Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2011

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abhishek_sharma
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Shyam Saran at Brookings: Full of TFTA Foreign Policy

Audio
MR. POLLACK: One other question here and then I would like to open this up to questions from the floor, of which I’m sure there will be many. China enjoys, dare I say, a nearly unique relationship with Pakistan. Pakistan is clearly a very troubled state in a variety of ways, underscore it even more by the events of the past few days. Presumably, this is not something that the Chinese have been very forthcoming in their interactions with India about, but could we -- I’ve heard some voices coming out of China of some concern about the state of affairs in Pakistan and this long precedes recent
events. Can we imagine ways in which this looks less zero sum, or is there any kind of a possibility that you could imagine where China and India could have an intelligent and reasonable and candid discussion about Pakistan’s future and what that implies for both countries?

MR. SARAN: It’s not that we don’t have conversations with China about Pakistan or what’s happening within Pakistan. It is also not the case that China does not express concern about developments in Pakistan, particularly with respect to, say,
fundamentalism or how this impacts on, say, Sinjia. But having said that, I think the Chinese support for Pakistan, I think, is almost unconditional, certainly as far as, say, relationship with India is concerned. We have to accept that as a fact of life.
What we do see, if I look historically at various points at which there has been confrontation between India and Pakistan or even conflict between India and Pakistan. There has been a certain caution in China so they may make sort of
rhetorical statements condemning India, but there has not been much of a stomach for actually getting into an armed confrontation with India on behalf of Pakistan.
Will that remain true? Well, let’s see. But Pakistan is a very good, in a sense, and very convenient, you know, (inaudible) for China. So, I’m not surprised. As a professional, I’m not surprised that this is a very convenient thing for China to pursue its interests in the subcontinent. But I as the salience of India-China relations, as the substantive content of the relationship between India and China continue to improve, yes, obviously this will have some impact on the relationship with Pakistan. Much will also depend upon what happens in Pakistan. You know, there is a certain minimum degree of, shall I say, coherence that you need in Pakistan for it to be a coherent ally.
So, that is something which is perhaps more worrisome, and as that’s worrisome not only for China, it is worrisome for all of us.
MR. TALBOTT: Shyam, I hope you won’t mind taking a question about the big story, which I would characterize as the extra-judicial, extra-territorial execution of Osama bin Laden, and I would focus not on the action itself, but what it tells us about Pakistan, both from an Indian standpoint and insofar as you would be comfortable speculating about it from a Chinese standpoint. The circumstances of his death, we are learning more about as the days go by, but what is extremely significant, it seems, is the circumstances of his life for the last number of years, and what that tells us about the very complex arrangement between him and powerful circles and people in Pakistan. And obviously that has
bearing on India’s security and you do know China so well, and the Chinese are very sotto voce about this, but they also are aware of connections between al-Qaeda and extreme Islamist secessionism, particularly in Shinjan. So, would you give us your thoughts on these two questions?

MR. SARAN: As I mentioned, Strobe, that it’s not that we have not had this as a topic of conversation between China and India, you know, the fundamentalism as a threat to both the secular society in India as well as to China and the threat faced by China from elements which may be based in Pakistan, but at the end of the day the Chinese perception, so far, has been that, yes, there is a threat, but Pakistan is such a close ally that it will always deliver on whatever we want Pakistan to deliver on. So, if you just take, for example, the Lal Masjid case, I mean, in a sense, that was the beginning of the end for Musharraf, but he took that action because China was mad because of what had happened to its six nationals.
So, as long as there continues to be a feeling in China that at the end of the day its larger interests are served by this alliance with Pakistan, and that this particular threat -- very specific threat, of terrorism in (inaudible) can be contained, can be handled. Because of the very close understanding and relationship between the two countries, I do not see much change taking place in that. It is depressing, but I think that’s how we see the relationship.

Now, as far as the impact of this particular incident is concerned, of course you have seen the Indian statement. Obviously we are very happy that he’s no longer around, but I think the question in our mind is, how is this going to play out in the next few months? That is the key question. One is, will the United States of America and the international community use what is a big leverage today in your hands to try and bring about a fundamental shift in Pakistani thinking about the use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy or is there going to be a temptation to use this for some shortterm ends, short-term end being, well, can we bend them to our will to help us with our exit strategy in Afghanistan, which will be perhaps a short-term gain, but may not resolve the longer term challenge that it poses.
We would certainly hope that it is the latter :?: , because that is -- unless that change comes about in the manner in which Pakistan looks at its interests vis-à-vis India, vis-à-vis Afghanistan, vis-à-vis the United States of America, I think we will continue to face this problem.
SPEAKER: Jack (inaudible), George Washington University. The last two questions set the stage for what I was going to ask. One, about China nexus with Pakistan. Recently after the Sunday incident, China impressed upon Pakistan not to release any information about (inaudible) cases and so on and so forth and not to give any information to India. That’s one instant. Two, Pakistan, in a recent delegation to Afghanistan, Prime Minister Galani and so on and so forth, impressed upon Afghan government to rely more on China than the United States. So, if you see (inaudible)
trend with Pakistan and China. China always tries to create problems for (inaudible).

MR. SARAN: Well, I was not aware of the fact that Pakistan has asked -- sorry, China has asked Pakistan not to share any information on 26/11. That’s news to me. I must confess I have not seen that report.

