US Secretary of State John Kerry has been forced to delay a visit to Pakistan because of the worsening crisis in Syria, Pakistani officials said on Tuesday.
The Pakistani foreign ministry said last week that Kerry would arrive in the last week of June for talks with the new government on issues including the fight against militants in the country’s northwest and NATO’s exit from Afghanistan.
But no announcement of the trip was made by Washington and on Tuesday a senior Pakistani official told AFP it had been put back.
US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki on Monday said Kerry was “very much looking forward to travelling to Pakistan” but still gave no indication of when such a visit might actually take place.
Kerry would be the most senior US official to visit the country since Nawaz Sharif was sworn in as Pakistan’s new prime minister after May elections.
Pakistan-US relations are on the mend after virtually collapsing in a series of crises in 2011 including the discovery by US commandos of Osama bin Laden hiding in the northwestern town of Abbottabad.
For seven months Pakistan also cut off NATO overland supply lines into Afghanistan after botched US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers near the Afghan border.
Pakistani cooperation will be vital as the US withdraws the bulk of its forces from Afghanistan by the end of next year after more than a decade of war, and Sharif has promised his government’s support.
But the vexed issue of US drone strikes targeting suspected Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants in Pakistan’s tribal zones continues to dog relations, with Islamabad condemning them as a violation of sovereignty.
Kerry is also expected to visit New Delhi when he comes to South Asia, Indian officials said last week.