Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

Jemima Khan Interviewed former President, where he speaks about current Pakistan issues and he admits he made mistakes in the past which led to more chaos in Pakistan.
I’m just going paste the important paragraphs.

Musharraf on his political career and he says he wouldnt mind working with IKMusharraf thinks that politically he is in with a good chance. In October 2010, he launched a new party, the All Pakistan Muslim League, of which he is the president, and he plans to return to contest elections in Pakistan next year. He tells me that according to a recent, informal poll, conducted by a friend from Lahore, 91 per cent of respondents want him to be president and Imran Khan, the leader of Tehreek-e-Insaf (“Movement for Justice”), to be prime minister. "I strongly believe this is the feeling. Even my own supporters tell me Imran is the person who should be with us. I think we can turn the tables if we are together. If he is alone and if I am alone I don’t think we can turn the tables."

I pass this on to Imran later. He laughs, and says: “And then did he wake up . . . ?”
It was Musharraf who put Imran – once a supporter of his – in jail during the state of emergency in 2007 for publicly protesting after the chief justice was dismissed. Pakistani politics is a fickle and expedient game in which the players have short memories and flexible loyalties.

his take on Karzai and Afghanistan Musharraf is often undiplomatic, describing the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, as “a liar and fraud” who “has been operating against Pakistan’s interests, playing into the hands of Indians and maligning us. The bad name that Pakistan has, I would give 50 per cent of the blame to him.” He says Barack Obama is a “slow decision-maker” who lacks leadership qualities. Whereas most politicians are maddeningly taciturn, terrified that the media will magimix even the most mundane of statements, Musharraf is incautious and, for that reason, good company and hard to dislike. It is no surprise that he has been forced to deny quotes he has given in the past. (He denied telling the *Washington Post *that rape in Pakistan had become “a money-spinning concern. A lot of people say if you want to go abroad and get a visa for Canada or citizenship and be a
millionaire, get yourself raped.” The interview was recorded.)

He believes that the coalition forces won a military victory in Afghanistan but failed politically. “The Taliban were totally disintegrated. The military delivered to you . . . We had to convert a military victory into a political victory, to instal a legitimate, acceptable government in Kabul.” He argues that an Afghan government and army dominated by that country’s ethnic minorities (“Panjshiris and Tajiks”) could never be accepted by the Pashtun-dominated population, and adds, for good measure: “As far as Pashtuns are concerned, he [President Karzai] is no Pashtun.” As for Afghanistan’s future, Musharraf says that after the planned withdrawal in 2014, “unless the Afghan national army is backed by [outside] force, they will be finished by the Taliban or they will run away” and that Karzai cannot last.

Same Parrotic Statement on BB murder, he doesnt hold himself responsible for BB murder. He says that the assassination of the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007, for which he was held responsible for not providing adequate security during her election campaign, was her own fault. “They are blaming lack of security. What lack of security? You were secure, you got into a bomb-proof car. Why did you get up [out of the sunroof]? Who told you?” A Pakistani court issued an arrest warrant for him last year in connection with her assassination.

Musharraf and his endless list of blundersMusharraf readily admits to past blunders. ***He publicly apologised to Pakistan for errors made in office. The National Reconciliation Ordinance – which in 2007 granted amnesty to 8,041 politicians, political workers and bureaucrats who were accused of corruption, embezzlement, money-laundering, murder and terrorism, including Bhutto and the current president, Asif Ali Zardari, her widower – was, he concedes, “a mistake”. “I was misled. Benazir Bhutto said she would not come [home] before the elections if I dropped the cases.” He agreed to it, he says, because the cases were going nowhere. The alleged deal backfired. Bhutto returned before the elections and was assassinated, leaving Zardari, known as Mr Ten Per Cent in Pakistan because of alleged kickbacks, as heir-apparent of the Pakistan Peoples Party, which then won the 2008 election. Threatened with impeachment, Musharraf resigned.


That he “moved against the chief justice”, Iftikhar Chaudhry (he dismissed him and then put him under house arrest), is another of Musharraf’s political regrets, though this one is qualified. ***“My regret is not that I did a wrong thing. It was absolutely correct and legal and constitutional, but why I regret it is that it led to upheaval and ended what we were doing for Pakistan, unfortunately. So my conclusion is, even when you are doing something right, you need to think.”


**Musharraf opposes the use of drones, but wait a minute it wasnt him who made a deal with Bush Administration??

**On the issue of how to deal with unauthorised US drone strikes on Pakistan’s tribal areas, he offers a particular lesson in realpolitik and the constraints of power. ***"The confrontationalist approach, from a position of such acute weakness, is not possible.


The world is not a just place; frankly, this world is an unjust world. It believes in might is right. Let me talk very frankly: if you are weak, anyone can come and kick you. You can’t justify that he kicked me unjustly.


