IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

U.S. lawmakers were to meet with Bhutto

Two U.S. lawmakers scheduled to meet Thursday with both  former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and President Pervez Musharraf were advised to leave the country after Bhutto's assassination.
Image: Arlen Specter, Patrick Kennedy, Anne Patterson
This photo provided by Sen. Arlen Specter's office shows Sen. Specter, R-Pa., second from right, along with Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., third from right, and U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson, right, during a visit to former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhuttos local party headquarters to lay flowers, Thursday, Dec. 27, 2007 in Islamabad, Pakistan. Chris Bradish / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

Two U.S. lawmakers scheduled to meet Thursday with former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and President Pervez Musharraf were advised to leave the country after Bhutto's assassination.

Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., said in a telephone interview from his Islamabad hotel room that he and Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., were to dine with Musharraf and meet later in the night with Bhutto.

He said he heard about the attack on Bhutto as he was dressing for the dinner with Musharraf.

"Our foreign policy had relied on her presence as a stabilizing force," Specter said, emotionally describing her death as "a real, real, real shock."

"I knew her personally .... She was, as you know, glamorous, beautiful smart," he said. "Her loss is a setback. But you have to face what is. And now, without her, we have to regroup."

Bhutto was shot to death Thursday in a suicide attack that also killed at least 20 others during a campaign rally in Rawalpindi. She served twice as Pakistan's prime minister between 1988 and 1996 and had returned to Pakistan from an eight-year exile Oct. 18 to seek the office again.

After learning that she was dead, Specter, Kennedy and Anne Patterson, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, went to Bhutto's campaign headquarters, and laid flowers there under her photo.

"They were crying and they were sobbing," Specter said, describing the people there. "It's a night reminiscent of Kennedy, Robert Kennedy's assassination."

Specter described the atmosphere in Islamabad as unsettling, saying he felt apprehensive about being an American there out at night. He said he and Kennedy were cutting short their trip by a day on the advice of the State Department.