I think much will depend upon how Pakistan sees its own interests in the engagement with India. So, from our side we have opened the possibilities of a positive turn in the relationship and in that what Pakistan does to bring closure to 26/11 and punish those who were responsible for that horrifying incident, is going to be a key in terms of any kind of reestablishment of at least a minimal degree of trust and confidence. So, if this is what China has told Pakistan and if China -- if Pakistan believes that, yes, this is in Pakistan’s interest, I’m afraid India-Pakistan relations will not
move in a positive direction. I mean, that’s the reality. Reported remarks by Galani to Karzai about depending more on China and less on the United States. I think the ground reality, as we know, is very different.

So, I cannot see -- I cannot see how even from Pakistan’s perspective. What the U.S. role is going to be in Afghanistan is also critical to its own security interests. I think the problem really is that Pakistan is not quite certain about what
its interests are. It is still thinking in very old categories when the whole situation in the region has changed.
So, to think in terms of, say, a strategic depth in Afghanistan, it is today -- I think it is quite irrelevant. Or to think in terms of, you know, being able to keep India off balance through the use of terrorism. Well, this is something which already you
are seeing is eating into the Pakistani polity itself. It’s a danger -- more of a danger to Pakistan than it is a threat to India. There are far more terrorist incidents taking place, far more Muslims being killed in Pakistan than today, I think, in India.

So, is Pakistan still going to -- despite the reality that it confronts -- is it still going to think in those old terms? If it does, than I’m afraid, you know, the situation will not change for the better. This is why I said what the reaction to this latest incident is going to be, is what is more important than the incident itself.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by anupmisra »

Benis worthy material but worth a shot here. Musharraf slams US over bin Laden raid. Strange beliefs, indeed.
The second is incompetence and I strongly believe in the latter,” Musharraf said.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by RSoami »

Nahi Shiv Saar,
Most of the indians want action.At least all the educated ones do..One only needs to visit some forums to get an idea of anger against govt. apathy to terrorist attacks.
But the country is ruled by elites who are scared that any action might lead to consequences which could endanger their grip on power. Interestingly, the porkis are talented enough not to need our help either.. They are going down all by themselves giving the elites in India a helping hand unknowingly.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by SSridhar »

ISI Chief on 'crucial' US mission to explain Pak perfidy (err...position)
I think he has been 'summoned'
ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha has left for the U.S. to explain Pakistan’s position on the presence of Osama bin Laden in the country against the backdrop of reports that he may step down over the debacle.

Mr. Pasha set off on the “critical mission for putting an end to misgivings about Pakistan in the US” yesterday, the influential Dawn newspaper reported today.

He left for the U.S. a day after the army’s top brass conceded an intelligence failure in detecting the al-Qaeda chief’s presence in a compound located a short distance from the Pakistan Military Academy in the garrison city of Abbottabad.

The Dawn said uncorroborated reports suggested that Pasha met the CIA’s station chief in Islamabad before leaving for Washington and reminded him of the ISI’s contributions in the war on terror and the lead about bin Laden’s courier that eventually led the U.S. to the al-Qaeda chief’s hideout.

An official statement issued on Thursday after a meeting of Corps Commanders chaired by army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said the military admitted its “own shortcomings in developing intelligence on the presence of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.”
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by SSridhar »

Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Quereshi wants political heads to roll
Shah Mahmood Qureshi says the operation was a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, and President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani should be held responsible.
He has fired the first salvo to 'protect' the PA. His head should roll now in PPP.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by shyamd »

It all makes sense now. Iran backs off, Iran giving benefits to Pak. De-escalation in tensions.

Pakistan mediates in Saudi-Iran row: Report
Saturday, 30 April 2011 01:38
Share

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has made considerable progress in its bid to defuse tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran which followed the uprisings against Gulf regimes, news reports here said yesterday.

State Minister for Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar’s recent visit to Saudi Arabia was designed to mediate between the two countries, Express Tribune newspaper reported. Strained relations between them touched their lowest ebb after Riyadh accused Tehran of instigating demonstrations in Bahrain and interfering in Arab countries’ internal affairs.

The Saudi foreign minister expressed support for Pakistan’s efforts in promoting peace and stability in the region during his talks with Khar, media reports said. However, Saudi Arabia did ask Pakistan to use its influence over Iran to persuade it to avoid interfering in Arab countries’ affairs.

Riyadh’s positive response came after Khar had extensive discussions with key Saudi leaders including Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal, Secretary-General of the National Security Council Prince Bandar bin Sultan and Saudi Interior Minister Mohammad bin Naif.

Islamabad took the initiative after Tehran expressed its desire to improve relations with Saudi Arabia that have worsened after Riyadh sent troops to Bahrain to help Manama curb bloody demonstrations.
This explains the sudden strike across LoC.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by SSridhar »

prove your committment, show concrete actions: US to Pakistan
The U.S. has asked Pakistan to show “concrete actions” to prove its commitment in the war against terrorism, even as it has sought an explanation from Islamabad on its ignorance about slain Osama bin Laden’s hideout.

The statement in this regard came from the State Department amidst increasing questions being raised by lawmakers and think tanks on Pakistan’s commitment to fight against terrorism.

