Republican Senator Bob Corker, Chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Pakistan was welcome to buy US arms with its own money, but not through the American tax payers' money.
"Pakistan's intelligence services (ISI) we know support the Haqqani Network. We know that the government of Pakistan, if they wished, could do away with the leadership of the Haqqani Network," Corker told Indian reporters at a fund raiser organised by the US-India Security Council here.
"I mean we should be reducing the amount of aid that goes to Pakistan because we've always said the Pakistani relationship has been one where people have said we don't want it to be a transactional relationship. We'd like for it to be a real relationship. But the fact is, it's a transactional relationship," he said in response to a question.
"And that's not really the kind of relationship that will be. It's not a relationship you can count upon. We'd like for their behaviour to change and I'd like to see that happen before we spend a lot more money in dealing with them," said Corker, who would be playing a key role in approval of US aid to Pakistan in the next year's budget.
"I'm very disappointed in the relationship. We should be reducing the amount of aid that goes to Pakistan," he said as he explained the relationship between the Haqqani network and the intelligence community.
Members of the US-India Security Council, a non-profit organisation with the mission of increasing interaction between the security communities of the two countries, urged Corker to lead a delegation of Senators and defence industry representatives to India.
The Haqqani network has carried out a number of kidnappings and attacks against US interests in Afghanistan.
The group is also blamed for several deadly attacks against Indian interests in Afghanistan, including the 2008 bombing of the Indian mission in Kabul that killed 58 people.
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