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Pakistan at Crossroads track this thread

Started by G Atwan; Last updated by K Schwartz | View history

Pakistan at Crossroads

Will moderation or extremism triumph in this bellwether nation?

Pakistan is one of the Islamic world's hottest hotbeds of fundamentalism. But it's also a country with an almost entirely secular (if mildly autocratic) government, headed by strongman Pervez Musharraf, who faces acerbic opposition both from reformers on his left and fundamentalist clerics on his right, and has struggled to preserve an uneasy friendship with the United States by promising to root out terrorism. The December assassination of Benazir Bhutto only adds to the country's unrest, postponing elections that a top Bhutto aide charges were "thoroughly rigged."

Stories

Stories 101 - 120 of 368

  • August 2008
    • Musharraf Will Quit Tomorrow, Flee: Mag

      Musharraf Will Quit Tomorrow, Flee: Mag

      (Newser) - Pakistan President Musharraf will likely resign tomorrow, a former Musharraf aide told Newsweek, and flee to Saudi Arabia for three months of exile. Pakistan's top military commanders are aware of the news, but Musharraf's camp officially denies the story. "Your source is a liar. The information you have is absolutely untrue," a spokesman told the magazine. More »

    • Musharraf to Quit Within 72 Hours

      Musharraf to Quit Within 72 Hours

      (Newser) - Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf will resign within the next few days, the New York Times reports, avoiding impeachment from Parliament. Political pressure became insurmountable for Musharraf, having lost most of his key governmental allies and support from the military. Details as to the manner in which Musharraf will step down, and whether he will remain in Pakistan, remain unclear. More »

    • Taliban Bomb Kills 14 in Pakistan

      Taliban Bomb Kills 14 in Pakistan

      (AP) - A roadside bomb destroyed an air force truck on a bridge today in Pakistan's volatile northwest and killed as many as 14 people. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, calling it "an open war" and retaliation for recent military operations in the region. "If this kind of operations continue against us... we will continue this," a Taliban spokesman said. More »

    • Al-Qaeda No. 2 Puts Out English Recording

      Al-Qaeda No. 2 Puts Out English Recording

      (Newser) - The deputy leader of al-Qaeda issued his first English-language message yesterday, in which he called on Pakistanis to support jihad, reports ABC News. The statement by Ayman al-Zawahiri, which berates the Pakistani and American governments, was broadcast on a Pakistani television station. Zawahiri has been wanted by the US since 1998 in connection with the bombings of American embassies in east Africa. More »