We’re going to look for concrete actions and concrete signs from the Pakistanis that they’re also committed to this,” State Department spokesman Mark Toner told reporters here.

Mr. Toner said the U.S. has asked a number of questions to Pakistan with regard to the hideout of Osama bin Laden, the al Qaeda leader, in an affluent suburb of Islamabad.

“Certainly, we’ve raised these issues with them. The Pakistanis have said they have the same concerns, and they’re looking into it. It’s hard for me to say. These kinds of investigations can take some time,” he said.

The U.S. is looking for the Pakistanis to address what the Administration believes are legitimate concerns raised by it and the Congress.

“They recognise that we’ll look to them to provide answers to those questions,” he said.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by SSridhar »

US demands names of top ISI operatives
Pakistani officials say the Obama administration has demanded the identities of some of their top intelligence operatives as the United States tries to determine whether any of them had contact with Osama bin Laden or his agents in the years before the raid that led to his death early Monday morning in Pakistan.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Altair »

SSridhar wrote:US demands names of top ISI operatives
Pakistani officials say the Obama administration has demanded the identities of some of their top intelligence operatives as the United States tries to determine whether any of them had contact with Osama bin Laden or his agents in the years before the raid that led to his death early Monday morning in Pakistan.
I think they already know some names and checking if Pakis come forward on their own. SEALS must have salvaged lot of information from the thumb drives and disks.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Aditya_V »

SSridhar wrote:US demands names of top ISI operatives
Pakistani officials say the Obama administration has demanded the identities of some of their top intelligence operatives as the United States tries to determine whether any of them had contact with Osama bin Laden or his agents in the years before the raid that led to his death early Monday morning in Pakistan.
The question is will the US have the guts to the right thing here, considering these operatives concealed the 9/11 mastermind, the logical conclusion should be that these operatives hould be treated the same way Osama was, does the US have guts to do this, and will Paki friends alteats then take some Open Miltary action against the US?
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by A_Gupta »

Retd. Col W. Patrick Lang on the US-Pakistan relationship:
http://turcopolier.typepad.com/sic_semp ... f-day.html

The positive side:
1-They let our Main Supply Route to Afghanistan run north from their ports to the Khyber Pass and to Quetta. This is a major vulnerability for us. With the size force we have in Afghanistan, we would have a difficult time supplying that force either through Russia or by air. Pakistani companies make a lot of money in the haulage on this MSR.

2- Pakistan's military keeps it's existing and future nuclear capability out of the larger world game. As has been discussed at SST many times, Pakistan either has or will soon have the real world CAPABILITY of ranging Israel's target set. They have around 100 fully engineered and manufactured deliverable nuclear weapons. They have aircraft and missiles (Shahiin 2 improved) that would do the job. The missile launchers are fully mobile. The US has zero control over this nuclear strike force. Logically, the willingness of the Pakistan military to keep this "piece" off the chess board is a major boon to the US. We do not want to see that willingness change to something else.

On the other hand...
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by A_Gupta »

Conventional wisdom is that Pakistan wants to control Afghanistan for "strategic depth", and that they plan to do so using the Taliban.

The Pakistani Taliban are creating havoc in Pakistan. The Pakistani Army is hardly able to control its homegrown extremists (unless one believes that the apparent loss of control is part of some strategically brilliant plan). Perhaps the only reason it has some control over the Afghan Taliban is that the Taliban leaders are in its protective custody. Once the Afghan Taliban leaders are safely ensconced in Kabul, after an American departure, and with Pakistani help, all bets are off; I don't see why they will be any more biddable than their Pakistani brethren.

So what is the Pakistan Army after, if not strategic depth? IMO, it is control over the lucrative opium trade.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by shiv »

RSoami wrote:Nahi Shiv Saar,
Most of the indians want action.At least all the educated ones do..One only needs to visit some forums to get an idea of anger against govt. apathy to terrorist attacks.
I would like to think you are right.

However experience tells me that "angry educated Indians on forums who want action" has been going on at least from 1999. I have seen so much of it and have been so enthused by their eager ranks that I used to believe that some action is forthcoming. The truth is its just not happening. I have now started looking around me to count the number of people who feel that war and action are wrong. And I see that their numbers are high - only their words are drowned out by enthusiastic Indians who think action will be taken "this time". It won't,

I would be happy to eat my words - but my cynicism arises from the fact that even more than a decade ago I used to hear Indians who were young then say that the "younger Indians" will take action. Those younger Indians are now middle aged with teenage children and did nothing more than the previous gen. The twenty somethings of 1999 are now beginning to touch 40 and nothing is happening. 70s are in their 80s, and the school kids of 1999 are confident youngsters. Don't want to put them off. I only want to counsel them and tell them that things are not so simple. There is a huge constituency in India that will give no support for war to be started by India, although they will give their lives or hearts if war is imposed on India like 1999. You need to look at what influence they are having on events and how. Or else we will be on BRF in 2021 saying " I am sure action is coming soon"
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by RSoami »

Shiv Saar,
By accident you are talking directly about my generation.I was in school in 1999. :wink:
I think your interest in seeing action is shared by many and I fully agree with you on most points.
But I dont want action right now.. Its simply because it is not the right strategic time for it(IMHO)..Perhaps plane hijack(99) was the right time..In fact anything before the Americans came along after 9/11 would have been a good time.
But I was still in school then.. :mrgreen:
Now the Americans are screwing the pockroaches.They are between the deep see and a very hard thing..Rather than demanding action right now we should just sit back and enjoy the show...I for one is very amused and happy. :wink: . Really happy
Sometimes its better just not to do anything.
Thanks for replying to my post. am honoured. :)
Regards
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Johann »

A_Gupta wrote:Once the Afghan Taliban leaders are safely ensconced in Kabul, after an American departure, and with Pakistani help, all bets are off; I don't see why they will be any more biddable than their Pakistani brethren.
The Afghan Taliban has never been 'safely ensconced' anywhere - they have always had to fight, and Pakistan has always been there to help them in those fights.

