http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?sectionName=HomePage&id=b276ff10-2256-4517-87c4-74245797a2bd&&Headline=Taliban+trying+to+take+over+Pakistan%2c+says+Zardari

 
 November 4, 2006 
HT Foreign Bureau, Hindustan Times
New Delhi, February 14, 2009
First Published: 13:49 IST(14/2/2009)
Last Updated: 01:19 IST(15/2/2009)

Taliban trying to take over Pakistan, says Zardari

There's a clear and present danger that the Taliban may capture the state of 
Pakistan, the country's President Asif Ali Zardari has said in an interview to 
CBS news that will be broadcast on Sunday night.

"We are aware of the fact it's.Taliban. trying to take over the state of 
Pakistan," Zardari told the American television channel, raising fears about 
the ability of the nuclear-armed nation's ability to resist a militant takeover.

Zardari, paranoid about his own safety, has hardly stirred out of his 
presidential palace in Islamabad since becoming head of state in September. 
Most of his travels have been abroad. Zardari's comments are not without irony 
given that his wife, Benazir Bhutto, as prime minister in 1996, sanctioned the 
"export" of the Islamist Taliban to Afghanistan, and, in 1997, Pakistan became 
the first country to recognise the neighbouring Taliban regime.

The Pakistan President believed that the militant Taliban had been taken for 
granted for a long time. "It's been happening over time and it's happened out 
of denial. Everybody was in denial."

Zardari, paranoid about his own safety, has hardly stirred out of his 
presidential palace in Islamabad since becoming head of state in September. 
Most of his travels have been abroad. A new assessment by US intelligence 
raised questions about Pakistan's inability to deal with the Taliban. "In 2008 
Islamabad intensified counter-insurgency efforts, but Islamabad's record in 
dealing with militants has been mixed," it said.
  
Zardari said the Taliban had taken advantage of the country's weaknesses. ".We 
have weaknesses and they are taking advantage of that weakness," a seemingly 
helpless President stated. He asserted that Pakistan was not doing anybody a 
favour by fighting the Taliban. "So, we're fighting for the survival of 
Pakistan. We're not fighting for the survival of anyone else."

In an answer to critics who question how much power he actually wields in 
Pakistan vis-à-vis the all-powerful military, Zardari said they were all behind 
him. "If that wasn't the case, then Islamabad would have fallen because  
obviously if the army doesn't do its job, these men (jehadis) are not 
restricted."



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