ISLAMABAD, Oct 2: Two former chiefs of the Inter-Services Intelligence have rejected as baseless a statement of President Pervez Musharraf about former officials of the agency abetting Taliban.

Former ISI directors-general Asad Durrani and Hameed Gul, talking to Dawn, said there was no need to issue such a speculative statement.

Mr Durrani said he was at a loss to understand as to what was the need for issuing such a statement.

It would not serve any interest of Pakistan, he said.

He said some people in their individual capacity might have associated themselves with the Taliban, but it was improper to make such a statement without any concrete evidence.

He said the statement was highly speculative and it was astonishing to see it coming from the head of the state who was under oath to protect the interests of the country.

Mr Gul said former officers of the ISI were not involved in helping Taliban. He said the Taliban surfaced in 1994, some five years after his tenure as ISI chief was over and about three years after his retirement from the army.

He said Gen Musharraf was a distinct type of team captain who was scoring goals against his own team by accusing his own people. The nation was astonished to see the captain hell-bent to see his own team’s defeat, he said.

Mr Gul claimed that a charge-sheet against him was being prepared.

He said no Afghan leader, including President Hamid Karzai, had levelled such an allegation. “I am sure they do not have such an opinion about me,” he stressed. He said President Karzai had not named any personality but had accused the government of Pakistan.

He said perhaps the situation in Afghanistan had boggled Gen Musharraf as the defeat of United States interests in the country was visible. “We pray for the success of Taliban. If it is tantamount to helping someone, I do it everyday for the Afghan nation as I am a friend of the Afghan nation,” he remarked.

He said it was his desire to see the pullout of US forces from Afghanistan, which would be in the interest of both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

He recalled that Gen Musharraf had also expressed his desire for a limited stay of US forces in Afghanistan.

He said retired officers of the ISI could not help Taliban. He said there was no dearth of weapons with Taliban as they had kalashnikovs, machine guns and rocket launchers in large numbers. They did not need training as they had been in war for 27 years and they were experienced enough now to deal with their enemies.

He said the opium trade was at its peak in Afghanistan with the blessings of US generals and businessmen. He said opium cultivation in the country this year was expected to cross 6,000 tons, while it had dropped to 185 tons in the last days of the Taliban rule.

He alleged that the founder of the country’s nuclear programme, Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan, had been put under house arrested on baseless charges.

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