Will he give the same advice to China?

Faryal Bhatti, a student at the Sir Syed Girls High School in Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF) colony Havelian, erroneously misspelt a word in an Urdu exam while answering a question on a poem written in praise of the Holy Prophet (PBUH). The word in question was ‘laanat’ instead of ‘naat’ – an easy error for a child to make, as the written versions of the words are similar.
According to the school administration and religious leaders who took great exception to the hapless student’s mistake, the error is ‘serious’ enough to fall within the realm of blasphemy...
On Thursday, Faryal’s Urdu teacher was collecting the answer sheets from her students when she noticed the apparently offensive word on her pupil’s sheet. The teacher, Fareeda Bibi, reportedly summoned the Christian girl, scolded her and beat her. Her punishment, however, did not end here. When Faryal’s class fellows learnt of the alleged blasphemy, the teacher brought the principal’s notice to the matter, who further informed the school management.
In the meanwhile, the news spread throughout the colony. The next day, male students of the POF colony school as well as certain religious elements took out a rally, demanding the registration of a criminal case against the eighth-grader and her expulsion from the area.Prayer leaders within the community also condemned the incident in their Friday sermons, asking the colony’s administration to not only take action against Faryal but her entire family. In the wake of the increasing tensions, Managing Director POF Colony Havelian Asif Siddiki called a meeting of colony-based ulemas and school teachers to discuss the situation. The girl and her mother were asked to appear before the meeting, where they explained that it was a mere error, caused by a resemblance between the two words. The two immediately apologised, adding that Faryal had no malicious intentions.In a move that was apparently meant to pacify the religious elements clamouring for action against the teenage ‘blasphemer’, the POF administration expelled her from the school on Saturday. Faryal was not the only one who got in trouble for her spelling error, however, as her mother, Sarafeen Bhatti, who was a staff nurse at the POF Hospital Havelian for several years, was immediately transferred to POF Wah Cantonment Hospital.It's not clear from the article, but the difference between "lanaat" and "naat" in Urdu script is, apparently, just the one dot.
Humph. That video shows the man making an extremely weak threat. He is at pains to qualify that the ISI helps the US. he wants to give "both sides of the ISI story". Lovely. His "threat" sound as weak as any I have heard from anyone. Time pass onlee. He says nothing that remotely suggests that the US will or can do much. He only says "We have to put all options on the table because I can't go to my voters and tell them your son got killed by my aid". Its about his voters. If he can convince his voters that al iz vel he might do that. Let me now sit back and wait for a lecture on how the US system is not like the Indian onemenon s wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgwvwuJu6Ms
"America needs Pakistan, u r right, but not a Pakistan that will help kill American troops" Sen Lindsay Graham , South Carolina.
Shiv, you may be right since this isn't 2001, but then Obama will become another Jimmy Carter, which is quite possible. This is going to help China a lot more than if the US does what I think it might, unless the barking stops.Like i said wake me up if the US goes beyond "negotiation and mending ties". In the short term the US will have to take kicks and stay kicked. Of course when India does that it is weakness. When it happens to the US everyone thinks the US will "do something". The US simply cannot do much. Archive this post and kick me by quoting it when the US actually does something drastic.
You forget their soosai recruits. There's probably quite a few sleepers already in India + they can land more people and supplies in unguarded locations along the coastline -- all they have to do is simply ask the D-company for the locations where they smuggle goods in.gakakkad wrote:In case of an Indo-Pak war the biggest casualties to India would have come from small arms and artillery and not from the junk puke air force nor from nearly non existent navy.. And surely not from their puke clear detergent tipped pissiles powered by solidified zam zam cola...
The 'can' has always been there. The 'will' is missing (and canned) and I don't see that change despite all the hot air blown by Moolen & co. If they do, I will happy to buy you 2 cases of your favourite choice of madira.Prem wrote: Good old Uncle Sam can and will take care of domestic Poakrats within a week.
No, RamaY garu, it would not. It is not enough to break TSPA and split Pakistan into pieces. If you want the world to be a safer place from your POV you have to stay there for however many years it takes... hold the hands of your chosen people in each particular piece of Former Pakistan... protect them against everyone from pan-Islamists to TSPA chauvinists... help them establish a government that their people will have confidence in (social services, infrastructure, economic stability etc.)... empower them to keep their hold on power despite repeated attacks decade after decade, by various groups who want to seize power away from them. What is the "cost" of all that? It is a lot more than the "cost" of cluster munitions to break the TSPA and kill 16 million cadres of Pakistani Tanzeems, and even THAT cost is great compared to the cost of simply paying off Pakistan for whatever benefits it gives you.RamaY wrote:^ could it be done in Pak, if us brakes TSPA and split Pakistan in to pieces? Wouldn't that make world a safer place with that cost?
