Los Angeles Times

Pompeo tries to shore up a rocky relationship in brief visit to Pakistan

ISLAMABAD - Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo used face-to-face meetings with Pakistani leaders on Wednesday to renew demands that they do more to stamp out Islamist militants and support a fledgling U.S. peace effort with the Taliban in Afghanistan.

In a six-hour visit to Islamabad, Pompeo and Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, tried to shore up a troubled relationship that has been further strained with the Trump administration's suspension of hundreds of millions

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times5 min read
Review: Lily Gladstone And Riley Keough Shine In Hulu's Dark True-crime Drama 'Under The Bridge'
"Based on a true story" — why do we care? Does it matter whether the events of a dramatic work "really happened," or sort of happened, more or less in the way we're being told? Is it a come-on to prurient interests, when the subject is dark or sensat
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Journalist Who Accused NPR Of Liberal Bias Resigns From The Network
Uri Berliner, the veteran NPR journalist who publicly accused his employer of liberal bias, has resigned from the network. Berliner posted a message Wednesday on the social media platform X with his resignation letter to the public broadcaster's chie
Los Angeles Times4 min read
LA Ethics Panel Approves Fine For Former CBS Exec Leslie Moonves Over Interference With LAPD Investigation
LOS ANGELES — Former CBS President Leslie Moonves will pay $15,000 to settle a Los Angeles city ethics complaint over his role in an alleged cover-up of sexual assault accusations against him. The city’s Ethics Commission unanimously approved the set

Related Books & Audiobooks