Washington: Pakistan assured the United States that it would continue to help America and other countries find their hostages from Afghanistan, but only as “a moral duty” and not under constraint or incentive.
The Declaration was issued by the Pakistani Embassy in Washington after a report from US media urging the administration of the US President Joe Biden to “pressurize or offer incentives” to Islamabad to release an American hostage, Mark frequer, Captured by the Taliban, Dawn reported.
The American Senator Tammy Duckworth, a democrat of Illinois, also urged the Bidge Administration to use “all the options” and to go Frrerichs, one of his constituents, at home.
Media Reports said that “PAKISTAN pressure to act on a hostage affair has successfully passed the recent past” and the Bidge Administration should also try this option to release Fricher from Afghanistan.
According to Dawn, a report recalled a 2017 case, saying that during the Trump regime, the White House “has launched secret efforts for Cajole Pakistan” to get another hostage, Caitlin Coleman, after five years. However, the Embassy of Pakistan rejected the suggestion that Islamabad was forced to have Coleman and his children released.
This comes after the reports have emerged that Pakistan would allow the United States to use its tickets for any action against Afghanistan, because Washington has begun to take advantage of its troops in the midst of high violence in Kabul.
Prime Minister Pakistani Imran Khan has clearly stated that the country would not allow “absolutely not” to allow its bases or its use of its territory in the United States for any action in Afghanistan.
“Absolutely not. There is no way we will allow bases, a kind of action by Pakistani territory in Afghanistan. Absolutely not,” said the Prime Minister in a given interview in Jonathan Swan HBO Axios, Dawn said.
This presents in the middle of reports that negotiations for the region’s military bases have reached a dead end for the moment the New York Times reported.
The Pentagon is now responsible for authorizing air areas in Afghanistan if the country falls in crisis due to the rise in violence by the Taliban.