If Palestine can be an independent state why cant sindh or Balochistan ?
Palestine is not yet an independent state, even after 60+ years after the creation of Israel.RamaY wrote:^ could it be done in Pak, if us brakes TSPA and split Pakistan in to pieces? Wouldn't that make world a safer place with that cost?
If Palestine can be an independent state why cant sindh or Balochistan ?
I don't recall but there was a show on Fox News last Friday where one of the guest proposed exactly the same. But I don't think India will dare to take the help from US and go after the TSP terror network. Besides, if US expects India to be a proxy for their war on terror, India has to be careful of such help.Rudradev wrote:Re my post above: There is a third option for the US (besides attacking Pakistan militarily in an unaffordable war, and besides cut & run + annual jizya to Pakistan to prevent further terrorist attacks on US soil.) That is to cooperate with India to manage the dismantling of Pakistan as it exists today; in a way that will involve India bearing most of the short/medium term costs (especially the endgame, absorbing Pakistan) but ultimately cannot help giving India most of the long-term benefits (if India bears the economic costs and bears the political/social costs, it will emerge as Akhand Bharat.) Will the US think about this option? Will India go with it?
Yes the mistake was more subliminal in nature, she wrote what she heard in her environment.sanjaykumar wrote:As someone who studied Urdu in the Nastaliq script, the spelling slip may be more Freudian.
Even if KSA agrees to this, it isn't only Iran that TSP can rely on. I think China will prevail upon Iran to supply oil to TSP at subsidized rates, even if Iran is angry about treatment of Shias in Pakistan; Iran fears/needs China more than it is angry with TSP. But even apart from Iran, there are options. E.g. Re-export via Chinese intermediaries from many gulf nations, maybe even KSA! It won't be painless for the Pakis but tallel than deepel will go to great lengths to ensure that the effects of such a punitive action by Unkil are minimized as far as possible.Pratyush wrote:Looking at the US options and the lack of them. What will happen to TSP if the US prevails upon the KSA to impose an oil blockade on the TSP.
How much oil can Iran provide to the TSP at the rates the KSA could provide.
LONDON (Reuters) - Six men have been charged with terrorism offences a week after they were arrested in a police operation in Birmingham, Britain's second largest city, police said on Sunday.
Four of the men were charged with preparing for acts of terrorism in the UK, while the other two were charged with failing to disclose information, West Midlands Police said in a statement.
Irfan Nasser, 30, of Sparkhill, and Irfan Khalid, 26, of Balsall Heath, are accused of preparing for an act of terrorism, and traveling to Pakistan for training in terrorism, said police.
Ashik Ali, 26, of Balsall Heath, and Rahi Ahmed, 25, of Moseley, face charges related to planning a bombing campaign in the UK, the force added.
Two other suspects, Bahader Ali, 28, and Mohammed Rizwan, 32, both from Sparkbrook, are both charged with failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism.
The six men will appear at West London Magistrates Court on Monday. They were arrested in a counter-terrorism operation in Birmingham on Monday last week. The men, all from Birmingham, allegedly committed the offences between Christmas Day last year and September 19, the police said.
A seventh man, aged 20 and also from Birmingham, who was arrested on Thursday, was still bring questioned, said police. Officers have until September 29 to charge, release or apply for a further warrant of detention for the detained suspect.
Pakistan. Herring. Red.Rudradev wrote:Re my post above: There is a third option for the US (besides attacking Pakistan militarily in an unaffordable war, and besides cut & run + annual jizya to Pakistan to prevent further terrorist attacks on US soil.) That is to cooperate with India to manage the dismantling of Pakistan as it exists today; in a way that will involve India bearing most of the short/medium term costs (especially the endgame, absorbing Pakistan) but ultimately cannot help giving India most of the long-term benefits (if India bears the economic costs and bears the political/social costs, it will emerge as Akhand Bharat.) Will the US think about this option? Will India go with it?
There will be an attack but it would be to highlight the unpopularity of the US policies in some quarters of PA(actually most of PA). Hence US should back off, yada yada..abhijitm wrote:soon expect ISI orchestrated spectacular attack on pakistan to show paki helplessness and we are also victim onleee
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik has contended that the US should share the blame for the rise of the Haqqani network as the CIA created the Taliban faction during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and trained its members.