From 1996 to 2001 Pakistani armed forces personnel and Pakistani channeling of Gulf money were key to pushing the Northern Alliance to the brink of defeat.

The only way for the US to reduce its troop strength in Afghanistan without seeing it overrun by foreign and Pakistani jihadis again is to arm and fund strong local allies.

Unless the Afghan Taliban switches to a political mode, this American role means the Afghan Taliban will have to rely even more on other powers for help fighting its enemies. That would guarantee powerful leverage to Pakistan as long as it is able and willing to play that role.

Will Obama continue to show the same courage and insight, and saw away further at the Gordian Knot by killing Mullah Omar and Haqqani wherever in Pakistan they may be?

If he does, then one of two things will happen: Pakistan will break its alliance with America in order to save its relationship with the Afghan Taliban, or the Afghan Taliban and the Pakiban will merge and take on the PA. Either choice would unleash profound violence and change within Pakistan.

Losing the 'alliance', dishonest as it is, means losing 50% of the supply line to Afghanistan, and losing direct access to events in Pakistan. I cant see Obama acting unless he was reasonably sure that the PA would however reluctantly sell their strategic investment in Afghanistan via the Taliban and Haqqanis for money when compelled by American fait accompli.
Last edited by Johann on 07 May 2011 21:06, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by g.sarkar »

My apologies if already posted. (Difficult to keep up with TSP this week!)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor ... 90,00.html
A Forced Marriage Plagued by Ever-Deepening Distrust
By Susanne Koelbl
Nice article from the Germans.
Gautam
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by shiv »

RSoami wrote:Shiv Saar,
By accident you are talking directly about my generation.I was in school in 1999.
Having kids who are now out of school I have had a lot more time to read what happens in schools and what kids are saying. While it is nice to see patriotic young people who ask that something should be done - it takes years before one starts ignoring the front pages of papers which have the action news and start looking at the supplements which have articles and poems by school kids. And that is where there are appeals for peace friendship and harmony. No articles by school children appear that demand killing of terrorists. Any article that says "I am Akshay of std 7 . I went to Pakistan last year. The roads are so nice. The people are so friendly. I think we should be friends with Pakistan blah blah" gets published.

India is a country that preaches peace and harmony to its school children. A few of those children grow uo to realize that war and action too are necessary and come on to BRF to find like minded people. But they are hardly in a majority. I am sure it has been drilled into you by grown ups that "You the young will inherit India". This is a white lie told by grown ups because it is only partially true. It is true that the young will inherit as the old codgers deservedly kick the bucket, but the youngsters will run the country using what they were taught when they were very young. If they have been taught that war must be avoided and everyone must be friends when they were young - they will try and run the country they inherit that way. Our schools are not teaching that there are bad people who kill. Our schools are not teaching us that bad people who kill must be opposed using force and may need to be killed. So don't delude yourself that you belong to a group that will act. You are in a minority who have opened their eyes. Use your power to educate the blind of India.

In Pakistan school children actually have a subject that teaches some military studies (as per a paper by Sidiqa Agha linked from the first post of this thread). The grown ups of India - not just my dead parents generation, but my generation as well as the generations 10 or 20 years younger than me have been blind. They are not opening their eyes. They think al iz well. All will not be well. We have belligerent violent countries next door and we have to be prepared for violence. The sooner young people also find out the better it will be.

That is why I am getting more and more impatient with well meaning people who say that that there is some deeply hidden constituency in India that wants to take action against Pakistan but is being stopped by the government. That is utter crap. No such constituency exists. I have waited over 20 years for that group to show up and I now realise that it is nonsense. We have to create the group. As long as we sit around imagining that "Rural folks of India know the truth" or "Educated people on forums know the truth" we are counting the minority and ignoring the huge dark peaceful elephant in the room. Let us stop making that mistake. We think that the government is stopping people. It is not. The government is merely implementing what most people want. And most people want what they have been taught in school. Ahimsa. Supineness as strategy. Show the other cheek. Smile if you are hit.

Teach the youngsters the truth about the world and tell them, as Arjuna did, where action is required. Don't imagine that action will come from a mass of people who you think are already ready for action. They are not there at all.

