I did no deals on drones: Musharraf

Former president says PML-Q cutting deal with PPP to save Moonis Elahi.


Express April 26, 2011

ISLAMABAD:


Former military ruler Pervez Musharraf denied he had cut an overt or covert deal with the United States, allowing CIA drone attacks against so-called Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan’s tribal regions.


However, he admitted that he had allowed the US to use pilot-less aircraft for surveillance purpose in the tribal districts bordering Afghanistan where US-led Nato forces have been fighting a deadly Taliban insurgency for over nine years now.

“I don’t know if the incumbent government has allowed a combat role for the US drones,” Musharraf told the Daily Express in an exclusive interview on Monday.

The former military ruler, who had joined the US-led war against terrorism, also denied allowing American private security firms, like Blackwater (now Xe Worldwide), to maintain a presence in Pakistan. “Blackwater had come to Pakistan after 2008. And I heard this name for the first time in 2009,” he added.

Musharraf’s revelation is likely to embarrass the PPP-led coalition government which has been claiming all along that it was Musharraf who had allowed presence of Xe Worldwide and US drone strikes in Pakistan.

Musharraf also said that graft cases against his successor Asif Ali Zardari and his slain spouse Benazir Bhutto were not concocted but still courts had not ruled against them. Therefore, he promulgated the now-defunct National Reconciliation Ordinance to drop these cases.

About the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, Musharraf said that Interior Minister Rehman Malik had told the Central Executive Committee in its last meeting in Larkana that “the general was not involved” in the conspiracy.

About the 1999 coup d’état, Musharraf claimed that the Sharif brothers were in contact with his government through intelligence agencies and had expressed their willingness to go into exile.

Musharraf, who formed the All Pakistan Muslim League to contest the 2013 elections, believes that if Sharif’s party is again voted into power, extremism will increase in the country because, according to him, “Sharif is not against extremist elements.”

The APML chief said he would return to Pakistan to lead his party in the next election even if there was a mid-term election.

The general revealed that he had met Asif Zardari at the residence of a common friend. He refused to name the friend.

Musharraf defended his controversial decisions of storming Islamabad’s Lal Masjid and killing Baloch chieftain Nawab Akbar Bugti. “I’ve no regrets on these decisions,” he said. However, he added that Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and his cousin Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi had endorsed these decisions. The two Chaudhrys have always denied any role in both operations.

Musharraf, the former benefactor of the Chaudhrys, said that the PML-Q was negotiating a power-sharing deal with the ruling PPP only to secure the release of Moonis Elahi, who is currently in jail for his alleged involvement in the multi-billion rupee National Insurance Company scam.  However, he predicted that such a deal would only damage their party.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 26th, 2011.

COMMENTS (50)

sardar Khan | 12 years ago | Reply Mr. Musharraf, whatever you did in 40 years for Pakistan will be liked, appreciated and respected only by those who love Pakistan. Can you expect G M Syed, Hakim Zardari, Shareef Brothers to like it. Our so called Political Leaders hate the Fauj. Can you expect them to love Pakistan when they don't love the defenders of Pakistan? Nobody has asked question why we lost east Pakistan, how and why shareef family came in Power, why Etazaaz Ehsan was fighting to have Iftekhar chaudhry back in chair, why Nawaz shareef always kept saying Iftekhar should be back in chair. Do you think we are free. How can the Parliamentarins with degrees still in Assembly.Why they are not behind bar? Why Iftehar Chaudhry did not take ZA KHUD NOTICE this???.
Pakistani Canadian | 12 years ago | Reply @Adeel: 30% are not paying 100% tax, and if that really is your argument, it further strengthens the fact that you are indeed a pseudointellectual. Income taxes only make up a small part of overall tax revenues. Heck, even the fuel you put in your car is subsidized even though the largest import bill to our country is oil. Look around you and name one country that subsidizes oil and happens to be a net importer. However, the secondary industries directly related to the agriculture sector (textile for instance) contributes to our economy and are taxed on export. You are now also complaining about 70% not paying taxes, yet that has absolutely nothing to do with your original argument about the price of your daal and roti being higher. Those 70% are also not getting the same services, if any at all, that urban Pakistan does. Ask them to pay taxes when the government is ready to provide them with roads, clean running water and sewage. All of those incidentally is the responsibility of the provincial government, which last I checked was being run by a party of industrialists and not feudal lords. Facts. Learn to look them up. As for me coming back to Pakistan to serve my country; you're just a fool. Last year, foreign remittances alone amounted to $8.9 billion and their positive impact on Pakistan's economy, throughout the country's history, is well documented. I think you should take your pseudointellect and move out of Pakistan. That in itself will help it the most and we will have one less person supporting corrupt dictators.
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