"The Haqqani network was trained and produced by the CIA," he said. The group did not originate in Pakistan and the US should not now speak about "things which happened 20 years ago", he told reporters during an interaction here on Sunday.
However, he acknowledged that Pakistan had helped the CIA during the war against Soviet forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s.
The Haqqani network is now present in Afghanistan and "those claiming otherwise should give evidence of its presence in Pakistan," Malik claimed. "We will fight the terrorists as our forces are capable of handling them and countering any challenge," he said.
"The U.S. has issued its strongest statement yet to Pakistan's ISI on its ties with the Taliban and Haqqani groups," said Jalali, who served as Afghan defense and interior minister from 2003-2005. "It is a clear message to Pakistan that it can no longer continue its current strategy in Afghanistan."
Mullen on September 22 accused the ISI of aiding the Haqqani network in planning and executing last week's attacks on the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. He said the Pakistani government had used the Haqqani network and other terrorist groups as its proxies in Afghanistan.
Mullen said Pakistan had chosen to "use violent extremism as an instrument of policy," adding that "by exporting violence, they have eroded their internal security and their position in the region. They have undermined their international credibility and threatened their economic well-being."
Jalali said "Pakistan has to come to terms [with the fact] that it cannot get what it wants in Afghanistan through violence and hard power. It must open up to diplomatic channels and use avenues such as the current peace council to state its concerns and ideas."
PS:The cur has begun to bite!:What did Pres.Nixon once supposedly say? "When you have their **** in your hand and squeeze,they'll come around". The US can emulate Nixon's tactics and bring Pak to heel.That both nations are heading for a showdown has been inevitable for a very long time.One cannot hunt with the hounds and hide with the hares as Pak has successfully done for decades.Despite hiccups now and again,Indo-US relations have improved enormously especially economically.The US no longer views India through the prism of the Cold War.
Having now openly declared Pak to be the equivalent of an "offender",if I was the US president,I would immediately take out not the Haqqani's et al,but the entire Paki N-arsenal,which the ISI will happily hand over to its partners in terrorist crime,the jihadi movements,who have an international dimension.The spectre of the next attack on US soil from an Islamist terror organisation using a Paki nuke is simply unaccepable to any nation,leave alone the US.It is therefore "time to draw the curtain" on Pakistan.That is the only way in which Pak can be "handled".Come on Obama,first squeeze hard and then if nothing happens,take Pak out!
Building used by CIA attacked in Kabul
A building used by the CIA in Kabul came under attack on Sunday, US and Afghan officials said, the latest in a series of attacks in the Afghan capital.
25 Sep 2011
Afghan authorities said gunfire was heard in the evening near the Ariana Hotel, a building that former US intelligence officials said was the CIA station in Kabul. The CIA occupied the heavily secured building just blocks from the Afghan presidential palace in late 2001 after the US-led invasion that toppled the Taliban.
Two singular events took place recently that lead me to believe that the unthinkable has finally happened: the Americans have lost the Afghan war.
First was the assassination of Burhanuddin Rabbani, former president of Afghanistan, and chairman of the High Peace Council attempting to reach a negotiated settlement with the Taliban.
Second was the explicit accusation by Admiral Mike Mullen, the outgoing American Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that Pakistan's Inter Services Inteligence was behind the recent, audacious attack on the US embassy in Kabul (the assault was rather too professional and well-planned for non-State actors to have done it).
Things are so bad that the New York Times, which is essentially the voice of the US establishment and therefore generally supportive of Pakistan, has seen fit to thunder in an editorial titled The Latest Ugly Truth About Pakistan that something must be done. They stopped short of specifying what that something might be.
There is an irony somewhere in the fact that the ISI has comprehensively hoodwinked the Americans into (unwittingly?) funding the ISI's attacks on American interests, not to mention their troops. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that the ISI had a hand in planning the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Centre: they are good at tactical support for large-scale operations, such as the 11/26 siege of Mumbai and the assault in the heart of Kabul where operatives held security forces off for 20 hours.
It is remarkable how the ISI has mesmerised the Americans. The metaphor that comes to mind is that apocryphal tale of how a cobra can hypnotise its prey into paralysis before it strikes. It is a thing of wonder, this willing suspension of disbelief by the Americans in the face of Pakistan's diplomatic theatre.