Sorry if this sounds like a lecture. But it came from the heart.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by ramana »

The NCC cadet handbook was quite good to give an idea of IA organization.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by shiv »

About education in Pakistan, the following is from a pdf entitled "BEYOND MADRASAS
ASSESSING THE LINKS BETWEEN EDUCATION AND
MILITANCY IN PAKISTAN by Rebecca Winthrop and Corinne Graff
CENTER FOR UNIVERSAL EDUCATION
WORKING PAPER 2 | JUNE 2010
Center forUniversal Educationat BROOKINGS"
The democratically elected president Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto introduced a full two-year course on the
“Fundamentals of War” and the “Defence of Pakistan”
for secondary school in the 1970s.181 Here glorifi cation
of the military and violence was seen as a strategy
to defend Pakistan against an aggressive India.
Military science is an important part of the curricula
and textbooks at the secondary level, covering topics
such as the causes of war, the conduct of war, modern
weapons systems, military operations, the ethics of
war, Pakistan’s defense problems, Pakistan’s defense
forces and foreign policy, and the role of armed forces
during peacetime. A review of Pakistani heroes covered
in textbooks shows the majority to be from the
military, with biographies describing in great detail
the battles they have fought. Pictures and lesson examples
are also heavily militarized in textbooks.182
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Dilbu »

If they have been taught that war must be avoided and everyone must be friends when they were young - they will try and run the country they inherit that way. Our schools are not teaching that there are bad people who kill. Our schools are not teaching us that bad people who kill must be opposed using force and may need to be killed. So don't delude yourself that you belong to a group that will act. You are in a minority who have opened their eyes. Use your power to educate the blind of India.
Shiv saar wonderful post. I was also in school in 99.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Muppalla »

Not to compare India/Indians with US or its citizens or as a matter of fact any other country. There is hardly any country where its people will ask its governement to take action or go for a war. Democratically a country can never go to a war. Even two Mumbai type attacks and a referendum to go for a war probably will always get lost and verdict will be in favor of no-war. It is probably possible only in Islamic countires to go for some war by popular demand against Israel.

Hence expectation of GOI taking action against Pakistan based of will of India's population or GWB going after Iraq after winning a referendum are futile. It is just the leadership's decision and nothing else.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Manny »

Our Strange Dance with Pakistan
Elizabeth Rubin


Osama bin Laden’s death in a mansion in exclusive club house territory of retired Pakistani officers has exposed the terrible paradox at the heart of our war in Afghanistan—Pakistan’s hypocrisy and our acquiescence. Bin Laden’s Pakistani hosts, two rich businessmen called Arshad and Tariq Khan who owned the house and were killed with him, hail from Charsadda, 15 miles north of Peshawar. Their uncle was a retired Brigadier. (Arshad was apparently the courier, Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, who led intelligence officials to the compound.) This is not a lawless land. This is highly controlled territory.

We give billions in aid to Pakistan’s military and civilian government. Yet Pakistan is harboring our enemies and even the enemies, one could argue, of its own healthy survival. Portions of our money are being funneled into the variety of insurgent networks whose fighters are killing American soldiers, Afghan soldiers, American civilians, Afghan civilians, European civilians, Pakistani civilians—mothers, fathers, children on multiple continents. Why, asks a US army major, did all his friends die in Afghanistan’s Helmand Province when the real problem is on the other side of the border? Why, asks a twelve-year-old Afghan girl in Kandahar whose family has been wiped out by US air strikes, are you bombing us? How has this come to pass?

http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/20 ... -pakistan/
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Muppalla »

Dilbu wrote:
If they have been taught that war must be avoided and everyone must be friends when they were young - they will try and run the country they inherit that way. Our schools are not teaching that there are bad people who kill. Our schools are not teaching us that bad people who kill must be opposed using force and may need to be killed. So don't delude yourself that you belong to a group that will act. You are in a minority who have opened their eyes. Use your power to educate the blind of India.
Shiv saar wonderful post. I was also in school in 99.
This is true. However, out of such groups some become defenders of Nation, civilization and future strategist. Not all 100 billion belong to same. Just like some are doctors and some are DOOS, there will be some who takes care of defense and offence. Why should job of some needs an approval of majority. Yes it affects them but every other trade's actions also affects uninterested ones in some way or otherway.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by suryag »

Shivji first time i am replying back to you in disagreement, will not be coherent hope you get the drift of what i write below

First of all sir, you say we need to create a group that will push for aggressive actions against the Pakis. This in my opinion, is not doable for atleast a decade or two. The reason behind this is the perennial struggle that the middle class in India is involved in; day-in and day-out they need to wrestle with so many issues in their life that a westerner or a well to do Indian doesnt have to. This group basically wants some amount of peace in life, may it be the fight between wife and mother or may it be between India-Pak. I am pretty sure this same group is also at ease if GOI takes unilateral action against Dawood Ibrahim via a covert/overt operation. They dont care, what they want at the end of the day is the problem doesnt exist. I have talked to a lot of people and they all are of the opinion that get done with this problem and move on and of course, they dont mean surrender when the say "get done" they mean smash them i.e., no half-baked measures. Why do you think entire India galvanises when there is an overt war, why do you think people(one person i know did) in far away TN sent in their jewelry to "somefund" on Nehru's appeal during the 1962 war, that is because the conflict is of immediate concern and we need to solve it. Here what i am trying to say is if you add one Low Intensity conflict issue on the psyche of an already burdened middle class man/woman it is going to invite indifference. You respond back and even if the outcomes are bad all these silent masses will rally towards the nationalistic side.

