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Pakistan's choices lead to loss of life of American soldiers: US

US Vice President called Pakistan an "unreliable ally" in the war against terror and said Islamabad had failed when it was to choose between the US and al-Qaeda.

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United States Vice President Joe Biden has called Pakistan an "unreliable ally" in the war against terror and said Islamabad had failed "on occasion" when forced to choose between the US and al-Qaeda.

Biden, who spoke to CNN on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks, said it was in Pakistan's interest to cooperate more.

The price of Pakistan's choices has been the "loss of life of American soldiers in Afghanistan," he said.

The interview was aired late last night.

Islamabad has "been very helpful in other times," he added. "But it's not sufficient. They have to get better. We need a relationship that is born out of mutual interest. And it's in their interest that they be more cooperative with us." "We are demanding it," he said.

The US-Pak relations had dipped to the lowest level since the May 2 US military operation that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan's garrison city of Abbottabad.

Pakistani authorities insist they did not know bin Laden's location.

Despite troubles in Pakistan and elsewhere, the US is "getting close" to bringing about an end to organised, legitimised terrorist activities, Biden said.

"We have done great damage to ... al Qaeda," he said. "Satellite organisations" have emerged in Somalia and elsewhere, he said, but "they are less coordinated" and "less capable."

"And we're relentless in pursuing them," he added.

As a result, Americans are safer today than they were a decade ago, Biden asserted.

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