Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has said that the US threatened
to bomb Pakistan in 2001 if he did not cooperate in the war against the
Taliban in Afghanistan after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
In an interview scheduled to air on Sunday on the CBS
television network, Musharraf said that Richard Armitage, then US
deputy secretary of state, issued the threat to Musharraf's
intelligence director.
"The intelligence director told me that
(Armitage) said, "be prepared to be bombed. Be prepared to go back to
the Stone Age," Musharraf said. "I think it was a very rude remark."
Armitage has questioned the terminology but did not deny that his message was strong, CBS reported.
Pakistan
was one of only a few countries that had given diplomatic recognition
to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, and the US declared shortly after
the 9/11 attacks that there would be consequences for Taliban
supporters.
"One has to think and take actions in the interests
of the nation, and that's what I did," said Musharraf, who dropped
recognition of the Taliban and has become a close US ally in the war on
terrorism.
After Musharraf's government began cooperating with
Washington, the Bush administration dropped sanctions imposed after
Pakistan's first nuclear bomb test in 1998.
Musharraf was in New York to attend the opening of the UN General Assembly.