He opposes the use of drones by a foreign force. “Certainly, it’s a breach of sovereignty, because, internationally, how can you cross a border and attack in a country?” But the present regime, he says, is “double-crossing the people of Pakistan” by playing a double game of tacit approval and public statements of outrage, as revealed by WikiLeaks cables that detailed how Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told the US ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, that “we’ll protest in the National Assembly [about drones] and then ignore it”. Musharraf denies that he ever gave similar permission or tacit approval to the US to strike Pakistan. “There was no permission that they can attack. There was certainly a joint co-operation on the photography part [to carry out surveillance and to gather intelligence].”


He agrees that the use of drones is counter-productive, given the resentment they cause within Pakistan, though he claims the relationship between the US and Pakistan soured years earlier. *"The war that is being lost on hearts and minds in Pakistan has a historical background. It is not now. For ten years, we fought the Soviet Union together. The US changed its policy and shifted its strategic co-operation towards India. We became rogues and India is the friend.
*
Then the US decides to leave. The 30,000 mujahedin from Morocco to Indonesia – who looks after them now? They need to rehabilitate them. They are armed and know nothing but fighting. Then al-Qaeda came into being. Four million refugees came into Pakistan. Pakistan was alone and standing by itself. We fought [with] the US for ten years, helped them win the war – helped break up the Soviet Union – all that we did for you. We should have been rewarded, not ditched. That went into the people of Pakistan."

Now, he says, Pakistanis feel further embittered by the fact that “all major political disputes around the world involve Muslims: Palestine, Kosovo, Iraq, Lebanon”, and by the west’s double standards in foreign policy. "When it comes to Muslims voting for independence – like Chechnya – they will not get it. They will be crushed. But Indonesia, East Timor: because it’s Christian, they can separate
If he were in power now, Musharraf says, “***I would ask the US, ‘You give the drones to us and we will observe targets together, and we [Pakistan] will launch attacks.’” And if the US refused? Would he shoot down the drones, as Imran Khan has promised to do if he comes to power? He dismisses this as unrealistic. "Then it’s war and you will be beaten, and India will be very happy. Imran should understand these things


He employs the obligatory cricket metaphors to stress the point. "When you are on a weak wicket, then don’t talk, at least. You cannot do it. *You should not say, *‘***We will shoot it down.’ Because, when it comes to it, let me see if the air force does it. And if the air force does it, let’s see how they confront the joint might of the coalition forces and maybe India also. This is very short-sighted. These are not easy things. If [Imran] is PM and he takes decisions, buck stops with him. Let me see what he does. He will not . . . he cannot do it.


He questions reports of civilian deaths resulting from drone strikes, in particular the incident in Bajaur on 30 October 2006 when a madrasa (religious school) was attacked, resulting in one of the highest recorded death tallies in the drone campaign – up to 81 civilians were reported to have been killed, including 69 children. "It’s all bull**** – sorry for the word – that it was a madrasa and seminary and children were studying Quran. They used this as cover.

What about the children killed there? “I don’t remember. In the media, they said it was all children. They were absolutely wrong. There may have been some collateral damage of some children but they were not children at all, they were all militants doing training inside.” Although the Pakistani army initially claimed it was responsible for the attack, it soon became clear that Pakistan was covering for the CIA, as one of Musharraf’s senior aides later confessed to the Sunday Times. From October 2006 onwards, the Pakistani military refused to take the blame for any US drone attacks.
When Musharraf was in power and the Americans launched drone strikes on Pakistan without his permission, he says, “I used to mind that a lot – if we were not on board. I would protest.” After he resigned, the drone strikes increased sharply. According to researchers at the Bureau for Investigative Journalism, before his departure in 2008, there had been 21 US strikes over four years. In the next five months alone, there were a further 31 strikes.

He explains: “***I could pick up the phone and speak to President Bush and Colin Powell, and I used to put a lot of pressure on them. Why this has happened? They used to be on the back foot and they liked me, probably, and therefore they used to have to go a long way to calm me down to explain to me why this and that . . . Now, of course, it is beyond any control. That is what is lacking with these people [Zardari and Gilani]. No communication and no trust. I think they trusted me.” ***Enough, he believes, to have told him when they discovered the whereabouts of Osama Bin Laden, rather than launching a secret operation to take him out without the knowledge or involvement of Pakistan. This, he says, was “shameful for Pakistan and a breach of sovereignty. We should have been told”.

