
unconfirmed reports speak of Davis beating up and abusing some fellow prisoners in the pakjail

There is a difference between forgetting history and being trapped by it.shiv wrote:I am bemused by the fatalistic statement here: "reciprocating the favor is not unexpected". Very Indic. Sorry if you don't like repetitions but I want to see an end to this Anglo-US liaison with Pakistan and not some rationalization and fatalistic explanation.VikramS wrote: It is clear that TSP was created to serve Anglo interests something Jinnah proudly claimed in those famous interviews; hence the Anglos reciprocating the favor is not unexpected.
The argument that a continuous reference to the past hinders a view of the future is one that stuns me. If this is the feeling that a majority of people have it explains to me in one crushing blow why my fellow countrymen - some of whom wear the "I am a patriot" label with vulgar clarity are so nonchalantly sanguine about the continued supply of US arms to Pakistan. They are forgetting the past and looking to the future.
The problem is that you are making an issue out of a non-issue. Your basic premise that it is Uncle's arms which drive TSP behavior is fundamentally flawed. There have been numerous discussions on this but being the undisputed dada of BR, you have the luxury to ignore them.
So we have the following statements to comfort ourselves:
1) Aid to Pakistan is "not unexpected" as a return for favors.
2) Since we must forget past episodes of arms supply and look to the future, we will never ever object to the US supply of arms to Pakistan. Let bygones be bygones. Like 26/11 I guess.
No Sir. That is not the way my mind thinks. I am not gaming any scenarios here. Merely demanding that the US must stop supplying arms to Pakistan and trying to think of schemes that will sabotage the US or Pakistan or both rather than forgetting the past have them sabotage us.
If we want the luxury of being weak and diffident, we can't afford to complain when we get kicked around. Nature doesn't work that way.shiv wrote:No No cosmoji. Bad self goal!! This is another highly Indic suggestion that calls for "doosron ki jai se pehle khud ko jai karein". We punish ourselves and starve ourselves because we want to make sure we are blameless before blaming someone else. Blow me down!!
We Indians think this way and I am hoping to point that out and change a few minds.
We must get everything. Pakistan must get nothing. We carry on doing whatever we want and stop the US from supplying Pakistan with arms. That is the way forward. Not self punishment and self denial. After all that is the way the world thinks - certainly the US and Pakistan think that way. Only Indians flagellate themselves and other Indians when the problem that needs to be solved is not within India but outside.
I guess a simple clause in MMRCA contract stating that supplier or suppliers of supplier should not be found to supply arms to TSP after so-and-so date would be too much to expect.Brad Goodman wrote:This is perfect. With $11B deal for MMRCA and least another $40B in pipelines. Boeing & Lockheed will do all the lobbying that we can only dream of acheiving.Cosmo_R wrote:Shiv, a modest proposal: A bipartisan bill in parliament that says: "The MoD is hereby prohibited from purchasing from any vendor that supplies arms to Pakistan that can be used against India. The stipulations under this bill are not retroactive but shall be effective this date forward"
Let the GoI/MEA/MoD act helpless. See what pressure Boeing/LM bring to bear on GOTUS
This baba agrees with the "undisputed dada of BR".VikramS wrote: The problem is that you are making an issue out of a non-issue. Your basic premise that it is Uncle's arms which drive TSP behavior is fundamentally flawed. There have been numerous discussions on this but being the undisputed dada of BR, you have the luxury to ignore them.
It is not Uncle's F-16s or Harpoons; it is the Chipanda Nukes and Missiles which provide TSP with its defense shield.
I will stop responding to your baits going forward, but you are not doing BR a favor by repeating the same flawed premise ad-nauseum.
4:1, 7:1 or even 100:1 is meaningless if you are unwilling to use them.skumar wrote:I agree with the "undisputed dada of BR".VikramS wrote: The problem is that you are making an issue out of a non-issue. Your basic premise that it is Uncle's arms which drive TSP behavior is fundamentally flawed. There have been numerous discussions on this but being the undisputed dada of BR, you have the luxury to ignore them.
It is not Uncle's F-16s or Harpoons; it is the Chipanda Nukes and Missiles which provide TSP with its defense shield.
I will stop responding to your baits going forward, but you are not doing BR a favor by repeating the same flawed premise ad-nauseum.
TSP gets its arms from only 2 sources - the US and China. Both provide arms knowing well that these will be used against India eventually, China probably provides it with that condition/hope.
