| Bush: Pakistan committed to war on terror(AP)
 Updated: 2006-03-04 17:07
 
 President Bush showed solidarity Saturday with Pakistani President Gen. Perez 
Musharraf's war-on-terror alliance with the United States, a stance that is at 
odds with many in this Islamic nation.  
 
 
 
 |  U.S. President 
 George W. Bush, left, meets with Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf 
 at Aiwan-e-Sadr, or 'House of the President', in Islamabad, Pakistan, 
 Saturday, March 4, 2006. Bush arrived in Pakistan late Friday, following 
 an unannounced visit to Afghanistan and three days in India. 
 [AP]
 |  "Part of my mission today was to determine whether or not the president is as 
committed as he has been in the past to bringing these terrorists to justice, 
and he is," Bush said at a joint news conference with Musharraf. "He understands 
the stakes, he understands the responsibility and he understands the need to 
make sure our strategy is able to defeat the enemy."
 Bush said the main concerns are making sure that "actionable" intelligence is 
shared on a real-time basis between the two countries, and that Pakistan has the 
equipment and resources to move on terrorists and their hideouts.
 Two days after an American diplomat was killed in a suicide car-bombing at a 
U.S. consulate in the southern city of Karachi, a hotbed of Islamic militancy, 
Bush promised that neither country would "back down in the face of these 
killers."
 "We will win this war together," he said.
 Musharraf reaffirmed his commitment to his support for Washington in the 
U.S.-led war on terrorism.
 "It's very clear that the intentions of Pakistan and my intentions are 
absolutely clear 锟斤拷 that we have a strategic partnership on the issue of fighting 
terrorism," Musharraf said. "If there are slippages, it is in the implementation 
part. We are moving forward toward delivering and we will succeed."
 Bush mixed praise with gentle prods on the need for more democratic reforms 
in Pakistan. Musharraf seized power seven years ago in a bloodless coup and has 
reneged on a promise to relinquish his military post.
 Bush said he appreciated hearing Musharraf's plans to spread freedom. But he 
also noted the need for elections next year to be "open and honest."
 "President Musharraf envisions a moderate state that provides an alternative 
to radicalism," Bush said. "I believe democracy is Pakistan's future. We share a 
strong commitment to democracy."
 Musharraf gave a lengthy defense of his record on the topic, while arguing 
for his right to retain his military uniform.
 "We have introduced the essence of democracy now in Pakistan," Musharraf 
said.
 He said both women and minorities have been empowered with a say in 
Pakistan's political life and "we have liberated the media and the press."
 
 
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