Why?
Because, Pakistanis hate double dealing and back-stabbing. US. while professing to be Pakistan’s friend allows, Afghan Taliban to attack Pakistani Border Posts in Mohmand Agency.
US through NRO imposed Zardari and his gang of looters on Pakistan.
Pakistan does NOT need US AID, don’t kill us with gratuitious kindness.
US congress, Media, Executive, and Newspapers, especially LA Times, NY Times, and Washington Post are pro-India/Israel, and continually bad mouth Pakistan, through columns written by Jewish, Hindu Journalists, or turncoats Pakistanis like Hussain Haqqani and Pervez Hoodhbhoy.
US suggests names of PPP Jiyalas for Prime Minister’s post, usually, they are already CIA assets, even before, becoming Prime Ministers e.g. Shahabuddin, Raja Rental, and in waiting Amin Fahim.
US agencies continually meddle in Pakistan’s internal affairs, while publically denying it at an official level.
US bans Pakistan from receivng Nuclear Technology, but goes ahead and signs a Nuclear Agreement with India.
US provides India with satellite imagery of China and Pakistan’s Nuclear and Strategic sites.
Indian South Block has a contingency plan to attack Pakistan, with logistic and air support from US.
Pakistani visitors to the US are humiliated and denigrated by US Immigration & Border Agents.
Pakistani students are blocked from studying Nuclear Engineering in US, while Indian come in hordes to study the same subject.
Britain, a lap dog of US is forced to follow, US foreign Policy vis a vis Pakistan
Despite humanitarian efforts, Pakistanis view US as a foe, poll finds
ISLAMABAD – In the last couple of years, Washington has earmarked a bigger chunk of its aid to Pakistan for civilian projects, hoping to engender goodwill with the country’s intensely anti-American populace. The latest polling suggests that strategy hasn’t worked.
About 75 percent of Pakistanis surveyed regard the U.S. as an enemy, according to a poll released this week by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project. That’s actually up more than 10 percent since three years ago, when 64 percent said they viewed America as an enemy.
A key reason for the ongoing ill will appears to be America’s use of drone strike as a tactic against Islamist militants based in Pakistan. According to the Pew survey, only 17 percent of Pakistanis surveyed said they support the strikes.
Pakistanis even appear less willing to back the use of their own military against Islamist extremists. In the new survey, 32 percent supported the use of Pakistani security forces, a sizable drop from 53 percent three years ago.
A growing number of Pakistanis also feel that improving relations with Washington isn’t a major priority, the poll found. Last year, 60 percent of Pakistanis surveyed said strengthening ties with the U.S. was important; this year only 45 percent said they feel that way.
The U.S. channels hundreds of millions of dollars in military and economic aid to Pakistan every year. Much of that aid is aimed at targeting such civilian needs as limiting Pakistan’s crippling power crisis and improving its weak education system.
Yet about 40 percent of Pakistanis surveyed said they think that U.S. economic and military assistance actually has a negative effect on their country. Only 12 percent said they believe that economic assistance from Washington helps solve Pakistan’s problems.
Relations between the U.S. and Pakistan are at their lowest point since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on the U.S. Anger resounds over American airstrikes that mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani soldiers last November, the secret U.S. commando raid that killed Osama bin Laden in the military city of Abbottabad in May 2011, which Pakistanis viewed as a blatant breach of their sovereignty, and the killing of two Pakistanis by a CIA contractor in the eastern city of Lahore in January 2011.
Those events have served as rallying cries for a Pakistani population that for years has viewed Washington as arrogant and untrustworthy.
The Obama administration’s heavy reliance on drone missile attacks as a primary tactic against Islamic militants in Pakistan’s tribal northwest has further intensified Pakistan’s animosity toward the U.S. Pakistanis view the drone attacks as violations of their country’s sovereignty and point out that they result in the deaths of civilians as well as militants.
The Pew survey was based on 1,206 face-to-face interviews with Pakistanis between March 28 and April 13.