reluctant drop Musharraf Newsweek
US Elections Calendar ~ Pervez Musharraf ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / May 2008 / May 4, 2008
US reluctant to drop Musharraf: Newsweek
George W. Bush

Daughters wedding was awfully special: George Bush

To appease China, Brown not to meet Dalai Lama at 10 Downing Street

Voters expect next U.S. President to fix the economy

Jenna Bush weds Henry Hager in a low-key ceremony

More on George W. Bush

Asif Ali Zardari

US media predicts fall of Pak govt over judges issue impasse

PP-led coalition will survive even without PML-N: Paper

US not to be involved in resolving judges restoration issue in Pak

Nawaz to decide future of PML-Ns ties with PPP today

More on Asif Ali Zardari

Condoleezza Rice

US tells India to take Bushs food habit comment positively

Leaders condemn Bush for blaming Indias prosperity to global food crisis

US reluctant to drop Musharraf: Newsweek

Indians will eat what they need: Anand Sharma

More on Condoleezza Rice

General Pervez Musharraf

Commonwealth set to readmit Pakistan

Commonwealth readmits Pakistan(lead: Commonwealth )

US media predicts fall of Pak govt over judges issue impasse

Experts say US must strategically shift policy on Pak-based extremists

More on General Pervez Musharraf

Top News

Andhra Pradesh CEEP 2008 Results

Chandrababu interacts with farmers who lost their crop in Guntur market fire

Karnataka has lost tag of a being progressive state: Rahul Gandhi

Pranab Mukherjee arrives in the UAE

Gen Y growing up too fast

SAIL signs MoU with BEML for crucial equipment supply

Suicidal Gaza now refuses food in rehab

Legally intoxicated, yet binge drinkers think they can still drive

Study confirms childhood, adolescent obesity influence cardiac health

US reluctant to drop Musharraf: Newsweek

The Bush Administration is not quite ready to abandon President Pervez Musharraf, according to a commentary appearing on the Newsweek magzines website.

Washington, May 4 : The Bush Administration is not quite ready to abandon President Pervez Musharraf, according to a commentary appearing on the Newsweek magzine's website.

According to by Michael Hirsch, the author of the commentary, Musharraf is not involved too much with the day to day affairs of state, and expectations are that he'll quietly step down around the same time as U.S. President George W Bush leaves office in early 2009.

Hirsch further goes on to say that Pakistan People's Party (PPP) co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari could be the next President of Pakistan and that Washington is in favour of pursuing a sophisticated counter-insurgency-reconstruction strategy in the country's tribal badlands.

Others in the administration, especially Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Central Investigation Agency (CIA) Director Michael Hayden, agree with the new government in Pakistan, namely that a sophisticated counterinsurgency strategy, including a "vigorous reconstruction programme" in the Tribal Areas, is the way to go.

The report quotes incoming ambassador Husain Haqqani as saying that as long as military strongmen run Islamabad, radical Islamists will always have a safe haven inside Pakistan.

ANI

May 12, 2008

May 11, 2008

May 10, 2008

May 9, 2008

May 8, 2008

May 7, 2008