**
Musharraf on ISI/OBL death and Haqqani network**

He is adamant that Pakistan’s government and its intelligence agency, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), were unaware that Bin Laden was hiding in Abbottabad, a small garrison town 50 kilometres from the national capital, Islamabad. “I am very sure from one, biggest reason: if he was there for five years – although I have a little bit of doubt about that – then two years was in my time. Now, I am absolutely sure that I didn’t know.”
I question how the infamously omniscient ISI could not have known Bin Laden was there. *“It is possible,” he insists. “People take ISI or CIA to be some kind of gods who know everything and can see everywhere. That is not the case. The CIA in 9/11: how come there were 20 people under training for six months to carry out that attack? How come they hijacked four aircraft from different airports and how come they changed flight paths? All this is possible.”
*
Prime Minster David Cameron cautioned Pakistan, in a speech given in India in July 2010, against “looking both ways” on terror, by which he meant tolerating or even exporting terrorism while allied with the west in the war on terror and demanding respect as a democracy. Meanwhile, the former US vice-chairman of the joint chiefs of staff James Cartwright accused the ISI of tolerating terrorism. And, in September 2011, Cartwright’s former boss Admiral Michael Mullen claimed that the insurgent Afghan Haqqani network had “long enjoyed the support and protection of the Pakistani government and is, in many ways, a strategic arm of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency”.

***Musharraf points to a trust deficit and breakdown of communication between Pakistan and the US. Islamabad needs to explain that “we are not helping or abetting [the Haqqani network], we are dealing with them”. It is now Pakistan’s task, he says, to explain to the rest of the world – “Talk it, dammit! Speak it!” – that the ISI’s failure to track down Osama Bin Laden was down to ineptitude and not complicity.


. “I am not a run-of-the-mill politician,” he says. “They [the present government] allowed too much liberty of action without any checks to the Americans. This Blackwater and all that. Allowing foreign intelligence and foreign NGOs, or militants in garb of NGOs, coming into Pakistan without visa restrictions – it was unthinkable in my time. I would never allow it. That is how they’ve been compromising on their sovereignty.”

“I am proud of giving pride to the people of Pakistan. There is no doubt in my mind that they had confidence in themselves and moved proudly around the world.”
New Statesman - Pervez Musharraf: “If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you”

giving Pride to the nation?, what Pride is he talking about???:bummer:

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

If Imran joins hands with Musharraf I for one will stop supporting IK, I am sure many other share the same feeling.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

At least he admitting his mistakes well other than that his another mistake now is delaying to go back Pakistan. He must come NOW and face the mess he created by his mistake and let decide court and peoples his future.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

Why it is after been thrown out of power then our politicians only realizes their mistakes???? be it BB, NS or in this case Mushy!!! all they do is ask for forgiveness and start the same thing again!!!

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

I never heard any past or present politicians admitted mistakes and asked for a forgiveness!!!!

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

^ You have a fair point.

Waissay Musharaf is sort of stating the obvious most of the time and for all his bad points, I mean personally I hate the guys guts, but still he is a lot better than others.

However on the main point of this thread isn't weak or strong something that is not seen until a time of crisis? I mean on paper everyone can try and measure strength and come to conclussions but I dont always beleive in paper tigers.

Never underestimate the enemy and even a wounded beast is dangerous. Sure outward strength is an advantage but sometimes being plucky Finland is worth a lot too.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

^Mushy has spent a lot of time being romanced by both the US & UK and treated like a princely vip. No wonder the man is eager to return to the top position. Personally I trust neither Mr IK nor Mushy, but time will reveal all.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

^ A wise decision, we cant afford to trust anyone these days until the prove thier worth, Mushy was still better than the current regime but that does not mean he is the best for the country. He is merely the lesser of two ills.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

True. But also I just cant get over the fact that Mr IK married and had kids with a non muslim woman and who isnt a woman of the book either (they dont exist, and even if they do shes not one clearly), she is jewish and her brothers hang around the rothschilds and married into that family which are pro zionist and shes also raising IK's sons to be anything but real muslims like herself! IK seems unbothered by all this and islam says that the kids should be raised by the muslim father if the guy stupidly enough married a woman who isnt clearly muslim but faking it. Thats why islam forbids marrying non muslims. All this from a guy claiming to be religious and the head of an islamic party, dont make me laugh! Guy should read up on the REAL islam.

Now as far as 'saving' the country goes..., who knows until this man is in power, but I wont hold my breath and wonder which side hes really batting for (and i dont mean sexuality wise!)

I know others may disagree, but I understand why some question this mans allegiances and why hes loved so much by the west and promoted by them.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

^ Thanks for that. It is good for people to give thier true opinions. My own are that I am much more open minded these days but I would like a republic where people had more say and the power of leaders was not so strong that they could strangle the people... :)

I have a deep distrust of most authority figures now hence why most figures in power see people like me as pests.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

Well, what were his achivements or mistakes beside that I am sure he think thousand time before he plan to to step in Pakistan. The military, who propelled him to power in 1999, don't want him back. They are still rebuilding their reputation and have shifted allegiance to Imran Khan's upstart campaign. The main reason for homecoming had been delayed after the generals delivered a message that he was to stay away for now, and then there are the legal challenges. Two warrants have been issued for his arrest -- and a third case has been filed - so there is a good chance he would be detained as soon as he stepped off the plane. first one is more importrant tho A GREEN SIGNAL FROM ARMY.

Re: Musharraf: If you are weak, anyone can come and kick you

I did read an interview of Benazir after her first removal asking for forgiveness for her mistakes.