Your premise that TSP's behaviour is driven more by the nuclear weapons than conventional weapons is flawed since it implies that TSP is willing to use nuclear weapons readily. Would you say that TSP embarked on Kargil ready to use them? Nuclear weapons are primarily a deterrent, not something that would encourage a Kargil. I think they are as s... scared of a fallout as we are. Though TSP does not have conventional parity with us, they enjoy an advantage on a per capita basis and this is due to the conventional weapons provided gratis by uncle and panda. Do you think TSP would be adventurous if we had a 7:1 advantage over them or even a 4:1? Unless these are provided gratis, would TSP be able to afford them?
In addition to the tangibles, the other point is the intangibles provided by uncle and panda. TSP knows that they can get into s... and uncle/panda will get them out (though that seems to be changing).
True spirit of Aman ki Asha. This is the original Thimphu spirit.Pakistani singer Rahat Fateh Ali Khan was detained at Delhi airport after his 15-member troupe was found to have over $100,000 in their possession, undeclared to customs authorities. He was grilled for over 20 hours by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, his manager’s and relatives’ homes were raided, and his passport has been impounded until the issue is resolved. He was initially even denied consular service. He has now got a conditional release, but the incident has shown up the inherent overkill in these cases. Carrying undeclared cash of this kind is a garden-variety civil law infringement, and one that comes — and should come — with strong financial penalties.
And while the law does give the authorities the option to detain the offender, must it be used as a matter of course, even when there is little chance of the offender fleeing the law?
But it is not as though Khan, as a foreign citizen, is being singled out for flouting excise law. This is a longstanding pattern at our airports — in mid-2009, businesswoman Sheetal Mafatlal was arrested for carrying more jewellery than is allowed, and the incident was turned into a tidy parable about the moral bankruptcy of wealth. Before her, it was Pune builder Avinash Bhosale and former managing director of Escorts, Anil Nanda, who were hauled up for carrying undeclared high-value items including a diamond-studded watch. Evading customs is an infraction, it costs the state, and it must come with hefty penalties. But it doesn’t need to be turned into theatre, an opportunity for a little official swagger and lessons in civic responsibility.
We need to examine whether acts like this need to be answered with such brutal shaming. All crimes are not created equal — and while Rahat Fateh Ali Khan’s detention was backed up by provisions in the Customs Act and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, perhaps application of the rule-book itself needs a rethink. Too often, incidents of this kind are accompanied by the harsh possibility of humiliation (compounded when the individual is famous or visible in some way, so that the customs authorities have a chance to grab the headlines) when simply allowing the law to take its course should suffice.
Meaningless semantics sir. Worth a response to point that outVikramS wrote:
There is a difference between forgetting history and being trapped by it.
Counter questions do not take away the fundamental truth of what I am saying although I have never painted the US as uniformly evil. That is your interpretation. You are hypersensitive to criticism of the US I am not. You are you . I am me.VikramS wrote:You make these Unkil==Evil posts on a regular basis, repeating the same story again and again, but never respond to counter questions posed.
Communication devices, night vision equipment and weapons locating radar were all provided by the USA - and all were used in the Kargil conflict. Read Kaiser Tufails notes on F-16s in the Kargil war. You are welcome to choose to be in denial - but as you can see, that will in no way restrict me from pointing out facts.VikramS wrote:There is a basic premise that Unkil's arms are responsible for TSP aggression, when apart from 1965 that is not the case. What did Unkil provide to enable Kargil or 11/26? We all know it is the nukes but you refuse to consider that.
Criticizing the US="baiting you". Is that a Freudian slip? You are welcome to hold your opinion about the favors or disfavors I might be doing, but it is curious to see that criticism of the US is seen by you as both "bait" and "disfavor to BR". I find that both amusing and illuminating.VikramS wrote:I will stop responding to your baits going forward, but you are not doing BR a favor by repeating the same flawed premise ad-nauseum.
Faith and belief are a matter of personal taste, but let me set the facts on the table. Allegiance to America and a willingness to believe fiction could be anyone's choice. but not mine.VikramS wrote: Prior to Kargil the TSP forces had been cut off from aid from Uncle for almost a decade but it did not deter them.
n October, 1990, the Administration was unable to certify Pakistan's compliance with the law, and the arms ban passed by Congress took effect, freezing $570 million in U.S. military aid. Although the Administration cut off direct country-to-country arms sales at the time, it decided to allow continued private, commercial arms sales to Pakistan, according to documents and interviews.
A decade is not much, weapon systems are generally used for many decades, TSP had lots of unused stock since Afghanistan has not blown over then and TSP had a continuous supply from the other (panda).VikramS wrote: Prior to Kargil the TSP forces had been cut off from aid from Uncle for almost a decade but it did not deter them.
