US President Donald Trump, in his first tweet of 2018, had lashed out at Pakistan for providing safe havens to terrorists and accused it of "lies and deceit" and of fooling US leaders while sheltering terrorists.
Unveiling his new South Asia policy in August last year, Trump had warned of tougher measures against Pakistan if it failed to cooperate with the US in the fight against terror.
In addition to broader systemic concerns, this also includes Pakistans non-compliance with its commitments under UN Security Council Resolution 1267, the official said.
The UN Security Council resolution asks member countries to freeze the assets of, prevent the entry into or transit through their territories by, and prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale and transfer of arms and military equipment to any individual or entity associated with al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden and/or the Taliban as designated by the Committee.
The FATF is scheduled to meet later this month, wherein Americas move is up for discussion.
The State Department, however, refrained from giving any further details.
The February Plenary of the intergovernmental Financial Action Task Force (FATF) will be determining appropriate next steps regarding Pakistan, the spokesperson said.
The FATF discussions are confidential and there will be no publicly released information until there is a FATF Plenary decision that Pakistan should be publicly identified. Confidentiality of the FATF internal deliberations and documents are very important and core to the deliberative process, the spokesperson added.
The watchdog does not have the powers to impose sanctions on a country found not meeting the required standards.
However, its listing can affect international transactions from the country concerned as those would then become subject to greater scrutiny.
This will increase the cost of doing international transactions and ultimately higher cost of doing business locally.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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