Washington: Pakistan’s former military ruler Gen Pervez Musharraf has said that the current bilateral relationship between Islamabad and Washington is at its lowest ebb, lower than those post 9/11 attacks on the US.
“We’re at a very poor level. I don’t think they were at this level even before 9/11, when I took over,” Musharraf told the CNN in an interview when asked about the relationship between Pakistan and the US. “I don’t think — I had a reasonable amount of respect around if the world even before 9/11. But not they certainly are at their lowest ebb. And it is extremely disturbing to anyone who understands geopolitics,” he said.
In recent months, relations between Pakistan and the US – key allies in the decade-old war on terror – teetered from one crisis to the next, including strains caused by the covert American raid that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil and deadly NATO attack that killed 24 Pakistani soliders. “It is very disturbing, and I only wish that Pakistan and the United States mend fences and we move forward on a course which is in the interest of the region, in the interest of Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the United States,” he said. The former Pakistani president said that there is no danger to the safety and security of the country’s nuclear weapons, unless it is ruled by religious extremists, which is unlikely going to be the case. (PTI)