Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf denied on Monday playing a double game of supporting the Taleban while receiving US funding to fight them when he was in power. The former army chief, who was forced to step down last August, criticised New York Times journalist David E. Sanger over allegations of Pakistani duplicity, which he made in a book titled “The Inheritance”. “Get your facts correct, I have never double-dealt,” Musharraf said in comments to a number of Pakistani television channels. Musharraf survived several assassination attempts by Al-Qaeda inspired militants and was often praised by US President George W. Bush as a strong ally in the war on terrorism. “There is a big conspiracy being hatched against Pakistan, to weaken the Pakistan army and the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence agency), to weaken Pakistan,” said Musharraf. He cited the heavy casualties Pakistan's armed forces have suffered fighting militancy as a strong deterrant to the conflict. Sanger's book focuses on the foreign policy challenges faced by US President Barack Obama. Analysts say one of Obama's toughest problems will be to convince Pakistan to close down sanctuaries on its territory used by Taleban and Al-Qaeda militants. Besides denying secretly supporting the Taleban, Musharraf also denied he had told the late former prime minister Benazir Bhutto that her safety in Pakistan depended on her relationship with him. Bhutto was assassinated in December, 2007, two months after returning from self-imposed exile as Musharraf's grip on power began to slip. Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, became president after Musharraf resigned.