US orders non-emergency consular staff in Karachi, Lahore to leave Pakistan
2026-03-04 - 07:34
Protestors clash with security forces near the US embassy on Monday after Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in an airstrike. (EPA Images pic) WASHINGTON: The US said on Wednesday it ordered non-emergency staff at two Pakistani consulates to leave the country and granted permission for staff to leave missions in Saudi Arabia, Cyprus and Oman as Iran retaliates to US-Israeli raids. The US state department ordered non-emergency US government employees and the family members of US government personnel from US consulates in Lahore and Karachi to leave Pakistan due to “safety risks”, the US embassy in Pakistan said in a statement. It said there was no change to the status of its embassy in the capital Islamabad. The department also “authorised non-emergency US government employees and US government employee family members to leave” Saudi Arabia, Oman and Cyprus “due to safety risks”. On Tuesday, the department said that it was taking “historic action” to assist citizens who wish to depart the Middle East and return to the US. It said that in the past several days more than “9,000 American citizens have safely returned from the Middle East, including over 300 from Israel”. The US and Israel launched the attack on Saturday and quickly killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, two days after US envoys had been speaking to Iran in Geneva on a nuclear accord. Since then, Iran has expanded its retaliatory missile and drone barrage across the Middle East, hitting on Tuesday a US consulate and base as the US and Israel said they had pummelled key sites inside Tehran.