U.S. reviews financial aid to Pakistan
By Sue Pleming
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Sunday the United States would review billions of dollars in financial aid to ally Pakistan after President Pervez Musharraf declared emergency rule.
Rice, who was speaking to reporters in Jerusalem, also urged Musharraf to call elections and reiterated U.S. displeasure at emergency rule, which she advised against in two phone calls with Pakistan's president on October 31.
"Obviously we are going to have to review the situation with aid, in part because we have to see what may be triggered by certain statutes," Rice said.
Musharraf imposed emergency rule on Saturday in a bid to reassert his flagging authority against challenges from Islamist militants, a hostile judiciary and political rivals.
"I am disappointed at his decision. I think the decision sets Pakistan back in terms of the considerable progress it had made along the road to democratic change," Rice said.
Asked whether she regretted that the United States had put so much faith in Musharraf as a leader, Rice responded: "The United States has never put all of its chips on Musharraf."
Pakistan has received about $10 billion in U.S. aid since 2001, with much of that in counter-terrorism assistance.
Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, a Democratic presidential candidate and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, described the situation in Pakistan as "a real mess" and agreed that U.S. aid should be under review. Continued...








