Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Political Assassinations (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination (/thread-5796.html) Pages:
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Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Danny Jarman - 11-05-2013 Magda Hassan Wrote:Danny Jarman Wrote:http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2013-04/30/c_132350602.htmFor sure Danny. Many powers do benefit form a destabilised Pakistan, India, the UK and US just for starters. It is a pawn in the great game. Then are internal players who also benefit from retention of their feudal privileges. But most Pakistanis have a terrible time of all this. Do you see Musharaff as likely behind this or are there others too? Aren't Musharaff, the ISI and the US all in cohorts? I see them as one and the same I fear a similar fate for Imran Khan who is gaining more political ground and popularity by the day. Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Magda Hassan - 11-05-2013 Danny Jarman Wrote:Magda Hassan Wrote:Danny Jarman Wrote:http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2013-04/30/c_132350602.htmFor sure Danny. Many powers do benefit form a destabilised Pakistan, India, the UK and US just for starters. It is a pawn in the great game. Then are internal players who also benefit from retention of their feudal privileges. But most Pakistanis have a terrible time of all this. Do you see Musharaff as likely behind this or are there others too? Yes, to a large extent that is the case. And Imran Khan is the biggest threat to that racket. Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Jan Klimkowski - 19-05-2013 Magda Hassan Wrote:Imran Khan is the biggest threat to that racket. It seems some of the players agree with you, as one of Imran's Khan's deputies has just been murdered. Imran Khan blamed the city's dominant MQM party, a claim the party has denied, and the British government, for Hussain's murder in a series of tweets. "I am shocked and deeply saddened by the brutal killing of Zara Shahid Hussain, Zara apa to us, in Karachi tonite. A targeted act of terror! "I hold Altaf Hussain directly responsible for the murder as he had openly threatened PTI workers and leaders through public broadcasts. "I also hold the British Govt responsible as I had warned them abt Br citizen Altaf Hussain after his open threats to kill PTI workers." Quote:Leading Pakistan politician Zahra Shahid Hussain killed outside home Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Jan Klimkowski - 20-08-2013 This is less about truth, and more about timing. Who can read the runes of the deep political timing of these, ahem, revelations?..... Quote:Pervez Musharraf indicted over Benazir Bhutto murder Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Peter Lemkin - 04-01-2014 NukeGate: Richard Armitage's Secret Deal with Musharraf & the Murder of Benazir BhuttoBy Alex Constantine / December 21st, 2012NukeGate archive(From "Terror on the Right," coming in the Fall, 2013) Before returning to power in Pakistan, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto offered to allow investigations of the A.Q. Khan nuclear trafficking network in the West. She speculated that an inquiry "might produce terrible results" for several ex-generals of the Pakistan Army who were part of it, but "were conveniently let off the hook as part of a secret deal between General Pervez Musharraf and Richard Armitage in 2004.""Dr AQ Khan," Pakistan's International News reports, "is on record having said that all the top army generals since 1985 knew about the proliferation activities of his network."Musharraf agreed to jail Dr. A.Q. Khan "only after striking a secret deal with US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage in 2004 that his own army generals involved in the illegal nuclear trade would not be touched and most importantly, that he himself would be accepted by the Americans to rule Pakistan in his military uniform." Benazir Bhutto herself stood in the way of Musharraf's ambitions when she returned in 2007, but it is not known if assassination a foreign policy function that Armitage had some experience in was a term of the "secret deal," but it was a necessary one if Pakistan was to continue to be ruled by a four-star general in military plumage.Benazir Bhutto was murdered on December 27, 2007 in Rawalpindi. Mark Siegel, an American lobbyist, former director of the Democratic National Committee and a Bhutto confidante, has testified, in a statement recorded by Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency, that Pervez Musharraf threatened Benazir Bhutto with "dire consequences" if she returned before the 2008 elections. Bhutto was with Siegel when she received the call from Musharraf. In that conversation, Musharraf informed Ms Bhutto that "he would not be responsible for her security if she returned before the elections."