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Congressman urges Biden to reject Pakistan ambassador-designate

Congressman urges Biden to reject Pakistan ambassador-designate

A US Congressman has urged president Joe Biden to reject Pakistan’s ambassador-designate Masood Khan’s diplomatic credentials and termed him a “bona fide terrorist sympathiser” working to undermine America’s interests in the region.

Republican Congressman Scott Perry also alleged that Khan had encouraged young men to emulate jihadists and praised foreign terrorist organisations.


Khan, who has previously served as the “president” of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) until August last year, was nominated as Pakistan’s ambassador to the US in November.

“(Pakistan Prime Minister) Imran Khan’s nomination of a bona fide terrorist sympathiser working to undermine our interests in the region, as well as the security of our Indian allies, can only be described as a breathtaking lack of judgment at best, and a demonstration of Islamabad’s unmitigated contempt for the United States at worst,” Perry wrote in a letter to Biden.

“While I am encouraged that the state department has reportedly placed a pause on approving Masood Khan as the new ambassador from Pakistan, a pause is not enough.

“I urge you to reject any diplomatic credentials presented to you by Masood Khan and reject any effort by the Government of Pakistan to install this jihadist as Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US,” said Perry, a member of congress 10th district, Pennsylvania.

According to reports, the US state department has been taking “unusually long” to accept the nomination of Khan and the “delay has triggered an impression of a pause in the process”.

The request for agrément, approval of a designated diplomat by the receiving state, for Khan had been sent to the state department in the second week of November.

Normally, the state department took four to six weeks to issue agrément for Pakistani ambassadors in the past, a former Pakistani foreign secretary said.

Perry further said that the ambassador-designate has praised both terrorists and foreign terrorist organisations, including Hizbul Mujahideen, in stark and unsetting terms.

He said that in 2017, Khan lashed out at the US for designating the leader of Hizbul Mujahideen for sanctions, calling those sanctions “unjustifiable”.

Perry further said that a litany of examples accompanies “Khan’s perverse attachment to Islamic terrorism, which makes it exceedingly obvious that Pakistan has embraced its identity as a super terrorist state”.

“We know, for instance, that the ambassador-designate is a supporter of the terrorist groups Jamaat-e-Islami, a group that assisted in committing genocide in the early 1970s, as well as Helping Hand for Relief and Development, a group that had no qualms establishing a partnership with the foreign terrorist organisation responsible for the brutal murder of 166 people during the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks (Lashkar-e-Toiba),” Perry said.

Pakistan's Dawn newspaper reported that Khan had previously served as Pakistan’s permanent representative to the UN in Geneva and New York, and as ambassador to China.

He was to replace the outgoing ambassador of Pakistan in Washington, Asad Majeed Khan.

The delay has happened at a time when ties between the two allies have turned increasingly frosty due to the geo-political environment. The US interest in Pakistan has waned after it pulled out of Afghanistan.

Moreover, Washington looks at ties with Pakistan from the prism of its strategic competition with China, although Islamabad has repeatedly said that it was not part of any camp politics.

The US had at the end of October nominated Donald Blome as the new envoy to Pakistan. Islamabad has already issued his agrément, according to reports.

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