US reassures Pakistan on civilian aid

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The US on Thursday reassured Pakistan that it would keep sending civilian assistance after it deferred $800 million in military aid in a bid to seek greater defence cooperation. Thomas Nides, the US deputy secretary of state for management and resources, delivered the message in a telephone conversation with Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh, the State Department said.
“We do have the slowdown on the security side, but our civilian assistance remains undeterred,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, describing the phone call. “We continue to work productively on the civilian side. That assistance continues to flow,” Toner told reporters. US President Barack Obama’s administration took office in 2009 pledging to move the relationship away from just military cooperation and instead to focus on building Pakistan’s weak civilian institutions, schools and infrastructure.
Toner said the US has given Pakistan some $2 billion in civilian aid since a major congressional bill was approved in 2009. Of the aid, $550 million was emergency relief for Pakistan’s massive floods last year.