It is widely known that the ISI's allies, ranging from Gulbuddin Hekmatyar to the Haqqani Network, had benefited greatly from CIA largesse during the Soviet Afghan campaign. Hekmatyar, now a sworn enemy of the Americans, alone is said to have receive 40 per cent of all the millions the CIA invested in overthrowing the Soviet-installed Najibullah regime.
The Haqqani Network was once lionised by Americans, one of whose politicians went so far as to claim that Jalaluddin Haqqani was the "very picture of goodness", according to Praveen Swami ('Pakistan, US and the immoderate Taliban', The Hindu, September 22). Now the Haqqanis, fairly or unfairly, are being blamed for every attack on NATO targets in Afghanistan. It is likely that 'Haqqani Network' simply means 'ISI'.
As early as November 2001, during the first part of the Afghan campaign, it was obvious that what was being marketed as the 'Taliban' was basically officers of the ISI and the Pakistani Army, who had merely exchanged their khakis for baggy pants and black turbans, and grown beards.
During the siege of Kunduz, when the Northern Alliance were on the verge of overrunning a fort where the 'Taliban' were cornered, the CIA allowed the Pakistanis to airlift a thousand of them, who it turned out were brigadiers and colonels in the ISI and the Pakistani Army.
Thus, the ISI has mastered the fine art of running with the hares and hunting with the hounds; the Americans have been turned into patsies. The net result is that after a trillion dollars and thousands of dead troops, America has been defeated by a so-called ally. (Although American analysts are now belatedly pointing out that the 'alliance' was a figment of somebody's febrile imagination.)
The Pakistanis have achieved their coveted 'strategic depth' in Afghanistan which is, in effect, their colony. True, there has been some cost to them in civilian casualties and the Frankenstein monster of internal terrorism, but that is collateral damage the Army is willing to accept in the pursuit of their strategic goals.
And true, this may turn out to a Pyrrhic victory because they may not be able to contain Pashtun nationalism and disdain for the Durand Line forever: there will almost certainly be a Pashtun nation at some point, and possibly Baluch and Sindh nations. Nevertheless, it is a signal victory: this is the second superpower in a row that they have defeated.
The jihadist terrorists of the ISI, once they have gotten rid of the Americans, will have a field day with India: they would have taken a big step, with the annexation of Afghanistan, towards their age-old fantasy of a fundamentalist emirate in the region with Islamabad as its capital. They will be even more triumphalist and will plan regular terrorist attacks on India.
India's options are limited. India's only ally in the region has been the Northern Alliance; with Massoud and now Rabbani gone, the best bet still are the Panjshiri Tajiks, who held out in their mountain fastness against the Soviets and later the Taliban, and whom the Pakistanis loathe. India should not be led down the garden path again by ideas of amity and friendship with the Taliban.
The Taliban has shown bad faith again and again. First, they assassinated the generally wary Massoud on the eve of 9/11 using suicide bombers masquerading as cameramen interviewing him. The bomb was in the camera. Then, despite the olive branches held out, they betrayed a hapless India in the Kandahar hijacking incident. Now, in the pretext of peace talks, they assassinated Rabbani. None of this should be surprising, as the Taliban have learned at the ISI school of international relations.
Further, India should learn to impose some pain on the ISI. The problem is that they know they can do pretty much anything to India, and that there are no consequences: the worst India will do is to dossier-bomb them. There are many ways in which India could possibly impose salutary pain in response; one might well be to arm separatists with weapons with Chinese markings. (That would only be fair: the Chinese have been sending fake drugs to Africa marked 'Made in India').
Another would be to foment uprisings among the various restive minority populations. But then, in a fit of misguided goodwill, a previous prime minister emasculated RAW's presence in Pakistan. I wonder if informants' names were even leaked out.
India should try to make sure that it has a Plan B to increase its relevance in a post-American scenario. As things stand, despite the millions India has invested, Pakistan is running away with the prize.
US can do this. All they have to do is to "recognize" that the Taliban are in revolt due to the issue of the Durand Line not being sorted out - and can offer to unite Pashtun lands for Afghans.Manny wrote:OK..if not Baluchistan, the US can offer to bring the Pashtoons into one country. Divide up Afghanistan. Afghanistan (Northern part including Kabul) and Pastooinstan. The Pashtoons may like it. The Talibans (Mullah Omar) could buy it.
This may bring the Pakistan Army/ISI to be "reasonable"?