[1] Shortly after Benazir Bhutto was murdered, Musharraf issued a statement calling on the citizens of Pakistan to remain calm so the "nefarious designs of terrorists can be defeated." After the deal was struck by Armitage and Musharraf, "the role of Pakistani generals in nuclear proliferation was ignored by the Americans and they focused on AQ Khan alone." Khan was "made a scapegoatin the name of national security interests.'" A dossier on the Khan network released in England states that A,Q. Scapegoat was "put under detention after he threatened the former ISI chief General Ehasanul Haq that he would tell the names of all the military generals who were part of this network if he was touched by the Musharraf government." Before he could make good on his threat, however, "he was arrested and put under house arrest without any access to the media and the courts. The same dossier had revealed that Dr A.Q. Khan had told his investigators that all the chiefs of Pakistan Army since 1985 knew about the activities of his illegal network."[2] A recent postscript: Musharraf wanted to eliminate' Bhutto considering her threat': Pak authoritiesANI, December 15, 2012, 13:51 Islamabad: Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has told Interpol that of former President Pervez Musharraf wanted to eliminate Benazir Bhutto considering her a threat to his rule, it has emerged.The statement was apparently made after the world police rejected Pakistan authorities' request to arrest Musharraf, who is currently in exile in London. According to the Dawn, in September this year, the FIA sent the request to Interpol for the arrest of Musharraf, but the latter rejected it, stating it was moved under political pressure. The FIA recently dispatched another letter to Interpol, requesting them to arrest Musharraf, a prime accused in the Bhutto murder case. FIA attached arrest warrants for Musharraf as well as some pieces of evidence, with the letter. The evidence dispatched with the letter on Thursday included a statement by US Journalist Mark Siegel and records of emails sent by Musharraf to former premier Benazir Bhutto. http://zeenews.india.com/news/south-asia/musharraf-wanted-to-eliminate-bhutto-considering-her-threat-pak-authorities_816858.html [1] Khalid Iqbal, "Mark Siegel Among Six Summoned by ATC," The International News, December, 16, 2012. [2] "Access to AQ Khan to Expose Many Sacred Cows," The International News, (available at the "Back Issues" section of the IN site, not in the archives, but it was reposted on October 10, 2007):http://www.constantinereport.com/allposts/access-to-aq-khan-to-expose-many-sacred-cowsrichard-armitages-secret-deal/ Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Marlene Zenker - 07-01-2014 Magda Hassan Wrote:It has always been a volatile area but it seems more so now than at any time. Bandit country. Gee, I'm sure glad that an unstable crazy place like Pakistan doesn't have nuclear weapons - oh wait - they do!:::::::: Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Magda Hassan - 08-01-2014 Yeah, makes me sleep well at night too. ::willynilly:: Musharraf Accused of Bhutto Assassination - Peter Lemkin - 08-01-2014 According to the Federation of American Scientists http://www.fas.org/programs/ssp/nukes/nuclearweapons/nukestatus.html Pakistan is estimated to have about 100 +/-10 nuclear weapons. They have already been known to have given the technology [if not actual weapons or parts] to other states - and have been suspect of even possibly giving them to non-state groups! The government and military/intelligence apparatus of Pakistan plays both a 'friendly' and 'hostile' stance toward the 'War on Terror' run primarily by the USA. They fight against and host persons listed as terrorists by other nations. Whatever they are, they are unstable, and a war with India is always another possibility [several terrorist actions in India came from groups in Pakistan with the seeming wink and nod of the Pakistani government]. No one has yet figured out the complexities of the bin Laden 'story'. Was he really there? And if he was, he was in the very city that hosts the HQ of the military, and must have been under the protection of the military and/or ISI [intelligence]. A very troubling country to have nukes. [Although I trust NO nation to have any!] The Bhutto murder has never been solved to anyone's satisfaction [as is usually the case in the assassination of candidates of heads of state everywhere]. ISI is known to have given money to Atta and his group of patsies for 9-11. Rogue nation at best - and with 100+ nuclear weapons of unknown strength and security. Fractured internal political/military/intelligence structures too.....no problem! |