US says 'confident' Pakistan can secure nuclear arsenal after president Biden uproar
Biden made the off-the-cuff remarks on Pakistan's nuclear programme Thursday


The United States said Monday that it had confidence in Pakistan's ability to control its nuclear arsenal after President Joe Biden expressed alarm, leading Islamabad to summon the US ambassador.
"The United States is confident of Pakistan's commitment and its ability to secure its nuclear assets," State Department spokesman Vedant Patel told reporters.
"The US has always viewed a secure and prosperous Pakistan as critical to US interests and, more broadly, the US values our long-standing cooperation with Pakistan," he said.
Biden made the off-the-cuff remarks on Pakistan's nuclear programme Thursday while at a private Democratic Party fundraiser in California where he began to discuss challenges facing President Xi Jinping of China, a close ally of Pakistan.
"And what I think is maybe one of the most dangerous nations in the world: Pakistan. Nuclear weapons without any cohesion," Biden said, according to a White House transcript.
Pakistan — proud to be the only declared nuclear power in the Islamic world — summoned US Ambassador Donald Blome to lodge a protest.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif tweeted that Pakistan was a "responsible nuclear state" and that it takes safety measures "with the utmost seriousness."
US officials have long privately voiced alarm about nuclear safety if the political situation changes in Pakistan, whose military and intelligence apparatus has assisted Afghanistan's Taliban.
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari said that Biden's remarks should not hurt relations, noting that the president was not speaking at an official function.
But Bhutto-Zardari, who recently visited Washington, called for more interaction, with Biden showing little interest in personally engaging his Pakistani counterparts.
Patel noted, however, that USAID chief Samantha Power and State Department Counselor Derek Chollet have both visited since devastating floods hit Pakistan.
"This is a relationship we view as important and it's something that we're going to continue to remain deeply engaged in," he said.
SOURCE: AFP

Health trackers offer a ton of data. Here are the metrics doctors want you to pay attention to
- 20 hours ago

Petition seeks FIR against JUI's Fazlur Rehman over Army-related speech
- 11 hours ago

Does Kamala Harris really have a shot in 2028?
- 20 hours ago
.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
IG Punjab honours 7 Sheikhupura police officers for outstanding performance
- 6 hours ago

The real reason Congress keeps getting older
- 20 hours ago
Strikes hit Iran's Gulf island of Qeshm: Iranian state TV
- a day ago

Is the Iran war back on for real?
- 20 hours ago

PM is committed to easing access to finance for SMEs: Haroon Akhtar Khan
- 7 hours ago

Meta turns off the Instagram feature that users make AI deepfakes of public accounts
- a day ago
US military says launched 'wave of strikes' on Iran
- 11 hours ago
11th Colour & Chem Expo 2026 to showcase Pakistan's largest dyes, chemicals industry gathering
- 10 hours ago

Meta risks $12B EU fine over addictive Instagram and Facebook feeds
- 13 hours ago





