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RebootedCorpse
09-22-2006, 04:29 AM
Pakistan Tells of U.S. Threat After 9/11, CBS Reports

By REUTERS
Published: September 22, 2006

President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan said yesterday that after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks the United States threatened to bomb his country if it did not cooperate with the American campaign against the Taliban in Afghanistan.

General Musharraf, in an interview with “60 Minutes” that will be broadcast Sunday on CBS, said the threat came from Richard L. Armitage, then the deputy secretary of state, and was made to General Musharraf’s intelligence director.

General Musharraf said the intelligence director had told him that Mr. Armitage had said: “ ‘Be prepared to be bombed. Be prepared to go back to the Stone Age.’ ”

General Musharraf added, “I think it was a very rude remark.”

Mr. Armitage was not immediately available to comment. A Bush administration official said there would be no comment on a “reported conversation between Mr. Armitage and a Pakistani official.”

But the official said: “After 9/11, Pakistan made a strategic decision to join the war on terror and has since been a steadfast partner in that effort. Pakistan’s commitment to this important endeavor has not wavered, and our partnership has widened as a result.”

General Musharraf is in Washington and is set to meet with President Bush at the White House today.

The Pakistani leader, whose remarks were released by CBS, said he had reacted to the threat in a responsible way. “One has to think and take actions in the interest of the nation, and that’s what I did,” he said.

Before the Sept. 11 attacks, Pakistan was one of the only countries to maintain ties with the Taliban in Afghanistan, which was harboring the Qaeda leader, Osama bin Laden. But within days of the attacks, General Musharraf cut Pakistan’s ties to the Taliban government and cooperated with efforts by the United States to capture Qaeda and Taliban forces that had sought refuge in Pakistan.

The official 9/11 Commission Report, based largely on government data, said United States national security officials focused immediately on securing Pakistani cooperation as they planned a response.

Documents showed that Mr. Armitage met the Pakistani ambassador and the visiting leader of Pakistan’s military intelligence service in Washington on Sept. 13, 2001, and asked Pakistan to take seven steps.

They included ending logistical support for Mr. bin Laden and giving the United States blanket overflight and landing rights for military and intelligence flights.

The report did not discuss any threats the United States might have made, but it said that General Musharraf had agreed to all seven United States requests the same day.

Lisa Curtis, a South Asia specialist with the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research group in Washington, said she did not know exactly what Mr. Armitage had said, but was skeptical that he would have threatened to bomb Pakistan.

“The question of any bombing taking place, that question revolves around Afghanistan,” said Ms. Curtis, a former employee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency.

“I would find it difficult to believe he talked about bombing Pakistan specifically because, while I don’t know the exact contents of the conversation, I do know it was a pretty firm ultimatum” as far as taking sides with the United States or supporting the Taliban, she said.

With the Taliban still fighting in Afghanistan and statements by the Afghan government that Pakistan must do more to crack down on militants in its rugged border area, the issue is again a delicate one between Islamabad and Washington.

General Musharraf reacted with displeasure to comments by Mr. Bush on Wednesday that if he had firm intelligence that Mr. bin Laden was in Pakistan, he would issue the order to go into that country.

“We wouldn’t like to allow that,’’ General Musharraf said at a news conference. “We’d like to do that ourselves.”

MIKE D
09-22-2006, 04:37 AM
As much as I don't trust the current administration, I trust Musharraf way way less, so I just don't buy anything that comes out of that guys mouth.

Ethan Van Sciver
09-22-2006, 04:46 AM
Sounds like the Bush Doctrine of going after terrorists and countries that support terrorism. So what?

jhz1963
09-22-2006, 05:09 AM
Diplomacy is alive and well. Cowboy George is the master!

Ray G.
09-22-2006, 05:21 AM
Not exactly how I'd deal with a non-hostile nuclear power, but at least he got their cooperation. That's the important thing.

Race
09-22-2006, 05:22 AM
Pakistan is (was?) our b!#@h.

DAVE
09-22-2006, 05:28 AM
I wouldn't be so quick to trust anything Musharraf says. I said this the other day in a post about Pakistan: this guy is the next "enemy of an enemy is our friend" who will come back and bite us in the ass. The US government has been terribly short sighted in their foreign policy since the Cold War and Bin Laden, Hussein and next Musharraf are the consequences of this.

TyPierce
09-22-2006, 07:23 AM
Sounds like the Bush Doctrine of going after terrorists and countries that support terrorism. So what?
Or... it sounds like bullying that doesn't result in the strongest of diplomatic and cooperative ties, as Pakistan has now officially agreed to live-and-let-alone with Taleban fighters.

Of course, we squandered any chance we had of actually catching bin Laden, anyway, so if Musharraf's telling the truth we're a bully that didn't even get the lunch money he was after.

Race
09-22-2006, 07:33 AM
Or... it sounds like bullying that doesn't result in the strongest of diplomatic and cooperative ties, as Pakistan has now officially agreed to live-and-let-alone with Taleban fighters.

Of course, we squandered any chance we had of actually catching bin Laden, anyway, so if Musharraf's telling the truth we're a bully that didn't even get the lunch money he was after.Not only that, but he's calling for the Pope's to be ousted from office, as well, IIRC.

RebootedCorpse
09-22-2006, 07:43 AM
"Why does everyone hate us?"

Ben
09-22-2006, 07:48 AM
Not exactly how I'd deal with a non-hostile nuclear power, but at least he got their cooperation. That's the important thing.
Yes, it's like the result justified the methods of achieving that result.

MIKE D
09-22-2006, 07:51 AM
I wouldn't be so quick to trust anything Musharraf says. I said this the other day in a post about Pakistan: this guy is the next "enemy of an enemy is our friend" who will come back and bite us in the ass. The US government has been terribly short sighted in their foreign policy since the Cold War and Bin Laden, Hussein and next Musharraf are the consequences of this.


This is what I was trying to say, but you said it better.

DAVE
09-22-2006, 07:53 AM
This is what I was trying to say, but you said it better.
Thanks, btw, I'm still expecting you to give me (deservedly) shit about no showing the last drink-up, as promised.

MIKE D
09-22-2006, 07:54 AM
Thanks, btw, I'm still expecting you to give me (deservedly) shit about no showing the last drink-up, as promised.


I thought about it, but I've decided to give you a pass, at least until you blow us off for the next one. Then the gloves come off.

DAVE
09-22-2006, 07:55 AM
I thought about it, but I've decided to give you a pass, at least until you blow us off for the next one. Then the gloves come off.
Fair enough, but I can take my medicine :)
The next one's gonna have ta come soon though.