In that case you might as well talk to a tree.
Interests, economics and power projection are the underlying mantra of foreign policy.
Not disagreeing. I have nothing to thank the US for, in other words, since you do everything in your own interests.
The deafening silence at the "friends of Pakistan" meetings is very popular these days for a reason... because the supposed "friends" are first and foremost interested in their own gains. This is all the more so when you have a client-patron arrangement, which is exactly what the US-Pak relationship has always been (I know many posters here disagree with me, but the facts just speak for themselves).
I'd disagree with that.
The US Pakistani relationship has been always about interests rather than economics. Economics have been important, but most importantly the US saw the Indians lurch for the Soviet Union early on. Had the Indians extended its branch to the US, they'd have taken it, leaving Pakistan for the Soviet Union.
In that case, it would have been India with all thw F-16s and Pakistan with the MiG-29s. The client-patron relationship is as a result of these political interests.
The US tax payer has been a benefactor of Pakistan for many years and the cold war stance also enabled Pakistan to get away with critical things it wouldn't have otherwise been able to, particularly the Nuclear tech acquisition (Adrian Levy and Catherine Scott-Clark: "Deception: Pakistan, the United States, and the Secret Trade in Nuclear Weapons").
Bull. Pakistan was sanctioned by the US upon demonstrating atomic power. That is not the mark of someone allowing the other to get away with something. The Canadians provided Pakistan's first atomic reactor, but this was not anything like ToT.
You're also overestimating the contribution of the US taxpayer. Let me give you an example.
Between 2000 and 2007, the US taxpayer coughed up perhaps 10 billion in military/economic aid (to be honest, it was just a an IoU, so the taxpayer may not have even contributed).
Between the same period, Pakistan's economy grew by 100 billion. So, 10 percent of the wealth created over that period was perhaps from the US taxpayer. That is not a lot relative to the wealth created in Pakistan. Add to this that Pakistan was participating in the WoT at great expense to itself, and the billions are significantly reduced. I would say pittance was given to Pakistan, when you see how much the US needs to spend fighting the war in Afghanistan (circa tens of billions a year), you gave Pakistan 10 billion
for 8 years of war. Pakistan is losing out in this situation.
I don't think anyone can deny the disastrous results from the clandestine US-Pak relationship of the past decades and the long line of errors that the US has made in order to perpetuate the said client patron relationship, but it is also evident that Pakistan has grossly mismanaged US funds which could have been used more wisely to build an economically stable and successful state.
The US phucked up the tribal areas, and areas in the west of Pakistan imo. Creating lots of madrassas in the eighties to find your stupid war against the commies was, imo, a mistake for Pakistan. It led to a radicalization of people over a decade's period. This is what we are seeing now. Is any price worth this? Not in my book. If I could give back all the money the US had sent Pakistan in history to reverse the radicalization the US indulged in the West of Pakistan with its madrassas, that would be a deal worth taking.