US concerned over rising Pak-India tension
WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday expressed concern over rising Pakistan-India tensions and the exchange of fire along the working boundary, which has claimed four Pakistani civilian lives.State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said Washington encourages Islamabad and New Delhi to engage in a dialogue. “We certainly remain concerned and watch
By our correspondents
January 06, 2015
WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday expressed concern over rising Pakistan-India tensions and the exchange of fire along the working boundary, which has claimed four Pakistani civilian lives.
State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said Washington encourages Islamabad and New Delhi to engage in a dialogue. “We certainly remain concerned and watch over tensions along the border. We encourage dialogue between the (two) countries,” Psaki said, when the issue of flare-up in border tensions between Pakistan and India was raised at the daily briefing.
When her attention was drawn to the reports of four Pakistanis deaths in Indian fire in Sialkot sectors, the spokesperson said she did not have any confirmation but added the U.S. would obviously sympathize with families on loss of any lives. “Our hearts will go out to the families” for any lives lost.
In response to another question, the spokesperson noted that Washington has been supporting dialogue between Islamabad and New Delhi. There have been some steps in the past and positive exchanges over the years but “obviously more work needs to be done.” On US-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue, she said the two sides work on a range of issues including counterterrorism and security issues.
State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said Washington encourages Islamabad and New Delhi to engage in a dialogue. “We certainly remain concerned and watch over tensions along the border. We encourage dialogue between the (two) countries,” Psaki said, when the issue of flare-up in border tensions between Pakistan and India was raised at the daily briefing.
When her attention was drawn to the reports of four Pakistanis deaths in Indian fire in Sialkot sectors, the spokesperson said she did not have any confirmation but added the U.S. would obviously sympathize with families on loss of any lives. “Our hearts will go out to the families” for any lives lost.
In response to another question, the spokesperson noted that Washington has been supporting dialogue between Islamabad and New Delhi. There have been some steps in the past and positive exchanges over the years but “obviously more work needs to be done.” On US-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue, she said the two sides work on a range of issues including counterterrorism and security issues.
-
Garrett Morris Raves About His '2 Broke Girls' Co-star Jennifer Coolidge -
Winter Olympics 2026: When & Where To Watch The Iconic Ice Dance ? -
Melissa Joan Hart Reflects On Social Challenges As A Child Actor -
'Gossip Girl' Star Reveals Why She'll Never Return To Acting -
Chicago Child, 8, Dead After 'months Of Abuse, Starvation', Two Arrested -
Travis Kelce's True Feelings About Taylor Swift's Pal Ryan Reynolds Revealed -
Michael Keaton Recalls Working With Catherine O'Hara In 'Beetlejuice' -
King Charles, Princess Anne, Prince Edward Still Shield Andrew From Police -
Anthropic Targets OpenAI Ads With New Claude Homepage Messaging -
US Set To Block Chinese Software From Smart And Connected Cars -
Carmen Electra Says THIS Taught Her Romance -
Leonardo DiCaprio's Co-star Reflects On His Viral Moment At Golden Globes -
SpaceX Pivots From Mars Plans To Prioritize 2027 Moon Landing -
King Charles Still Cares About Meghan Markle -
J. Cole Brings Back Old-school CD Sales For 'The Fall-Off' Release -
GTA 6 Built By Hand, Street By Street, Rockstar Confirms Ahead Of Launch