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We'll Bomb You Into The Stone Age!

Started by AlanM, September 22, 2006, 09:19 AM NHFT

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AlanM

Musharraf Says U.S. Threatened War After 9/11
Pakistani Leader's Comments Come Before White House Meeting
By DEB RIECHMANN, AP

NEW YORK (Sept. 22) - President Bush is trying to settle troubles that have bubbled up between two U.S. allies in the war on terrorism who accuse each other of failing to crack down on extremists.
   
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A White House aide said he didn't know the specifics of the conversation cited by Musharraf.

Bush was to meet Friday with Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf. He's following up that meeting with talks on Tuesday with Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Then, they'll have a three-way sit down on Wednesday.

Bush is working to find a way to defuse the dispute between Pakistan, which is helping the United States track Osama bin Laden and restrain bin Laden's al-Qaida organization, and the struggling democratic government in Afghanistan.

Karzai's government is suffering its heaviest insurgent attacks since U.S.-led troops toppled the Taliban in late 2001.

Coinciding with the Bush-Musharraf meeting was a news report alleging that after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the United States used threats to persuade Pakistan to become a partner in the U.S.-led war on terror.

In an interview to air Sunday on CBS-TV's "60 Minutes" program, Musharraf said that after the attacks, Richard Armitage, then deputy secretary of state, told Pakistan's intelligence director that the United States would bomb his country if it didn't help fight terrorists.

"The intelligence director told me that (Armitage) said, `Be prepared to go back to the Stone Age,'" Musharraf told "60 Minutes."

White House counselor Dan Bartlett said Friday he didn't know the specifics of what Armitage might have said to the Pakistanis.

"But we have made very clear that we went straight to President Musharraf in the days after 9/11 and said it's time to make a choice: Are you going to side with the civilized world or are you going to side with the Taliban and al-Qaida," Bartlett told CBS' "The Early Show."

Armitage told CNN on Thursday that he never threatened to bomb Pakistan, wouldn't say such a thing and didn't have the authority to do it. Armitage said he did have a tough message for Pakistan, telling the Muslim nation that it was either "with us or against us," according to CNN. Armitage said he didn't know how his message was recounted so differently to Musharraf.

The State Department declined to comment on the conversation.

Afghan officials have alleged repeatedly that Taliban militants are hiding out in neighboring Pakistan and launching attacks across the border into Afghanistan. Pakistan, which has deployed 80,000 troops along the border, rejects the accusation and says it's doing all it can to battle extremists.

"This isn't about pointing fingers at one another," State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said Thursday. "What this is about is finding ways that we can all work together to be able to achieve our common objectives, which is a free, secure and independent Afghanistan; a secure Pakistan border area as well."

Musharraf is strongly defending a truce he recently signed with Taliban-linked militants in the tribal North West Frontier Province where his government has little control. Under the terms of that deal, Pakistani troops agreed to end their military campaign against fighters in North Waziristan. For their part, the militants said they would halt their attacks on Pakistani forces and stop crossing into Afghanistan to launch ambushes.

"If they're able to live up to the terms of those agreements, the border should be a much quieter region," NATO's top commander, U.S. Gen. James L. Jones, said at a Senate hearing on Thursday. "We're in the process now of observing very closely what is going on and what the effect is on the Afghani side of the border. And we'll know that within probably the next month or so."

Karzai said in a speech in New York City on Thursday that the Taliban was not gaining strength and he suggested that Pakistan's toleration of militants had helped make Afghanistan unstable.

He also said some in the region used extremists to maintain political power, referring to Musharraf.

Karzai equated cooperating with terrorists to "trying to train a snake against somebody else."

"You cannot train a snake. It will come and bite you," he said.

During Musharraf's visit, human rights activists are asking Bush to press Musharraf to restore civilian rule in Pakistan, end discrimination of women, and stop using torture and arbitrary detention in counterterrorism operations. Musharraf seized power in a 1999 coup. Instead of giving up his military uniform in 2004 as promised, he changed the constitution so he could hold both his army post and the presidency until 2007.


9/22/2006 08:58:20

AlanM


slim

They only know force and cannot think of any other way to persuade people.  >:D

David

And after years of threats and force, the one time they do say please and of course are rebuffed, becomes the whine of gov't.  "See, See, we tried to be nice and look where it got us.  Gov't persons are full of s--t.