Simple analogy is if your wife and your mother have a LIC running between them and if after a long day's work your wife complains to you the best you do is try and empathise with her and ask her to take it easy, if making peace was not possible and goto sleep. However, when this flares up then you do something drastic and you dont feel sorry about it. In the same vein none of the youth today will feel sorry if we hit them hard but if there are small skirmishes where they are not directly involved they try and brush it under the carpet. And yes life after primary school is different; once you step out into the real world you see and learn to deal with touts/policemen/chitput goondas/arrogant parking fellows and people breaking the line and this shapes our attitude towards the pakis. Their society anyways has nothing to lose because they are wallowing in dirt our middle class on the other hand wants peace whether it be via harsh punishment or via chai-bisket peace talks, need is for some leaders thats all
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Vashishtha »

^^suryag, i agree with you........indo pak doesn't figure as a priority for a majority of mid-class indians....they want peace, either via chai-biscoot or via geronimo........

My dad once said himself, if kashmir gets rid of terror attacks, just give it to them, but it must be the last option.........
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by archan »

Vashishtha wrote: My dad once said himself, if kashmir gets rid of terror attacks, just give it to them, but it must be the last option.........
tch.. tch... thats a big IF though. And thats exactly what the pakis hope to make most Indians think like. But give them Kashmir and they'll want their flag on red fort next.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by suryag »

No i never said give them kashmir, I am Duryodhana in that not even sui ki nok, but solve the problem thats what everyone wants, it doesnt help if you keep the issue running
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Muppalla »

Everyone wants solution to Kashmir and if occupying Sindh solves Kashmir they India should do it. But taking it to billions of Indian population whether it is a good idea to occupy Sindh will always be disasterous. It is even possible that when India occupies Sindh, or during the process, GOI rating may be 15% of India and rest may be cribbing due to non-availability of petrol and high cost of food. War decisions are not done based on pulse of the nation polls or surveys. You do it if you have it otherwise keep telling that we don have them or some other super-duper-chanikyan-"statemanship" stuff.
{Note: I am proposing any war with Pak. Just trying to my view of war decision making}
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Vikas »

archan wrote:
Vashishtha wrote: My dad once said himself, if kashmir gets rid of terror attacks, just give it to them, but it must be the last option.........
tch.. tch... thats a big IF though. And thats exactly what the pakis hope to make most Indians think like. But give them Kashmir and they'll want their flag on red fort next.
Archanji, Pre-BRF days (& Pre-Kargil days), even I sometimes used to believe that IF giving Kashmir to Pakistan resolves all the issues between India and TSP, then better give it to them. Most of us were/are strategically-challenged unfortunately and media does not help at all in breaking these myths.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Vashishtha »

It took me some time to explain him the consequences..
Most of us were/are strategically-challenged unfortunately and media does not help at all in breaking these myths.
unfortunately, a lot of people are still strategically challenged...
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Kamboja »

abhishek_sharma wrote:Shyam Saran at Brookings: Full of TFTA Foreign Policy

MR. SARAN: It’s not that we don’t have conversations with China about Pakistan or what’s happening within Pakistan. It is also not the case that China does not express concern about developments in Pakistan, particularly with respect to, say,
fundamentalism or how this impacts on, say, Sinjia. But having said that, I think the Chinese support for Pakistan, I think, is almost unconditional, certainly as far as, say, relationship with India is concerned. We have to accept that as a fact of life.

... Pakistan is such a close ally that it will always deliver on whatever we want Pakistan to deliver on. So, if you just take, for example, the Lal Masjid case, I mean, in a sense, that was the beginning of the end for Musharraf, but he took that action because China was mad because of what had happened to its six nationals.
This quote stood out to me from the transcript above, and now I have a question for the gurus.

It strikes me that this slavishness of the Paki elites towards the taller/deeper overlords seems very idiosyncratic. Consider that the Pakis are past masters at cynical manipulation of imperial overlords: willing to sell themselves to the US/UQ cause, but only in exchange for vast amounts of cash, weapons systems, etc; willing to sell themselves to the Saudis and Gulf Arabs, but again only because they are the 'spiritual overlords', keepers of the two mosques, and incidentally are able to provide subsidized oil at critical moments.

The Americans have done an incredible lot for the Paki elite -- yet the latter only begrudgingly, if at all, acknowledge all this. The Saudis have also helped and receive the respect and due obeisance from the Paki elite... but again, none of this matches the awe, respect and love shown to the taller/deeper/sweeter allies. And really, what have the Chinese done for the Pakis?

As far as I can see, there are only a few things:
1) Providing the clown jewels; which, granted, is a big deal
2) Providing Nodongs and green paint helping Paki 'jinn teknology scientists' to 'build' Shaheens and other 400% halal delivery systems for the jewels
3) A few military trinkets, but nothing compared to the US largesse
4) Indirect benefit: bruising India in a war in '62, which no doubt sent the Pakis into a tizzy of schadenfreude

Looking at these I think the real reason for the otherwise inexplicable reverence and love that the Pakis show for the Cheenis -- who, let us not forget, are even more kaffir than us SDREs -- is benefit (4). Why? Simply by process of elimination. We all know (and the Paki elite surely know) that China will not provide what the US or even the Saudis have in the past; i.e. steady streams of cash money for the elites to milk; neither is China (yet) the kind of place that the RAPEs want to send their RAPElets to 'study' and party; neither does China (yet) have sufficient advanced military hardware to share en mass with their TFTA friends. So it must come down to the fact that China is the only major Paki ally (and country in modern history) to injure India in a fight -- that, and the possibility that India and China could come to blows in the future, are the single most important reason that the Pakis worship the Chinese.

