TIL Desk/World/Islamabad/ Imran Khan has said he wants to mend relations with the US if re-elected and no longer blames it for his removal as Pakistan’s prime minister, apparently taking a U-turn after accusing Washington of engineering his ouster by supporting the then Opposition’s no-confidence motion.
Khan, 70, who was ousted in April in a no-confidence vote had been claiming that he was the result of a conspiracy between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the US, a top security partner to Pakistan that has provided the country with billions of dollars in military aid.
He had been claiming that the Opposition’s no-confidence motion against him was the result of a foreign conspiracy because of his independent foreign policy on Islamabad’s ties with countries like China and Russia and funds were being channelled from abroad to oust him from power.
In an interview following an assassination attempt this month, Khan said he no longer blamed the US and wants a dignified relationship if re-elected. “As far as I’m concerned it’s over, it’s behind me,” he told the alleged conspiracy, which both Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the US denied. Khan has claimed that Donald Lu, the top American official dealing with South Asia in the US State Department, was involved in the ‘foreign conspiracy’ to topple his government.