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  4. President Trump ready to take 'necessary' steps if Pakistan doesn't change behaviour: US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis

President Trump ready to take 'necessary' steps if Pakistan doesn't change behaviour: US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis

US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis has said that President Donald Trump is prepared to take "whatever steps necessary" against Pakistan if it does not "change its behaviour".

Reported by: PTI Washington Published : Oct 05, 2017 12:38 IST, Updated : Oct 05, 2017 12:38 IST
US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
Image Source : AP Defense Secretary Jim Mattis speaks before the Senate Armed Services Committee

US President Donald Trump is prepared to take "whatever steps necessary" against Pakistan if it does not "change its behaviour" and continued to support terror groups, Defence Secretary Jim Mattis has said. 

Mattis also warned Pakistan of global "diplomatic isolation" and losing its Non-NATO ally status if it failed to take action against safe havens to terrorists on its soil. 

"If our best efforts fail, President Trump is prepared to take whatever steps necessary," Mattis told members of the powerful House Armed Services Committee during a Congressional testimony on South Asia and Afghanistan yesterday. 

He was asked a series of questions by Congressmen who expressed their frustration on Pakistan not taking actions against terror groups. 

Without much elaboration, Mattis said the US has "enormously powerful number of options" if Pakistan does not follow through and be a better promoter of stability in the region. 

"Right now, I would like to think we will be successful," Mattis said. "With the growing consensus against terrorism, they'll find themselves diplomatically isolated." 

"There is an awful lot of advantage to Pakistan of coming online with the international community, and we have to stay focused there, but the penalties are just as significant as the advantages if they choose to go a different direction," he said. 

"But for right now, the US needs to try one more time to make this strategy work with them by, with, and through the Pakistanis," he said. 

When Congressman Rick Larsen asked if revocation of non- NATO allies status is on the list of possibilities against Pakistan, Mattis said, "I'm sure it will be." 

Mattis' tough talk on Pakistan, came as Pakistan Foreign Minister Khwaja Asif is visiting the US as part of efforts to rebuild bilateral ties frayed after President Trump accused Islamabad of sheltering terror groups. 

President Trump announced his Afghanistan and South Asia policy in August in which he adopted a tough policy against Pakistan. 

In a meeting with the Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Asif defended his country's role in the war against terrorism. 

He claimed that Pakistan has pursued a zero-tolerance and indiscriminate approach in its campaign against all terrorist and militant groups. 

However, Mattis told lawmakers that while the US is adopting "a whole of government approach" on Pakistan, it is also aligning NATO countries on this. 

"What you're going to see is 39 nations all in the NATO campaign working together to lay out what it is we need Pakistan to do, he said. 

"What we are doing right now is we are aligning what Department of Treasury, Department of Defence, the Intelligence Committee, Department of State, say, this is what we must ask Pakistan to do to change its behaviour, he added. 

The Trump administration, he said, is going to use a whole government international effort to align the benefits and the penalties if those things are not done. 

"Pakistan has lost more troops in this fight against terrorist than nearly any country out there. And yet at the same time, as you know, there's been some parsing out where some terrorists have been allowed safe havens. We're out to change that behaviour and do it very firmly, Mattis asserted. 

As part of this, Mattis said there would be exchange of high-level visits between the two countries. 

Mattis said he and the Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will soon visit Islamabad. 

"We're not going to back off. It will start with assistant secretaries coming out of Washington and the National Security staff members going into Pakistan soon followed by the Secretary of State," he said. 

"I will go in and we have (NATO) Secretary General Stoltenberg's very clear support for this in his advocacy as the Secretary General of NATO. So we're going to continue to build this up in an international way with a whole of US government argument for the Pakistanis to work in their own best interest and ours," Mattis said. 

After holding talks with Asif, Tillerson yesterday said that the US is concerned over the future of the government in Pakistan and wants to ensure long-term stability in the country. 

Inviting Tillerson to visit Islamabad to continue their talks, Asif said that a broad-based and structured framework for dialogue would best serve the two countries' mutual interests.

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