To paraphrase the ancient "doha" that we learned in the IIT: posting the full glory of the doha will get me banned in a jiffy:

Jisko jitna chahiye
Kaat kaat le jayiye
Jisko jitna chahiye
Kaat kaat le jayiye
You are, of course, correct about "these ppl and fertile imaginations..unfortunately this is neither their fist attempt and it will not be their last... One thing I have seen that, cowards as they are, they are going to cut and run at their first opportunity.UlanBatori wrote:.. these ppl have fertile imaginations when it comes to inventing "offense" and "harassment" and "torture" and victimhood, even when there is absolutely none of that in reality? And they have the full might of the GOTUS to misuse on their side, until someone puts a stop to that from within the GOTUS. Right now it is in their interest to shut us up, just try not to facilitate that.
Esp as head of BDS.friends ask you about your brilliant FB posts
If an 80-year old woman or three years old girl who is confined to a wheelchair can be strip searched by the TSA at the airport while a woman in a burkha or hijaab is only subject to having her neck and head searched-you live in anation that was founded by geniuses but is run by idiots
If a female diplomat is arrested while dropping her kids at school and cavity searched, while a maid on a non-working visa gets the T-Visa and her family gets T-3 visas and flight tickets to US, you live in a nation that has laws written by geniuses and run by idiots...
No surprise there: Indian Pandus-e-Consulate and maybe even honest elements in NYPD were hunting for her, and only Khalistanis know how to shelter from those. Interesting connection, Khalistan and PB.... Elsewhere I heard Rajiv Malhotra was tweeting something about whether PB was going to go after Khalistanis or was he soft on terrorists.she did not seek out the local churches but was given shelter at a Sikh center. This too does not make sense. NY must have a large Kerala population from her community.
Well if O'Bomber also qualifies as being a peace-maker,what the hell is he doing in arming the Syrian Opposition to the gills and leaving Iran out of the peace talks?So it occurs to me to wonder if any Americans today are speaking and thinking like Dr. King. I'd like to offer up two.
First, Robert Gates, the former secretary of defense whose just-released book, "Duty," is causing a firestorm among commentators. They're pinning him down on everything from his personal feelings about President Obama to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the duties of the American officer corps.
But to me, his most important words were expressed in an interview on CNN, when he suddenly started speaking with quiet passion about what many of us derisively call the "small wars" that have occurred since World War II and the Korean War, especially Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan.
American defense and development planners do not have capacity enough to see the unforeseen, he said, and unless a country has a better idea of what it wants to accomplish and what might happen three or four steps ahead, it shouldn't engage in others' wars.
Then, in an amazing critique of America's defense "thinkers," Gates said he told the military to look at our decisions of the last 40 years -- "We've never once gotten it right."
These words were to me like manna from the gods. Vietnam: We lost 58,000 men and women and caused the deaths of millions, yet the most we do as a nation is pretend it never happened. An honest evaluation of it would have meant, for one thing, we would never have gotten into Iraq or Afghanistan.
Iraq: Again, there was no reason except ego to go into Iraq, and now the situation is even worse than at the beginning. Afghanistan: There were al-Qaida there whom we could have fought using commandos and intelligence; instead, we got into another of our hopeless democratization fantasies and have come close to destroying a country.
Second, President Barack Obama, whom many are still criticizing for not being tough enough and not meeting the nation's needs.
The Washington Post, highlighting a profile of Obama in the current New Yorker, reported that he was asked about "a president's limited power to effect change." His answer brought us directly back to Dr. King.
Even the greatest presidents, like Abraham Lincoln, had to operate in the currents of history, the Post reported Obama as saying. It took "another hundred and fifty years before African-Americans had anything approaching formal equality, much less real equality. ... At the end of the day, we're part of a long-running story. We just try to get our paragraph right."
And, in fairness, Barack Obama has fought his best to get his paragraph right. Universal health care, concern for the environment, attempts to re-industrialize America, criticism of the "small wars" syndrome. Much of this was new -- and most of it is right.
So we celebrate Dr. King's patience and determination, his view of the long human struggle for justice and equality, and his honesty about the realities of the world one faces -- and, yes, we do blessedly discover his best qualities in other leaders today. I can think of no better birthday present. Happy Birthday, Dr. King!
Come on! The AQ needs the advanced weaponry. Pakistan is a Poor Country, can't afford to keep sending Stinger missiles to A'stan and Eyeraq to shoot down American helicopters. Now with Syrian "rebel" aid, they can rise again.what the hell is he doing in arming the Syrian Opposition to the gills
My objection to that letter is "Has the provenance been verified?". I would not harp on it further though as that line of thinking is out of bounds as far as US illegally arresting an Indian DCG goes.Bade wrote:SR has been reported as having Kerala origin, but the letter she wrote home was in Hindi.
hindsight and story bias
Why on earth would DK agree to that ? SR was on an official passport. Such a passport cannot be used for any sort of work role in another country; the holder is a government representative and does what (s)he is required to do by the sending government.UlanBatori wrote:Key date is April 2013 when SR initiated the "work outside" demand. First entrapment attempt. If DK had agreed, they could have arrested her on that, hey?
