision.
"For 15 years we have been asking Pakistan to go after terrorists within its own borders and for 15 years not only has Pakistan not done so in any significant way, but it has actually supported those very terrorists who kill our service men and women in Afghanistan. It is time to call it like it is," he said.
"We do not need to give Pakistan a raise to betray us. They will do it for free. And that's just the way it is," Poe said.
The House of Representatives recently gave Pakistan a $200 million raise.
In all, it was a $900 million payday for a country that to this day is supporting terrorist groups that kill US service men and women in Afghanistan, he said.
"It is well known by now that Pakistan gave safe harbor to Osama bin Laden. Before he met his maker in one of the greatest US military raids ever conducted, bin Laden was living in a big house in a bustling military town in Pakistan," he added.
"Less known is that after that raid our Central Intelligence Agency station chief in Pakistan was poisoned: Both he and the Central Intelligence Agency suspect he was poisoned by Pakistan's version of the Central Intelligence Agency called the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency or 'ISI'," Poe wrote.
"The ISI is infamous for its support for terrorists. In February 2012, a North Atlantic Treaty Organisation report confirmed that it was supporting the Taliban and other terrorist groups with resources, sanctuary and training," Poe said.
"A year before the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation report, in 2011, Adm Mike Mullen, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before Congress that "the Haqqani Network acts as a veritable arm of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Agency. No terrorist organisation is responsible for more American deaths than the Haqqani Network," he alleged.
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