In other words it boils down to the one thing that Paki elites love more than cash (surprising!) and even more than their beloved ummah (jeehard!!) -- and that is anyone who hurts India. Do that and you earn the everlasting love of the Paki elite, rich or not, kaffir or not, and they seem willing to even do things to please China that are self-destructive or even suicidal (like Lal Masjid).

Am I missing anything here?
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by ranjbe »

As a off and on lurker on this forum since 1999, I would totally agree with Dr. Shiv regarding the attitude of middle-aged Indians on this forum in 1999. However, I would like to also give my subjective impressions of BRF posters in that time frame.
1. Strong sanctions had been imposed on India (and Pakistan) because of the nuclear tests, and if readers believe that there is a lot of SDRE dhoti-shivering (which is due to lack of self-confidence) today, the dhoti-shivering was orders of magnitude higher at that time.
2. A majority of BRF believed in equal-equal with TSP, as did the rest of the world.
3. Flush with jihad, and the humiliation of USSR, Pakistan was ratcheting up terrorism in Kashmir and rest of India. India suffered for the next 10 years.
4. There were some good reasons for 1. and 2. India's population was 8 times Pakistan, and our GDP was less than 7 times.
Consider the scenario today.
1. Based upon IMF, our GDP is (end of 2011) 10 times that of Pakistan, and our population is only 7 times that of Pakistan.
2. Pakistan was under benign neglect by the West at that time (remember all the 'close ally' stuff started after 9/11) and deteriorating both economically and socially. As of today the 'close ally' is in an even worse position than 1999, in spite of massive aid from the 31/2 friends.
3. USA and West has their hand in TSP's pants (infiltrating their intelligence, communications and Army) and the threat of any major Terrorist attack on India is substantially less primarily because it is not in the West's interest to allow this to happen in today's environment.
4. There is a more than 50% chance that TSP is at a stage of terminal decline where it's survivial in its present form is impossible - note that this is the feeling of TSPA experts both on BRF and some in the mainstream. Whether it splits up in to 3/4/5 countries (as favored by the majority here), or becomes a Somalia, is unknown.
Not bad for doing nothing and letting natural Pakistaniyyat take its course!
Last edited by ranjbe on 08 May 2011 03:27, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Johann »

del
Last edited by Johann on 07 May 2011 23:35, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Pranav »

shiv wrote: India is a country that preaches peace and harmony to its school children. A few of those children grow uo to realize that war and action too are necessary and come on to BRF to find like minded people. But they are hardly in a majority ...

Teach the youngsters the truth about the world and tell them, as Arjuna did, where action is required. Don't imagine that action will come from a mass of people who you think are already ready for action. They are not there at all.

Sorry if this sounds like a lecture. But it came from the heart.
What gets taught in schools is Gandhianism. Gandhi was promoted by the British for a good reason.

But I don't agree that the majority has lost its common sense, despite the brainwashing. They may be disenfranchised and partly ignorant.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Johann »

Kamboja wrote:
abhishek_sharma wrote:Shyam Saran at Brookings: Full of TFTA Foreign Policy

MR. SARAN: It’s not that we don’t have conversations with China about Pakistan or what’s happening within Pakistan. It is also not the case that China does not express concern about developments in Pakistan, particularly with respect to, say,
fundamentalism or how this impacts on, say, Sinjia. But having said that, I think the Chinese support for Pakistan, I think, is almost unconditional, certainly as far as, say, relationship with India is concerned. We have to accept that as a fact of life.

... Pakistan is such a close ally that it will always deliver on whatever we want Pakistan to deliver on. So, if you just take, for example, the Lal Masjid case, I mean, in a sense, that was the beginning of the end for Musharraf, but he took that action because China was mad because of what had happened to its six nationals.
This quote stood out to me from the transcript above, and now I have a question for the gurus.

It strikes me that this slavishness of the Paki elites towards the taller/deeper overlords seems very idiosyncratic. Consider that the Pakis are past masters at cynical manipulation of imperial overlords: willing to sell themselves to the US/UQ cause, but only in exchange for vast amounts of cash, weapons systems, etc; willing to sell themselves to the Saudis and Gulf Arabs, but again only because they are the 'spiritual overlords', keepers of the two mosques, and incidentally are able to provide subsidized oil at critical moments.

The Americans have done an incredible lot for the Paki elite -- yet the latter only begrudgingly, if at all, acknowledge all this. The Saudis have also helped and receive the respect and due obeisance from the Paki elite... but again, none of this matches the awe, respect and love shown to the taller/deeper/sweeter allies. And really, what have the Chinese done for the Pakis?