It was an extortion attempt. Based on experience of prior Indian consulate ppl who were subjected to extortion, maybe the conspirators hoped that they could bully DK into closing her eyes at this, and they could then trap her saying Look At Foreign (Indian) Diplomat Deliberating Violating Our Laws! Note my firm hypothesis that the whole intent was to highlight and tom-tom the WH's new Federal Domestic Worker hoopla. Finding an Indian "maid" in blatant violation by allowing work outside, would have made the news.Why on earth would DK agree to that ?
Frankly very irrelevant.Amber G. wrote:FYI: Meanwhile recently (last week) an Indian-American businesswoman Shamina Singh has been nominated by Obama to a key administration post - (board of directors) of the Corporation for National and Community Service.
Logic is to create a few thousand jobs here a few hundred there and we are talking a couple of percentage point drop in the unemployment rate, stock markets go up a little. Good talking points when the leaders go hat in hand to $1K or $5K per plate dinner fund raisers. Who cares what the situation on the ground is?Bade wrote:Most of the live-in or other 40hrs onlee maids are immigrants legal and illegal. So why should a few thousand of them getting "justice" in the eyes of the law make a difference to the 20% (?) unemployed Americans.
"I won't underplay this incident, I won't overplay this incident. I think we need to see it in perspective," S. Jaishankar said in an interview. "I think we are in the midst of working this one out."
Jaishankar said India was "perplexed" by the decisions of US authorities to arrest and strip-search 39-year-old Devyani Khobragade, India's deputy consul in New York, after she was accused of visa fraud and underpaying her maid.
"There was a fair measure of anger about both the substance of the problem and the way it was handled," he said. "It was not just done publicly; frankly it was done appallingly."
...
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"Frankly, it's probably the most important relationship," he said. "We are not holding up business, or Pentagon dealings, or congressional dealings ... or science programs and saying, 'They don't get done until things get sorted out.'"
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Until the issue was resolved, Jaishankar said, the level of immunity enjoyed by US consular officials in India would be reduced to exactly the level granted in the United States.
"Since our consular officials have no immunity against felonies, US consular officials do not have immunity against serious crimes in India," he said.
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Frankly, I am now worried what this will bring.Amber G. wrote:FYI: Meanwhile recently (last week) an Indian-American businesswoman Shamina Singh has been nominated by Obama to a key administration post - (board of directors) of the Corporation for National and Community Service.
This sentence caught my eye. Why does India maintain reciprocity only as an exception and then revert back to original programing?putnanja wrote:'Perplexed' India says US probably still most important ally
Until the issue was resolved, Jaishankar said, the level of immunity enjoyed by US consular officials in India would be reduced to exactly the level granted in the United States.
No question of granting the Americans a base, etc period. Not for this or any other reason.The US should discuss with India after its general elections the possibility of basing American military and intelligence operatives in the country to address threats posed by Pakistan-based terror groups in a post- Afghanistan context, a think-tank here has said.
A special report titled 'Reorienting US Pakistan Strategy: From Af-Pak to Asia' by the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) also recommends that the US should launch a new diplomatic dialogue with China, India and Pakistan to reduce prospects for regional tension and violence.
"Starting with the national security adviser to the prime minister of India, senior US national security officials should begin to discuss options for significantly expanded counter-terror cooperation with their Indian counterparts, up to and including the possibility of basing US military and/or intelligence operatives in India to address Pakistan-based terrorist threats in a post-Afghanistan context," the report's author, Daniel Markey, who is CFR senior fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia, said.
Markey acknowledged such conversations between Washington and New Delhi would be "politically sensitive" and so should begin only after the next Indian government is elected in the spring.
"If diplomatic discussions make progress, the Pentagon should work with members of the US intelligence community to develop specific implementation plans for on-the-ground operations in India," he said.
The basis for Markey's argument is that while Washington and Islamabad have found common cause in fighting against Pakistan's homegrown Taliban insurgents, Pakistan has been unwilling to tackle threats posed by the Haqqani network or LeT forcing Washington to reconsider the wisdom of remaining heavily dependent on US personnel and facilities now based in Afghanistan.
"Over the long run (and perhaps much sooner if Washington is unable to negotiate a satisfactory bilateral security agreement with Kabul), maintaining a foothold in landlocked Afghanistan as a means to deal with Pakistan-based security threats is likely to be extraordinarily difficult and costly. In light of Pakistan's geographic location, India is the obvious US alternative to Afghanistan," he said.
In recent years, Washington and New Delhi have on their part taken steps to expand their counter-terror cooperation with the intention of building defences against future attacks like the Lashkar-e-Taiba strike on Mumbai in November 2008.
The report said that given persistent terrorist threats and Pakistan's "clear lack of capacity and, in some cases, will" to tackle them, Washington would need to ramp up its efforts in India considerably, including even to the point of establishing military and intelligence facilities on Indian soil.