"We need to continue to have a measured response to all the rhetoric coming out of the US, Janjua said, delivering a lecture on 'Pakistans Foreign Policy Issues at the Institute of Business Administration (IBA) in Karachi yesterday.
"As far as possible Pakistan wants to engage with the US because it is not only a global power but also has its presence in the region, and for us it's almost our neighbour," she was quoted as saying by the Dawn.
She said Trump's tweet on January 1 came for "many reasons" and Pakistan is trying to analyse why the president's scathing remarks came.
"It could have been some briefing material given to him in the morning...What triggered it? Because we must not forget that the meetings we had with the Americans (General Mattis) before that were positive, yet on January 1 the New Years gift to the world were two tweets: there was one about Pakistan and the other about Iran.
Trump in a New Year's Day tweet accused Pakistan of giving nothing to the US but "lies and deceit" and providing "safe haven" to terrorists in return for USD 33 billion aid over the last 15 years.
The Trump administration has suspended about USD 2 billion in security aid to Pakistan for failing to clamp down on the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network terror groups and dismantle their safe havens.
"They were security provider role given to India in our region; border management issues; the US National Security Strategy, 2017, which wasnt positive," she said.
The foreign secretary said one of the reasons for the situation was the rise of China as an economic and military power perceived as the challenger to the US dominance.
She said in Afghanistan the "India-US nexus" was very much there.
"There were ungoverned spaces in Afghanistan, so when they talked about sanctuaries in Pakistan, wed been telling our American friends that as far as Pakistan is concerned there is no organised presence of the Haqqani network. And if you have any information, through intelligence sharing we can address this issue," she said.
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