ISLAMABAD:
The key witness in Pakistan's Memogate scandal, Mansoor Ijaz Wednesday
said he delivered a secret memo seeking American help to avert a feared
coup after Islamabad's Ambassador to the US told him it was from the
president.
Testifying via live video link from London before a judicial commission
in Islamabad probing the scandal threatening President Asif Ali Zardari,
American businessman Mansoor Ijaz said he delivered the request to
a US general.
The controversial unsigned memo was allegedly an attempt by Zardari,
through his close aide and former envoy Hussain Haqqani, to enlist
help from the US military to head off a feared coup in Pakistan last
year following the killing of Osama bin Laden by US Navy SEALs.
"I asked (Haqqani) on whose authority he was doing this?"
Ijaz said.
"He (Haqqani) said this is coming from the President of Pakistan
who wanted to put together a new national security team similar to
national security team in USA", Ijaz said.
Ijaz told the commission that he drafted the memo after Haqqani gave
him points and requested that it should be delivered to Admiral Mike
Mullen, then chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff. The memo was
delivered on May 10.
He said Haqqani called him on May 9 and said the army was contemplating
a coup following the May 2 US raid which killed bin Laden in Abbottabad.
"The army wants to bring this government down," Ijaz quoted
Haqqani as saying.
Ijaz said Haqqani wanted him to convey this fear to Mullen and request
him to ask Pakistani Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani to step down.
Ijaz said Haqqani gave him points to be conveyed to Mullen which included
assurances on giving the US administration the choice of selecting
members of a commission to probe bin Laden's presence in Pakistan.
The Pakistani envoy also offered that if Kayani stepped down, Islamabad
would assist the US "in locating other bad guys and we also commit
American boots on the ground", Ijaz said.
"He (Haqqani) further offered that Pakistan would agree on an
additional discipline as regard to the nuclear program", Ijaz
said.
The US and western governments have expressed fear that Pakistan's
nuclear weapons might fall into the hands of militants, but Islamabad
insists that its arsenal and facilities are well guarded and secured.
The commission will reconvene on Thursday and resume recording the
statement from Ijaz.