Granted that our inability to use overwhelming force and take the fight to the enemy, even in defense, is no one's fault but our own. But we are discussing TSP here; we are the status-quo power and the action to change it comes from TSP. The question again is, would TSP be adventurous if we had a conventional 7:1 or 4:1 advantage?VikramS wrote: 4:1, 7:1 or even 100:1 is meaningless if you are unwilling to use them.
And India is unwilling to use it because the risk-reward does not work out. There is always the risk of the conflict going nuclear. TSP has nothing to lose; India has a lot to.
... And if nukes did not deter India, why didn't Indian forces go for the TSPA bases in POK? Why was IAF restricted from operating on the Indian side of the LOC when it had a qualitative and a quantitative advantage over the TSPAF. Indian leaders chose to keep the conflict local. WHY?
Can you see that the argument can go both ways here?VikramS wrote:No one wants to bell the cat but Crying Uncle is easy.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Railways has turned into a shambles because there are no funds available even to repair its out of order locomotives.
A meeting organised by the National Assembly Standing Committee on Railways to discuss affairs of the ever-sinking national organisation was informed on Tuesday that the government had released only Rs2.1 billion so far against Rs25.1 billion allocated to it for the current financial year.
The meeting, presided over by Ayaz Sadiq of the PML-N, was attended by Railways Minister Ghulam Ahmad Bilour, MNAs Nauman Islam Sheikh, Begum Nasim Akhtar, Dr Talat Mahesar, Rahela Baloch, Tariq Ayub Sheikh and Haji Rozuddin, Finance Secretary Waqar Masood, Planning and Development Division Secretary Sohail Ahmad and Railways Secretary Shahid Hussain Raja.
Mr Bilour said: “The PR is virtually dying because out of its 500 locomotives, only 227 are in running condition. Despite repeated presentations before the cabinet, the government is non-committal to bail the railways out.”
He said it was ironic that the government had funds to bail out the PIA, which was used only by a fraction of Pakistanis, while the railways was a cheap mode of transportation.
The minister said the government had been promising for the past one year to release Rs5 billion for making old locomotives functional, but nothing had happened, and as a result “we will have to close down more routes”.
Pakistan: U.S. Contractor a Murderer
The U.S. and Pakistan continue to face off over the fate of a U.S. contactor being held in Lahore on charges of murder. The Lahore police chief said Raymond Davis didn’t act in self-defense and would be charged with murder, while the U.S. government maintains he has diplomatic immunity—though they have so far refused to say exactly what Davis did at the Lahore consulate. According to the U.S. embassy in Islamabad, Davis had withdrawn money from an ATM and was driving his Honda Civic when two men on a motorcycle tried to rob him. He shot and killed them both, while a second car driving from the embassy to help Davis struck and killed a bystander. According to a senior Pakistani official, however, Davis was a spy, carrying maps of high-security installations, and knew both the men he shot.
Read it at Wall Street Journal
In addition, recent Pentagon audits have confirmed that hundreds of billions of dollars cannot be accounted for. http://www.counterpunch.org/christie11192010.html "Right now, the Pentagon does not know how or where it spends its money. As the Government Accountability Office and DOD's own Office of the Inspector General have reported for decades, the Pentagon cannot track the money it spends. Routinely, DOD does not know if it has paid contactors once, twice, or not at all. We recently learned it does not even know how many contractors it has, how many they employ, and what they are doing."shiv wrote:n October, 1990, the Administration was unable to certify Pakistan's compliance with the law, and the arms ban passed by Congress took effect, freezing $570 million in U.S. military aid. Although the Administration cut off direct country-to-country arms sales at the time, it decided to allow continued private, commercial arms sales to Pakistan, according to documents and interviews.
abhishek_sharma wrote:Facing the music
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Facin ... sic/750427
True spirit of Aman ki Asha. This is the original Thimphu spirit.Pakistani singer Rahat Fateh Ali Khan was detained at Delhi airport after his 15-member troupe was found to have over $100,000 in their possession, undeclared to customs authorities. He was grilled for over 20 hours by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, his manager’s and relatives’ homes were raided, and his passport has been impounded until the issue is resolved. He was initially even denied consular service. He has now got a conditional release, but the incident has shown up the inherent overkill in these cases. Carrying undeclared cash of this kind is a garden-variety civil law infringement, and one that comes — and should come — with strong financial penalties.
And while the law does give the authorities the option to detain the offender, must it be used as a matter of course, even when there is little chance of the offender fleeing the law?
