Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
US threat to hit Pakistan post 9/11 was news to me, Bush insists
From Tim Reid in Washington
PRESIDENT BUSH said yesterday that he was ââ¬Åtaken abackââ¬Â by a claim from President Musharraf of Pakistan that the US had threatened to bomb his country if it did not co-operate with America after the September 11 attacks.
Mr Bush, standing next to President Musharraf at a White House news conference, was asked about the Presidentââ¬â¢s allegation on Wednesday that his country was told that it would be bombed ââ¬Åinto the Stone Ageââ¬Â if it refused to join the fight against the Taleban and al-Qaeda.
NI_MPU('middle');ââ¬ÅThe first I heard of this was when I read it in the newspaper today,ââ¬Â Mr Bush said. ââ¬ÅI guess I was taken aback by the harshness of the words.ââ¬Â
President Musharraf, asked to explain his comments, said that he could not comment before the publication of his memoir, In the Line of Fire, which will be serialised in The Times from Monday.
In an interview with the CBS programme 60 Minutes, President Musharraf said that the threat was made by Richard Armitage, then the Deputy Secretary of State, in the days after the attacks, to the Pakistani intelligence director.
Mr Armitage, now retired from government, denied the allegation yesterday , but conceded that he had had ââ¬Åstrongââ¬Â words with General Mahmoud Ahmad, the former intelligence director, during a meeting in Washington soon after the attacks.
ââ¬ÅIââ¬â¢ve never made a threat in my life that I couldnââ¬â¢t back up, and since I wasnââ¬â¢t authorised to say such a thing, hence I couldnââ¬â¢t back up that threat, I didnââ¬â¢t say it,ââ¬Â Mr Armitage told CNN. ââ¬ÅNever did I threaten to use military force.ââ¬Â
Mr Armitage said that he told General Ahmad that ââ¬Åfor Americans the issue was black and white ââ¬â that you are either with us or against us. He was looking for a friendly conversation with a friend of Pakistan and he got a very straightforward conversation.ââ¬Â
Tony Snow, Mr Bushââ¬â¢s spokesman, ascribed President Musharrafââ¬â¢s allegation to a possible misunderstanding. He acknowledged that Pakistan was presented with a stark choice after the attacks.
Mr Bush and President Musharraf were at pains yesterday to ease any tensions caused by the Pakistani leaderââ¬â¢s comments. Mr Bush added that President Musharraf had been one of the first leaders to ââ¬Åstep upââ¬Â and join the US in its fight against terrorism.
ââ¬ÅI admire your leadership. I admire your courage,ââ¬Â Mr Bush told him.
The two were asked about comments made by Mr Bush this week that he would not hesitate to authorise an immediate US military strike inside Pakistan against Osama bin Laden.
President Musharraf told CBS: ââ¬ÅWe wouldnââ¬â¢t like to allow that. We would like to do that ourselves.ââ¬Â
Yesterday President Musharraf said that he was not worried about ââ¬Åsemanticsââ¬Â, adding: ââ¬ÅWe are in the hunt together. Letââ¬â¢s not get involved in how it ought to be done, by whom it ought to be done.ââ¬Â
President Musharraf also sought to ease concerns over a recent peace treaty that Islamabad has struck with tribes on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, amid concerns in Washington that Pakistan is not doing enough to crack down on Taleban and al-Qaeda fighters.
ââ¬ÅThis treaty is not a deal with the Taleban. It is actually to fight the Taleban,ââ¬Â he said. ââ¬ÅThis deal is with the tribal elders.ââ¬Â He said that they were now honour-bound to take on Taleban and al-Qaeda militants in the border region. Mr Bush will have a three-way meeting with President Musharraf and the President Karzai of Afghanistan at the White House on Tuesday. The dominant issue will be the Talebanââ¬â¢s resurgence in southern Afghanistan.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,11069-2371128,00.html
And that was that. It was so interesting. Bush was replying with jokes and doing some funnies and Mush totally looked like a coupla degrees smarter than that guy.
The US media is chewing Bush for this
I heard this guy on CNN say "I don't know what's more desturbing, that we can use such language against a sovereign nation or that Bush just found out".
My take: Bush threw Musharraf in an awkward spot by trying to send similar message that he can do whatever around the world by saying he'd send thousands of troops across the Pak border. Musharraf used politick to the extreme and declared this tid bit embarassing Bush. Now that when Bush wants to move in forces forcibly, Mush can say NO and Bush can't dare repeat his mantra "I'd send you guys to the stone age", coz then he'd look like a jackass to put it simply.
You shoulda seen their joint press conference today.
This reporter asks Bush, "So what are going to be your strategies to nab Bin Laden now?"
Bush: We uhh well ummm we'd use our intelligence, our networks ummm and hunt.... --
Mush: Can I cut in President Bush?
Bush: Sure go ahead
Mush: We can't disclose each and everything especially tactics. We are looking for him and we'll get him. Thats all you need to know.
And that was that. It was so interesting. Bush was replying with jokes and doing some funnies and Mush totally looked like a coupla degrees smarter than that guy.
And Mush had jokes today too. Later in DC while speaking at the GW Uni, he was crackin jokes, Sehba Musharraf was crackin jokes. The 1st couple of Pakistan have totally stolen the diplomatic scene around here. Lol he put one more on Bush which went unnoticed... At George Washington Uni he starts off, "I'm refraining from calling George Washington Uni as GW since according to my training and understanding, GW means Guerilla Warfare".
yeah I've subscribed to C-Span off the internet... Surprisingly nothing's in the papers about GW U.
Even Sehba Musharraf spoke. Infact she started. She looked so much older.
Lol in the middle Musharraf pauses while trying to remember some computer device (which I can't recall) and he turns to Sehba and is like "Woh usko kya kehte hain???"
Then she prompts him.
edit oh here it is about GW Uni.
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-09-22-voa48.cfm
I can read it, but damn everything's so small.
I see what u mean about the first lady's youth.
When i first saw the reports on BBC i thought pakistanis would be considering it as a shame that Mushraff had to do this under total media glare and that too in US.
Did anyone watch the "60 mins"..was Mushraff asked why he joined WOT afterall...was it becoz of the threat??
What ever the reason its been better for pakistan..after all look at what Iraq is now.