Regretting that offers to mediate with the Taliban in Afghanistan had been rebuffed by the US, Hasan insisted that his country can still play a key role in negotiating peace in the war-torn country.
The Pakistan envoy said his country has had "the best relationship" with the Taliban, which placed it in a good position to negotiate with the group.
"When we have been telling them (the US) that you must have a dialogue with the Taliban, good or bad, they never listen to us. Now they have started back-door diplomacy and all these backtracks through the Saudis and others. But again they're forgetting one thing."
He added, "Pakistan has been one of the major players in the region, ever since the Soviets occupied Afghanistan. We have had the best relationship with those Afghans, the Taliban or whatever in the past. Couldn't we be a better option for them to deal with those people? No - they never bothered."
Questioning US achievements in the last decade in Afghanistan, Hasan said, "How long have NATO troops been there in Afghanistan? Nine, ten years? And they've spent trillions of dollars there, but have they succeeded to clear one particular area of Taliban or al Qaeda operatives? Not a single case."
According to him, a decade later, the US had not "even allowed democratic parties to be active, you are not allowing political parties to exist in Afghanistan. "How can you have democracy if you don't have political parties?"
Hasan alleged that US drone strikes in Pakistan's tribal areas were weakening democracy and risk pushing people towards extremist groups, and accused the US of "talking in miles" when it comes to democracy but "moving in inches".
Hasan acknowledged that there was little that Pakistan could do stop the drone attacks. "We cannot take on the only superpower, which is all-powerful in the world at the moment. You can't take them on. We are a small country, we are ill-equipped."
Claiming that anti-US sentiment in Pakistan was at a high, Hasan said, "Even those who were supporting us in the border areas have now become our enemies. They say that we are partners in these crimes against the people. By and large you will hardly find anybody who will say a word in support of the United States, because of these drone attacks."
He added, "We're not opposed to eliminating these Al Qaeda chaps. We were not opposed to eliminating Osama bin Laden, because he was declared an international terrorist. If I were there I would have killed him myself."
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