Islamabad: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday regretted Pakistan's decision to join America's 20-year-long 'war on terror' in Afghanistan by calling it "self-inflicted wound" and a decision made for the sake of money and not for public interest.
Khan, who had long been critical of Pakistan's participation in the about two-decades long war, claimed that he was close to the decision-makers in 2001 when the then military ruler, Gen Pervez Musharraf, decided to become part of the 'war on terror'.
"And so, I am well aware of what considerations there were behind the decision. Unfortunately, the people of Pakistan were not a consideration," Khan said while addressing the officers of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs here.
"The considerations, instead, were the same as in the 1980s, when we participated in the Afghan jihad," he said, referring to the Soviet-Afghan war, which was then dubbed as holy war.
"We ourselves are responsible... as we let [others] use us, sacrificed the reputation of our country for aid and made a foreign policy that went against the public interest [and was devised] for money."
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He termed the 'war on terror' for Pakistan a "self-inflicted wound" and added that "we cannot blame anyone else for this outcome (of the war).
Khan in the past had often cited that Pakistan suffered more than 80,000 deaths and economic losses of over USD 100-billion as a result of the 20 years of war.