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This Article is From Oct 07, 2011

India wants to 'create anti-Pakistan Afghanistan': Musharraf

India wants to 'create anti-Pakistan Afghanistan': Musharraf
Washington: As concerns mounted over Pakistan's military and intelligence links with terror groups, Pakistan's former president General Pervez Musharraf has accused India of seeking to "create an anti-Pakistan Afghanistan".

Describing Afghanistan as a proxy war between India and Pakistan, Musharraf claimed at a forum in Washington that Afghanistan was sending its "diplomats, soldiers and intelligence staff" to India where they were being indoctrinated against Pakistan.

Without dwelling on recent charges by top US military officials that Pakistan's military intelligence was running terror groups like the Haqqani network, Musharraf said the US needs to understand Islamabad's "sensitivities about Afghanistan's relationship with India".

"In Afghanistan, there is some kind of a proxy conflict going on between Pakistan and India. India is trying to create an anti-Pakistan Afghanistan," he told ABC news in an interview.
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Musharraf made the charges as part of the panel at the Washington Ideas Forum. His charges came as President Barack Obama voiced concern over Pakistan's military and intelligence links with extremists calling it "troubling."

Obama said Pakistan should realise that a peaceful approach towards India would be in "everybody's interests."

Without naming the Haqqani network with whom Pakistan's spy agency ISI is suspected to be having links, Mr Obama described the extremists as "unsavoury characters".

Musharraf said India did not seek to take over Pakistan militarily but charged that it wants to dominate Pakistan in the area of foreign policy, economic policy, trade and commerce.

He claimed that when he was in power he had offered Afghanistan free military training but "not one man has come to Pakistan for training."

Responding to a query about the complicity of Pakistan army with terror groups, Musharraf  said that he was convinced that bin Laden hiding in Abbottabad, Pakistan, was not about  the government's complicity with terror groups but a "terrible case of negligence." He speculated that the worsening US-Pakistan relationship might be because of the lack of a personal relationship between the leaders of both countries.

Musharraf said personal relationships with former President George Bush and former US Secretary of State Colin Powell helped ease tensions. He recalled that Powell said to him, "Let's talk general to general," which resulted "in straight upright talking" that resolved issues.

"I wonder whether that exists now, that understanding, that mutual confidence," he said. "Maybe it is not there and, therefore, yes, there is a total breakdown of confidence and that is what is harming the relationship."


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