'Absolutely no truth': State Department, White House reject allegations of ‘threatening’ letter against Pakistan

US State Department spokesman Ned Price takes questions from reporters during a press briefing at the State Department in Washington, DC, on March 31, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 01 April 2022
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'Absolutely no truth': State Department, White House reject allegations of ‘threatening’ letter against Pakistan

  • Khan spoke at Sunday rally about a purported letter that contained threats to his government but did not name a country
  • In an address to the nation on Thursday, Khan named the United States as he spoke of a conspiracy to topple his government

ISLAMABAD: In separate briefings on Thursday, the US State Department and the White House said there was “no truth” to allegations by Prime Minister Imran Khan that the US had threatened the Pakistani government via a letter, hours after the premier doubled down on allegations of a foreign conspiracy against him in an address to the nation.
“Lettergate,” as the scandal has come to be called, began at a rally in Islamabad last Sunday where Khan spoke about a purported letter that contained threats to his government but did not name a country. Pakistani officials have since said the letter was a cable written by a former Pakistani ambassador to the United States, who conveyed threats by a “senior foreign official.”
In his address to the nation on Thursday night, Khan named the United States as he spoke of a conspiracy to topple his government by inciting a political campaign to remove him from office.

Khan is currently facing a no-confidence motion in parliament filed by the opposition, which will be put to vote on Sunday.
“Well, we are closely following developments in Pakistan, and we respect, we support Pakistan’s constitutional process and the rule of law,” state department spokesperson Ned Price said at a briefing. “But when it comes to those allegations [of the letter], there is no truth to them.”
In a separate briefing, when asked about Khan’s allegation that the US was “working with the opposition to remove him from power,” a White House spokeswoman said:
“There is absolutely no truth to that allegation.”
Khan chaired a meeting of his National Security Committee on Thursday afternoon, and announced after its conclusion that “a strong demarche [would be issued] to the country in question both in Islamabad and in the country’s capital through proper channel in keeping with diplomatic norms.”
“Participants also endorsed the Cabinet’s decision in the Special Cabinet meeting held on 30th March, 2022 under the Prime Minister’s chairmanship to take the parliament into confidence through an in-camera briefing of the National Security Committee of the Parliament,” the prime minister’s office said.

The foreign office subsequently said “the requisite demarches have been made through diplomatic channels.”
Khan’s ouster would likely mean another round of instability in the nuclear-armed South Asian country, in which the military has a long record of intervening in politics, though it denies this, and no prime minister has completed a full five-year term in its history.
The political crisis comes as the nation of 220 million people, the world’s second-largest Muslim country, struggles with double-digit inflation and dwindling foreign reserves. As dissatisfaction with Khan’s government grew over the past few months, particularly over economic challenges, his opponents announced their intention to move a no-confidence motion in parliament, which was tabled this Monday.
Two coalition partners of Khan have abandoned him since, technically giving the opposition the votes needed to oust him from office.

 


Police kill five militants, foil plan to block highway in Pakistan’s southwest

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Police kill five militants, foil plan to block highway in Pakistan’s southwest

  • The militants were killed in an intelligence-based operation in Mastung district of Balochistan
  • Search, combing operations are underway to apprehend accomplices of militants who fled the scene

QUETTA: Pakistan’s counterterrorism police on Monday said they had killed five militants, who were planning to block the Quetta–Sibi highway and target security forces, in an intelligence-based operation in the southwestern Balochistan province.
The operation took place in Mastung district when militants affiliated with the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) were planning to carry out “subversive activities” against security forces and the public, according to a CTD spokesperson.
CTD received credible intelligence that armed BLA militants had taken positions near Mastung’s Dasht area to block the Quetta–Sibi highway and target security forces and civilian traffic. Acting swiftly on the information, CTD teams moved into the area. The militants opened indiscriminate fire upon sighting CTD personnel.
“During the encounter, five unknown terrorists were shot dead, while other accomplices managed to flee, taking advantage of the rugged and mountainous terrain,” the CTD spokesperson said in a statement.
Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has long been the site of a separatist insurgency and witnessed a series of high-profile militant attacks last year. In March, the BLA hijacked a passenger train and the siege killed at least 60 people, while in May, a suicide bombing in Khuzdar killed several children on a school bus.
The separatists accuse the central government of stealing their resources to fund development in Punjab. The federal government denies the allegations and says it is working for the uplift of local communities in Balochistan, where China has been building a deep-sea port as part of its Belt and Road Initiative.
Officials found seven hand grenades, five sub-machine guns with live rounds and three motorcycles from the scene, according to the CTD statement.
“Search and combing operations are underway to apprehend the fleeing terrorists and dismantle the remaining network,” it read.