But it is not as though Khan, as a foreign citizen, is being singled out for flouting excise law. This is a longstanding pattern at our airports — in mid-2009, businesswoman Sheetal Mafatlal was arrested for carrying more jewellery than is allowed, and the incident was turned into a tidy parable about the moral bankruptcy of wealth. Before her, it was Pune builder Avinash Bhosale and former managing director of Escorts, Anil Nanda, who were hauled up for carrying undeclared high-value items including a diamond-studded watch. Evading customs is an infraction, it costs the state, and it must come with hefty penalties. But it doesn’t need to be turned into theatre, an opportunity for a little official swagger and lessons in civic responsibility.
We need to examine whether acts like this need to be answered with such brutal shaming. All crimes are not created equal — and while Rahat Fateh Ali Khan’s detention was backed up by provisions in the Customs Act and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, perhaps application of the rule-book itself needs a rethink. Too often, incidents of this kind are accompanied by the harsh possibility of humiliation (compounded when the individual is famous or visible in some way, so that the customs authorities have a chance to grab the headlines) when simply allowing the law to take its course should suffice.
During the Kargil War, according to Army Headquarters reports, the Pakistanis could detect Indian fire and counter attack while Indians were at the receiving end and had to deploy massively disproportionate firepower later to suppress the Pakistanis.
<snip>
Pakistan has had the advantage of US-supplied radars from the mid-1980s, and they were also built by Raytheon, but an earlier model, AN-TPQ-36.
manjgu wrote:u have the geriatric FM who reads wrong speeches !
Right on VikramS. Your statement is dead-on. The repeated rants of some of posters just sound like pukish anti imperialist speeches by Nehru and Menon and then come Oct 1962 all the chamchas of them were standing at the gates of American embassy in their shiny white Ambassadors with their list of demands for IA. Banned Org RSS was first time allowed in 1963 Republic Day parade. Its hard for them to understand that constant US baiting just plays into hands of Communists and Digvijay Singh types, since they listen to this bogey and take it further that since US is not Indian friend, let's be friends with KSA, Iran and PLO.VikramS wrote: The problem is that you are making an issue out of a non-issue. Your basic premise that it is Uncle's arms which drive TSP behavior is fundamentally flawed. There have been numerous discussions on this but being the undisputed dada of BR, you have the luxury to ignore them.
It is not Uncle's F-16s or Harpoons; it is the Chipanda Nukes and Missiles which provide TSP with its defense shield.
I will stop responding to your baits going forward, but you are not doing BR a favor by repeating the same flawed premise ad-nauseum.
In fact Kaisar Tufail's accounts of F16 usage during Kargil is an illustration of what is WRONG with the US from a Pak perspective..the Pakis were under sanctions at that time, and quickly ran out of spares - F16 sorties had to be kept to a minimum..If the conventional conflict was expanded, the F16 fleet was not effectively available to them..shiv wrote:Read Kaiser Tufails notes on F-16s in the Kargil war.
What the "conversation should be" is a matter of opinion. Your opinion and mine could well be different. What WE can do is to influence the US or sabotage the US. But first we need to acknowledge that supply of lethal arms to Pakistan by the US is a problem for India. There is no talk of what We can do because a lot of people don't even believe it to be a problem and often prefer to change the subject when the topic is brought up.somnath wrote:The conversaiotn should be on what WE can do to influence events in our favour...Badmouthing US/UK/Europe/3.5 friends makes no sense..
In the list of problems from Pak that India has to face, it comes pretty low..The first ten slots in that list is taken up by Pak's nukes..the next ten by Pak's geogrpahy making it so important to the US..conventional arms supplies would come after that...Of course strictly IMO..shiv wrote:But first we need to acknowledge that supply of lethal arms to Pakistan by the US is a problem for India
Deliberately leaving out Chipanda from the above discussion and only focussing on a self selected peripheral issues is a self defeating argument.What the "conversation should be" is a matter of opinion. Your opinion and mine could well be different. What WE can do is to influence the US or sabotage the US. But first we need to acknowledge that supply of lethal arms to Pakistan by the US is a problem for India. There is no talk of what We can do because a lot of people don't even believe it to be a problem and often prefer to change the subject when the topic is brought up.
You want a change of conversation?
In the list of problems from Pak that India has to face, it comes pretty low
And why exactly should the US want that? Its Afghanistan mission is dependent on Pak, for vaious reasons...Even otherwise, Pak is the only "reliable" US proxy in the Central Asian periphery, important as a hedge against Russia...So why exactly should US "want" to doom Pak?CRamS wrote:If US really wanted, and prima facie, one were to accept US thesis that TSP is a failing state, and nukes could fall into the hands of extremists, it could do a lot more. I mean just the other day, US itself issued a report that TSP is expnading its nukes.
Precisely my point! The red lines are not a couple of F16 squadrons...The red lines are the nukes...CRamS wrote:If TSP's nukes are out of the way, imagine how uppity India will get.