Pakistan-US relationship at new low: Musharraf

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Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf said on Thursday that Pakistan and the United States were mutually to blame for a relationship that’s reached its lowest point and remains plagued by “total mistrust”.
The Pakistani military was guilty of “terrible negligence” in allowing Osama bin Laden to go undetected before he was killed in a US raid, Musharraf told an audience in Arkansas. Musharraf also said Pakistan hadn’t done enough to target Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network and that slain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had failed as a dictator.
On the same day that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned military leaders in Islamabad about militants, Musharraf — a short distance from her husband’s presidential library in Little Rock, Arkansas — said that neither Pakistan nor the US could defeat militants on their own.
If US military forces went into Pakistan’s tribal areas to attack militants, they “will be totally bogged down,” Musharraf said later Thursday in an interview.
“Perhaps a hit-and-run action with helicopters like they did with Osama bin Laden, but then how many such actions can they do?” Musharraf said. “And they’ll suffer a lot of casualties.”
Musharraf said the Pakistani military and intelligence services needed to “clarify” to the US their strategy for defeating the Haqqani network.
But Musharraf blamed American mistakes in Afghanistan for the Taliban’s re-emergence, calling Pakistan a “victim and not a perpetrator of terrorism”. Furthermore, he criticised the comments from now-retired Admiral Mike Mullen, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said Pakistan’s spy agency supported and encouraged attacks by Haqqani militants.
Musharraf said Mullen’s comments were “very, very unfair”.
“Don’t pass such judgments,” he said. “Don’t give such accusations. Ask, demand clarifications. But be sure that the overall direction is clear. Pakistan is against terrorism.”
Hillary was in Islamabad on Thursday for meetings with Pakistan’s leaders. Hillary said the US would go after militants in Pakistan with or without the government’s help.
Moreover, Musharraf said that he is planning an election bid to reclaim the presidency in 2013. But he also must face allegations by Pakistani prosecutors that he was part of a conspiracy to assassinate ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in late 2007. Bhutto, too, was living in self-exile in Dubai before returning to Pakistan.
Musharraf criticised Bhutto and the country’s current leadership. Asked on Thursday by a person in the audience why he was going back, Musharraf said: “I’m going to win. That’s why I’m going back.”
He said Pakistan faced internal turmoil over terrorism, a poor economy and the aftermath of devastating floods last year. Without a major change, Pakistan was headed toward becoming a “failed state”, he said.
In discussing Gaddafi’s death later, Musharraf said there were good dictators and bad dictators.
“Dictatorship should facilitate democracy, should ensure that the country transforms into a workable, sustainable democracy,” Musharraf said. “That is the job of a good dictator.”
Gaddafi did not pass that test, he said. After decades of his rule, Libya is “as illiterate, as backward, as underdeveloped and not prepared for democracy”, Musharraf said.

4 COMMENTS

  1. M is the only ex who always stood in support of Pakistan……never ever uttered anything against it…

  2. If United States stops economic assistance to Pakistan, it would be interesting to see for how long the oil Shiekhd0oms will support this country which has thrived on double dealing and back stabbing.

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