Qaeda remnants hiding in Pak, Pervez told US
Dec. 1: Former Pakistan military ruler Pervez Musharraf had told US that remnants of Al Qaeda were hiding in the mountainous border region of his country, leaked US diplomatic documents have revealed. Though the Pakistan government and the military deny the presence of the world’s most wanted terrorist Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri on the country soil, Mr Musharraf told the high-level Congressional delegation that the Al Qaeda remnants were now hidden in the mountainous border regions of the country, an American diplomatic cable said.
Responding to questions from the Congressional delegation, Mr Musharraf decried the “tremendous misunderstandings and misperceptions” that have led US critics to accuse Pakistan’s intelligence agencies of colluding with the Taliban, Al Qaeda and other extremists.
Meanwhile, an optimistic Musharraf had told top US Congressional leaders in 2007 that an agreement on Kashmir is coming sooner than anyone might think, informing them that India and Pakistan were on verge of a deal on the contentious issue, leaked cables from WikiLeaks show.
In a meeting with Congressional leaders in Islamabad on January 27, 2007, the then Pakistani President said he and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh were on the verge of an agreement on Kashmir and this could be signed as early as April that year.
“Soon — sooner than anyone might think,” Mr Musharraf is quoted as saying in a state department cable — released by Wikileaks — to the Congressional delegation that included Nancy Pelosi, the then Speaker of the House Representative; Ike Skelton, Chair - House Armed Services Committee; and Tom Lantos, Chair - House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Musharraf appreciated Singh’s flexibility, relating his personal invitation for the President to attend the SAARC Ministerial in New Delhi in April, the cable said. “Musharraf explained his decision to decline the invitation, saying that there is too much euphoria and expectation at present. If I went to Delhi, but we didn’t sign an agreement, the people would think we had failed,” he said. “Musharraf said that he has conveyed two options to New Delhi: either PM Singh comes to Pakistan before April to sign an agreement or the two hold a signing ceremony at the SAARC Ministerial,” it said.
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