...with Lybia, North Korea, Iran and, perhaps, al Qaeda, before confessing his guilt in early 2004. Later pardoned by Gen. Pervez Musharraf, Mr. Khan remains perfectly free to travel within Pakistan, as he was just admitted this Monday, under the protection of...
...since they have been made intermittently by India. The last time these were raised was on July 13, 2001, when President Pervez Musharraf arrived in Delhi for the Agra Summit. Mr L K Advani, then India's home minister, came to make a courtesy call on Gen Musharraf...
...Dec. 2: The former President of Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf, has spoken for the first time about the massacre in Mumbai in an interview in London and implicitly confirmed that the terrorists were from Pakistan. Blaming the successor government of Asif Ali...
...the terrorism issue based on interviews with U.S officials. In one chapter, the study relates how former military ruler Pervez Musharraf kept fudging the infiltration and terrorism issue by telling U.S Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage that ''nothing...
...in September 2006 by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and foreign secretary Shivshankar Menon when he was preparing to meet Pervez Musharraf in Havana after a period of chill following the Mumbai train attacks which had a clear Pakistani imprint. The whole idea then...
...bandwagon and join the ‘war on terror,’ and take lessons from Israel. Terrorism took the worst turn in Pakistan only after Pervez Musharraf followed the prescriptions of George Bush. The government should consider attacking terrorist training camps deep inside...
...The former Pakistani President, Pervez Musharraf, has blamed Pakistan’s current administration for the tensions in ties with India in the wake of the Mumbai attacks, saying it should have made it clear how strong it is about fighting terrorism. “Well, you...
...in New Delhi, which brought Pakistan and India to brink of open conflict. After that attack, Pakistan's then-president, Pervez Musharraf, banned the LET. But Robert Grenier, a former CIA counterterrorism chief with experience in Pakistan, said Islamabad made...
...of the countrys new civilian government, elected earlier this year after popular protests brought down military dictator Pervez Musharraf. Meanwhile the Indian government is talking up plans for new security and “anti-terror” laws that are likely to target...
...on Pakistani TV channels did come as a shock. Pakistan's burgeoning digital media, a legacy of the former president Pervez Musharraf, has often been responsible for extensive coverage of events. It has also been criticised for making issues out of non-issues...