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Trump-Nawaz phone call: US stops just short of calling Pak a liar
December 02, 2016
The transition team of U.S.president elect Donald Trump has taken issue
with the Pakistan government's version of the telephone conversation
that took place with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
Saying that
Islamabad had overplayed President Elect Trump's offer to play "a role"
in resolving Pakistan's disputes with India, the transition team
released its own version of the telephone call.
It said that both
Prime Minister Sharif and U.S. president-elect Donald Trump did have a
'productive conversation' on Wednesday (November 30).
The Dawn
quoted the transition team's statement, as saying, "President-elect
Trump and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif spoke and had a productive
conversation about how the United States and Pakistan will have a strong
working relationship in the future."
"President-elect Trump also
noted that he is looking forward to a lasting and strong personal
relationship with Prime Minister Sharif," the statement added.
An
unidentified adviser to the Trump team said the Pakistani readout of
the talk had "committed the president-elect to more than what he meant".
The
most critical comment on the Pakistani readout, however, came from a
former White House press secretary, Ari Fleischer: "It's entirely
inappropriate for the Pakistani government to release what an American
president-elect says in the course of a phone call."
Fleischer,
who was a member of former Republican president George Bush's White
House team and is close to the Trump transition team as well, noted that
no government releases such readouts.
"We would never release
what a foreign leader said to (ex-president) George W. Bush. We would
talk about what George W. Bush said. But to release what somebody else
says, I am not the spokesperson for Pakistan or any other nation," he
told CNN.
"So, for them to do it is an entire breach of
diplomatic protocol and tradition. And if they had done that to me, I
would be on the phone right now with their press secretary, chewing him
out. The ambassador would be on the phone with their ambassador, chewing
the ambassador out. And up and down the chain," Mr Fleischer added.
The
US media also criticised the Pakistani decision to release the readout,
agreeing with Mr Fleischer that it was inappropriate.
"Readouts
of phone calls between world leaders are usually written safely in order
to protect leaders from incidental backlash - like the one the Trump
team put out," CNN noted.
The Washington Post called the
Pakistani release "a surprisingly candid read" and noted that it
"focuses almost entirely on Trump's contribution to the conversation,
and reproduces them in a voice that is unmistakably his (Mr Trump's)".
The
New York Times called it "a bizarre conversation", noting that "while
not exactly confirming the content, the Trump transition team did
acknowledge the call".
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