As far as I can see, there are only a few things:
1) Providing the clown jewels; which, granted, is a big deal
2) Providing Nodongs and green paint helping Paki 'jinn teknology scientists' to 'build' Shaheens and other 400% halal delivery systems for the jewels
3) A few military trinkets, but nothing compared to the US largesse
4) Indirect benefit: bruising India in a war in '62, which no doubt sent the Pakis into a tizzy of schadenfreude

Looking at these I think the real reason for the otherwise inexplicable reverence and love that the Pakis show for the Cheenis -- who, let us not forget, are even more kaffir than us SDREs -- is benefit (4). Why? Simply by process of elimination. We all know (and the Paki elite surely know) that China will not provide what the US or even the Saudis have in the past; i.e. steady streams of cash money for the elites to milk; neither is China (yet) the kind of place that the RAPEs want to send their RAPElets to 'study' and party; neither does China (yet) have sufficient advanced military hardware to share en mass with their TFTA friends. So it must come down to the fact that China is the only major Paki ally (and country in modern history) to injure India in a fight -- that, and the possibility that India and China could come to blows in the future, are the single most important reason that the Pakis worship the Chinese.

In other words it boils down to the one thing that Paki elites love more than cash (surprising!) and even more than their beloved ummah (jeehard!!) -- and that is anyone who hurts India. Do that and you earn the everlasting love of the Paki elite, rich or not, kaffir or not, and they seem willing to even do things to please China that are self-destructive or even suicidal (like Lal Masjid).

Am I missing anything here?
Kamboja,

- Those Chinese nukes and the missiles are what allowed Pakistan to feel confidant again about deterring India from invasion across the IB after the defeat of 1971. Thats simply enormous.

- The PRC has indeed been an 'all weather' friend that has never publicly humiliated Pakistan with sanctions, public demands, drone strikes and commando raids. You cant put a price on that either.

Not even the Saudis have been as consistent in support as the Chinese - they occasionally cut aid when they felt the Pakistanis are being difficult and going off plan. Of course their humiliation of PA and civilian leadership is much more discreet, just like assistance itself, but it still stings.

- That stability of this 'all weather friendship' with the PRC is as you say is based on a common enmity with India.

Neither the Saudis nor the Americans share that. The primary US concern was first the Soviets, and then the global jihad. The Saudis are most concerned about the Iranians, followed by the need for foreign forces to help put down coups and internal uprisings.

The Sino-Pakistani relationship is further reinforced by a common sense of hostility towards what they see as US constraints on their ambitions.
Last edited by Johann on 07 May 2011 23:40, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Atri »

AOA.... the thread got its 72..... time to attain jannat...
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Pranav »

Kamboja wrote:So it must come down to the fact that China is the only major Paki ally (and country in modern history) to injure India in a fight -- that, and the possibility that India and China could come to blows in the future, are the single most important reason that the Pakis worship the Chinese.

In other words it boils down to the one thing that Paki elites love more than cash (surprising!) and even more than their beloved ummah (jeehard!!) -- and that is anyone who hurts India. Do that and you earn the everlasting love of the Paki elite, rich or not, kaffir or not, and they seem willing to even do things to please China that are self-destructive or even suicidal (like Lal Masjid).
Very perceptive observations.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by KLNMurthy »

Johann wrote:
A_Gupta wrote:Once the Afghan Taliban leaders are safely ensconced in Kabul, after an American departure, and with Pakistani help, all bets are off; I don't see why they will be any more biddable than their Pakistani brethren.
The Afghan Taliban has never been 'safely ensconced' anywhere - they have always had to fight, and Pakistan has always been there to help them in those fights.

From 1996 to 2001 Pakistani armed forces personnel and Pakistani channeling of Gulf money were key to pushing the Northern Alliance to the brink of defeat.

The only way for the US to reduce its troop strength in Afghanistan without seeing it overrun by foreign and Pakistani jihadis again is to arm and fund strong local allies.

Unless the Afghan Taliban switches to a political mode, this American role means the Afghan Taliban will have to rely even more on other powers for help fighting its enemies. That would guarantee powerful leverage to Pakistan as long as it is able and willing to play that role.

Will Obama continue to show the same courage and insight, and saw away further at the Gordian Knot by killing Mullah Omar and Haqqani wherever in Pakistan they may be?

If he does, then one of two things will happen: Pakistan will break its alliance with America in order to save its relationship with the Afghan Taliban, or the Afghan Taliban and the Pakiban will merge and take on the PA. Either choice would unleash profound violence and change within Pakistan.

Losing the 'alliance', dishonest as it is, means losing 50% of the supply line to Afghanistan, and losing direct access to events in Pakistan. I cant see Obama acting unless he was reasonably sure that the PA would however reluctantly sell their strategic investment in Afghanistan via the Taliban and Haqqanis for money when compelled by American fait accompli.
You are assuming that it is an obvious and feasible choice for TSP to break off with the US if obama kills Haqanis or Omar. And therefore concluding that Obama won't do it, on account of what would follow from the breakup.

But if TSP breaks off with the US, where are they going to get their money from? Is China really going to give so much money, with so few conditions and controls, if at all it would give the money?

If I were Obama, I would consider turning TSP over completely to the tutelage of PRC, and make PRC responsible for TSP good behavior, more or less, in the manner of North Korea.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Baikul »

Thread reaches 72 ...In before onlee.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan (TSP): Mar. 29, 2

Post by Muppalla »

Even if TSP wants to break off for US, uncle is not going to break off. Uncle is fatally attracted towards the TFTAs and the relationship will be there for ever. All other theories are just spin IMVHO.
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