"We [the US] don't see ourselves building a broad relationship with Pakistan, and we have no interest in returning to the days of hyphenated India-Pakistan. That's not where we are. That's not where we're going to be", she told reporters during her visit to India earlier this week.
"We all need to make sure that we have the capabilities that we need to ensure everybody's security, including India's, of course. So I am going to have some very specific conversations, continuing conversations that Secretary (Antony) Blinken has had [with Pakistan]", she added, referring to Blinken's meeting with Pakistani Foreign Minister Qureshi on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York last month.
"I think you're very right to point at the role that Pakistan has played throughout the past 20 years and even before", stated Blinken, responding to a question from Democratic lawmaker Bill Keating, who accused Islamabad of being "duplicitous" in its dealings with the US.
The secretary of state urged Pakistan "to line up with the rest of the international community in working towards those ends and in upholding those expectations".
"It's his option whether he [Joe Biden] wants to make a call or not. It's his business to think if it is necessary to call or not. It's not like that I am waiting for his call", Khan told reporters at the time.