Given what you said, it is fair to conclude that pakistan is keeping its 'options open', i.e, there still exists a distinction between the various factions that now come under the common umbrella of the 'taliban'. From an American angle then, Pakistan is an ambiguous ally, I think he did address Pakistan's concern's about India gaining more influence and Afghanistan turning into a client state. He can't really get into the depth of things in 3 minutes, but nonetheless he did mention Pakistan's concerns, Pakistan isn't doing this to "wipe Israel off the map" (i.e crazy) its doing it because it has certain concerns (India)
the situation in afghanistan is rather circular IMO, there is a lot of mistrust between all the parties involved, Pakistan has not cracked down on these 'militants' as hard as it can because it feels the US will fail in Afghanistan and leave it in the cold again, so it does the bare minimum with the militants opposed to the coalition forces and targets only those that are hostile to it, which leaves the insurgents with just enough breathing room to stay alive and thus risks making failure in afghanistan a self fulfilling prophecy. This is probably why the US had to take matters into its own hands and expand drone strikes in FATA and Waziristan, thereby alienating more Pakistanis from its cause and making it even harder for the GoP to take serious action against the militants targeting NATO.
The US is therefore pressuring Pakistan to jump on the bandwagon, Pakistan is still sitting on the fence, its leaning towards the US, but I don't think its there just as yet, the stakes are higher for you guys, so the decision is harder, but I think Pakistan will eventually give into US pressure, for a price of course, the US has more options and Pakistan has a pressure point (India) so I think America will get the sweeter end of the stick. Also Pakistan seems to have lost a lot of credibility, India seems relentless in that aspect, so you'll have a tough time making you're point. But ultimately at the end of the day, you're either with them or you're not. That's one hell of a bargaining chip. We'll have to see how things play out in these coming months.
but coming back to Zakaria, his perspective is different so there is always an inherent bias, but I don't think we're dealing with a Jewish puppet bent upon maligning Pakistan. I think he's doing a decent job.
(If anything hes an Indian puppet, give RAW some credit!
)