The US shares India's concern over the continued ability of terrorist outfits to operate on Pakistani soil, a senior Trump administration official said, stressing that tackling this core issue by Islamabad is critical to the prospects of its better relations with New Delhi.
Alice Wells, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, said conversations on counter-terrorism has always been a very important part of the US-India relationship and the two countries have been coordinating on 'wanted' terrorists and terror outfits.
"We have a thriving counter-terrorism dialogue. We have ongoing efforts by the US administration to sanction a range of global terrorists, including nearly a dozen Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) targets and aliases over the last year," she said at an event at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a top American think-tank.
The Lashkar-e-Taiba carried out the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, killing 166 people, including American nationals. "And certainly, with the 10th anniversary of the Mumbai attack approaching, we share a concern over the continued ability of terrorists proxies to operate on Pakistani soil," Ms Wells said.
Referring to a recent remark by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Ms Wells said the US was "looking for actions, not words" from the government of Pakistan. And obviously this is a shared concern (with India), she said.
Mr Pompeo, who recently visited Islamabad before he travelled to New Delhi, had good constructive consultations with the new Pakistani leadership, Ms Wells said.
"It was his first opportunity to meet with (Pakistani) Prime Minister Imran Khan and it was an opportunity for the Secretary to lay out aspirations for the relationship," she said, adding that she sees Pakistan as a sovereign country that has a choice to make.
"I would hope that the choice is what was attributed to their Chief of Army Staff, General (Qamar Javed) Bajwa who said as long as there are extremists non-state forces operating in Pakistan; Pakistan can't be a normal state," Ms Wells said.
"It is tackling that core issue that's going to be so critical both to the quality of our bilateral relationship (with Pakistan) and also to the prospects for better relations between India and Pakistan," she said.
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