| US, Pakistan recommit to war on terror(AP)
 Updated: 2006-03-04 21:25
 
 President Bush and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf recommitted their 
nations Saturday to the difficult task of hunting down terrorists still hiding 
here and across the globe. 
 
 
 
 
 |  U.S. President 
 George W. Bush, left, shakes hands with Pakistani President Pervez 
 Musharraf at the conclusion of a joint press availability at the 
 Aiwan-e-Sadr, of 'house of the President', in Islamabad, Pakistan 
 Saturday, March 4, 2006. President Bush showed solidarity Saturday with 
 Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's war-on-terror alliance with 
 the United States, a stance that is at odds with many in this Islamic 
 nation. [AP]
 |  Bush came to Pakistan 锟斤拷 despite 
terrorist dangers that demanded extraordinary security 锟斤拷 to bolster Musharraf, 
who straddles a delicate political divide in this impoverished but growing 
Islamic nation.
 The U.S.-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are unpopular here, and Pakistan's 
strong anti-American sentiment was reflected in the thousands who demonstrated 
across the country against Bush's visit. While there are suspicions that 
al-Qaida and Taliban operatives maintain some degree of safe sanctuary inside 
Pakistan, Musharraf has defied criticism he is too cozy with Washington to be a 
strong U.S. partner in the anti-terrorism campaign.
 Bush said his visit convinced him that Musharraf is as committed as ever.
 "We will win this fight together," Bush said after more than an hour of 
private talks with Musharraf. "While we do have a lot of work to be done, it's 
important that we stay on the hunt."
 The United States also sees Musharraf as a leader who favors a more open, 
moderate and tolerant Pakistan. Standing alongside the Pakistani leader whom 
Bush calls his "buddy," the U.S. president stopped short of criticizing 
Musharraf on the pace of democratic advances, only gently calling for elections 
scheduled for next year to be "open and honest."
 Musharraf seized power in a 1999 bloodless coup. Instead of giving up his 
military uniform as promised in 2004, he changed the constitution so he could 
hold both his army post and the presidency until 2007.
 "I believe democracy is Pakistan's future," Bush said as the leaders stood 
side-by-side at their outdoor news conference at the marble presidential palace.
 Musharraf defended his record on democracy, touting steps to liberalize 
Pakistan's press, usher in an elected parliament and empower women.
 "Beyond 2007, this is an issue that has to be addressed and according to the 
constitution of Pakistan, and I will never violate the constitution," said the 
Pakistani leader, repeating similar reassurances made in the past. "Democracy 
will prevail."
 The Pakistani government once supported the repressive Taliban regime in 
Afghanistan. But after the 2001 terrorists attacks on America, Musharraf aligned 
himself with Bush and the war on terrorism.
 Pakistan's law enforcement agencies have arrested more than 700 suspected 
militants in the past four years.
 "The intentions of Pakistan and my intentions are absolutely clear 锟斤拷 that we 
have a strong partnership on the issue of fighting terrorism," Musharraf said. 
"If at all there are slippages, it is possible in the implementation part. ... 
We are moving forward toward to delivering and we will succeed."
 The day before the president arrived, 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. Musharraf called it a vicious act timed to coincide 
with Bush's visit.
 Bush said he was unfazed. "We're not going to back down in the face of these 
killers," he said.
 On Saturday, Pakistani police detained Imran Khan, the leader of a small 
opposition party, ahead of a planned protest. Khan, a respected former Pakistani 
cricket captain, has condemned Musharraf as an "American slave."
 Hoping to broadcast American compassion to the Muslim world, Bush showcased 
the U.S. assistance offered after an earthquake devastated Pakistan in October, 
killing 86,000 people and leaving more than 2 million homeless.
 "It is staggering what the people of this country have been through," said 
Bush, who earlier saw a film on the quake and visited with victims, including 
orphans, widows, women in wheelchairs and children who lost limbs. "We're proud 
to help." 
 Musharraf said Pakistan would have been hard-pressed to handle relief 
operations without U.S. military Chinook helicopters and medical assistance. 
 Bush was also seeking to heighten ties between the two countries by taking in 
cricket, a popular sport here. 
 "Maybe I'll take the bat," he quipped. "I don't know. We'll see. I'm kind of 
getting old these days." 
 American and the green-and-white Pakistani flags were posted in honor of 
Bush's first visit to Pakistan. Streets were mostly empty, aside from the armed 
security officers standing guard. 
 On Friday night, Air Force One flew through into the Pakistani capital 
without lights to conceal the plane's profile as it delivered Bush and his wife, 
Laura, from India. Layers of security, including three helicopters that circled 
overhead, shadowed Bush's motorcade as it ferried him from the fortified U.S.. 
Embassy compound to the presidential palace. 
 At the grand official building in the heart of Islamabad's government 
district, Bush was escorted down a red carpet behind raised swords gripped by 
Pakistani troops in dark green uniforms. 
 Bush's trip here followed a three-day visit to India where he sealed a 
civilian nuclear deal with India. Pakistan has asked for the same deal, but Bush 
made clear that was unlikely, using diplomatic language about the two countries' 
"different needs and different histories." 
 Just two years ago Pakistan's leading nuclear scientist, A.Q. Khan, was 
exposed as the chief of a lucrative black market in weapons technology that had 
supplied Iran, Libya and North Korea. Pakistan's government denied any knowledge 
of his proliferation activities. 
 But Bush said the United States was committed to helping Pakistan meet its 
rising energy needs. He expressed no objections to plans by India and Pakistan 
to build a pipeline to bring much-needed natural gas supplies from Iran, a 
project that had brought U.S. disapproval. Washington opposes investments that 
benefit Iran, which it suspects of trying to build nuclear weapons. 
 "Our beef with Iran is not the pipeline," Bush said. "Our beef with Iran is 
the fact that they want to develop a nuclear weapon." 
 Bush was departing for Washington late Saturday after a state dinner. A huge 
ballroom at the presidential palace was already decked out in the morning for 
the evening's formality 锟斤拷 under 11 brightly lit chandeliers, tables were adorned 
with orchids draped from candelabra and elaborate crystal 
stemware. 
 
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