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West won't
handle war on terror without Pakistan: President
LONDON--President Pervez
Musharraf said on Saturday the West would be "brought to its knees"
without his country's support in the fight against terrorism. In a
interview with BBC radio, he defended his country against claims it was
a poor ally in the U.S.-led war against terrorism.
"Pakistan is the main ally. If we were not with you, you won't manage
anything," he said. Earlier this week, a leaked document from a think
tank associated with Britain's Defense Ministry accused Pakistan's
intelligence agency, ISI, of indirectly supporting al Qaeda and Taliban
militants in Afghanistan.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has reassured Musharraf that the
report does not represent government policy.
Musharraf defended ISI, noting it had rounded up 700 al Qaeda militants
and captured their sanctuaries in the North and South Waziristan border
area.
"You will be brought down to your knees if Pakistan does not cooperate
with you," Musharraf told the BBC. "Remember my words, if ISI is not
with you and Pakistan is not with you, you will lose in Afghanistan."
Musharraf has been trying to clear out the militants who fled to
semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun lands on the Pakistani side of the border
after U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban.
A pact between the Pakistani army and pro-Taliban militants in North
Waziristan is meant to end violence in the area and choke off
cross-border attacks into Afghanistan.
The U.S. military said last week that militant attacks in eastern
Afghanistan, near the Pakistan border, had tripled in some areas,
despite the pact.
Musharraf has been in Britain as part of a tour to promote his memoirs
"In the Line of Fire".—Agencies |