Afghanistan and
The Pakistani president met his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai shortly after arriving on a two-day trip that comes amid calls for
With ties frayed between the two neighbors over who is to blame for cross-border movement of militants, Musharraf said mutual trust was essential if the insurgency in
"The only course left is to have trust - kill mistrust, don't blame each other.
"If we don't trust each other, there is no moving forward. If we carry on the course of accusations and counter-accusations, we will never achieve peace and we will never be brothers."
"Not hiding Osama"
The Muslim neighbors had a heated exchange this year after Musharraf dismissed Afghan intelligence about Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders allegedly living in
The Pakistani president said his country and
"After 9/11, we are seeing the scourge of terrorism. This terrorism was in the form of al-Qaeda, it still is, but it has now transformed and taken the form of Talibanisation," Musharraf said. "We have to fight both."
Musharraf assured
He rejected speculation that
"It's very difficult to get him, as maybe it is difficult to get [Taliban leader] Mullah Omar in the Kandahar region ... Mullah Omar is not in the bag, Osama bin Laden is not in the bag.
"Please don't think that somebody is collaborating and letting him live there in hiding and the government of
No foreign forces
Musharraf also said
"On our side of the border there will be a total uprising if a foreigner enters that area," he said. "It's not possible at all, we will never allow any foreigners into that area. It's against the culture of the people there."
The Pakistani leader gave reassurances that a "peace deal" reached by Islamabad on Tuesday with pro-Taliban rebels in the North Waziristan tribal belt along the Afghan border was intended to curb militant activity.
The deal was "no Taliban activity on our side of the border or across the border in
Karzai welcomed the agreement as a "positive step." He said
"Let's wait. If it works well, we are happy. If it doesn't work we'll find another way."
The Afghan leader also offered assurances to
"By the fact of the experience of the past 27 years of invasions, misery and interference,
Photo Caption
Musharraf (L) met Karzai shortly after arriving on a two-day trip