Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec 2014
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Look at that picture posted above not a single female in sight. Less beards than I expected. One guy has a pink diesel tee shirt . How come leftist females not see the glaring gender segregation / subjugation that happens in Islamic lands? Where does the love ooze from?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
and that almost everyone is without helmet
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Why cant we send soo many of Paki loving WKK to go there inbetween those raackit mards
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
There is a wimmens just behind pink T shirt and to the R sideBrad Goodman wrote:Look at that picture posted above not a single female in sight. Less beards than I expected. One guy has a pink diesel tee shirt . How come leftist females not see the glaring gender segregation / subjugation that happens in Islamic lands? Where does the love ooze from?
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
and without burkha too, what is the country coming to??shiv wrote:There is a wimmens just behind pink T shirt and to the R sideBrad Goodman wrote:Look at that picture posted above not a single female in sight. Less beards than I expected. One guy has a pink diesel tee shirt . How come leftist females not see the glaring gender segregation / subjugation that happens in Islamic lands? Where does the love ooze from?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Ears are covered. That is the important thing.
Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec 2014
Pakistan kay uchhay din aagaye.
Terror attacks drive Pakistan coffin boom
PESHAWAR: Northwest Pakistan has been gripped by a raging Islamist insurgency for more than a decade, but a grim economic lifeline has emerged from the tragedy for some enterprising locals — a boom in coffin sales.
Coffins are not part of traditional Islamic death rites in Pakistan, where corpses are normally bound in a funeral shroud and laid upon a rope-cord bed at the time of burial.
But when it comes to the mutilated victims of gun, suicide bomb and IED attacks, whose bodies are often in pieces, there is often little choice but to gather the remains in a box.
Jehanzeb Khan, a 60-year-old former hardware store owner in the city of Peshawar, was a pioneer of the industry.
"I used to sell two to three coffins in the early days of the business," Khan, who began making in coffins in the 1980s, told AFP at his workshop.
Back then, his clients were mostly Afghan refugees from the Soviet invasion who needed coffins to take bodies back on long road journeys home, or ultra-religious families who wanted the corpses of their women to remain in purdah, away from the eyes of unrelated men
But business began to pick up after a homegrown Islamist insurgency centred in the northwest began to take root in 2004 following the US invasion of Afghanistan, with militants seeking shelter in Pakistan's restive tribal areas.
The Pakistani government says more than 50,000 people have since been killed in gun, bomb and suicide attacks, and Peshawar's coffin-sellers are struggling to keep up with demand.
"People see coffins being used for dead bodies in hospitals after blasts, but now they're buying them even for those who die peacefully at home," said Khan.
Khan, who now has competition from around 40 other vendors in this city of 4.5 million, sells around 15 coffins a day.
He aims to keep a reserve stock of 80 in case of major attacks, like last month's Taliban massacre at a military-run school in Peshawar which killed 150 people, mostly children. Khan's shop handled 60 orders after the attack.
Other vendors like 23-year-old Shehryar Khan cater more to the army and paramilitary forces, for whom the trend has also caught on.
"We make special coffins for the military. They demand good material, better wood and handles on the coffin," said Khan, explaining that while an ordinary model costs $30, his deluxe units cost around $100.
"Twice or three times a year we have to manufacture a very special coffin when a senior military officer dies. We use expensive cedar wood, good quality foam and velvet cloth for this piece, and sell it for around 35,000 rupees ($350)," he added.
Islamic teachings stipulate that a burial must take place as soon as possible, normally by sunset the same day.
As such, Shehryar Khan keeps staff on duty at all hours. "I sleep in the shop in night," his salesman Niaz Ali Shah told AFP. "The ambulance drivers know this, and whenever somebody needs a coffin they drive straight to our shop."
Sporting a black beard and a round cap on his head, 31-year-old Shah has been working with Khan for four years and says he sees his job as a religious obligation.
"We share others' grief. They come to us crying. We sell them coffins and it reminds us that we also have to die. This life is temporary," he said.
Jehanzeb Khan admits the business can take a depressing toll on those who profit from it
The horrific Taliban school assault left him "devastated", he said. "There have been attacks in this city which broke my heart in the past, but this was much more terrible and worrying. They were all our own children, our young children."
The Al Khidmat trust, an Islamic charity which provides coffins to the poor and unknown victims of attacks, says not all of the vendors are as scrupulous.
"There are businessmen who increase prices of coffins in emergencies whenever there is a big attack in the city," said Khalid Waqas, the charity's vice president.
"Some people get unjustified profits, even in the most tragic of times."
Cheers
Terror attacks drive Pakistan coffin boom
PESHAWAR: Northwest Pakistan has been gripped by a raging Islamist insurgency for more than a decade, but a grim economic lifeline has emerged from the tragedy for some enterprising locals — a boom in coffin sales.
Coffins are not part of traditional Islamic death rites in Pakistan, where corpses are normally bound in a funeral shroud and laid upon a rope-cord bed at the time of burial.
But when it comes to the mutilated victims of gun, suicide bomb and IED attacks, whose bodies are often in pieces, there is often little choice but to gather the remains in a box.
Jehanzeb Khan, a 60-year-old former hardware store owner in the city of Peshawar, was a pioneer of the industry.
"I used to sell two to three coffins in the early days of the business," Khan, who began making in coffins in the 1980s, told AFP at his workshop.
Back then, his clients were mostly Afghan refugees from the Soviet invasion who needed coffins to take bodies back on long road journeys home, or ultra-religious families who wanted the corpses of their women to remain in purdah, away from the eyes of unrelated men
But business began to pick up after a homegrown Islamist insurgency centred in the northwest began to take root in 2004 following the US invasion of Afghanistan, with militants seeking shelter in Pakistan's restive tribal areas.
The Pakistani government says more than 50,000 people have since been killed in gun, bomb and suicide attacks, and Peshawar's coffin-sellers are struggling to keep up with demand.
"People see coffins being used for dead bodies in hospitals after blasts, but now they're buying them even for those who die peacefully at home," said Khan.
Khan, who now has competition from around 40 other vendors in this city of 4.5 million, sells around 15 coffins a day.
He aims to keep a reserve stock of 80 in case of major attacks, like last month's Taliban massacre at a military-run school in Peshawar which killed 150 people, mostly children. Khan's shop handled 60 orders after the attack.
Other vendors like 23-year-old Shehryar Khan cater more to the army and paramilitary forces, for whom the trend has also caught on.
"We make special coffins for the military. They demand good material, better wood and handles on the coffin," said Khan, explaining that while an ordinary model costs $30, his deluxe units cost around $100.
"Twice or three times a year we have to manufacture a very special coffin when a senior military officer dies. We use expensive cedar wood, good quality foam and velvet cloth for this piece, and sell it for around 35,000 rupees ($350)," he added.
Islamic teachings stipulate that a burial must take place as soon as possible, normally by sunset the same day.
As such, Shehryar Khan keeps staff on duty at all hours. "I sleep in the shop in night," his salesman Niaz Ali Shah told AFP. "The ambulance drivers know this, and whenever somebody needs a coffin they drive straight to our shop."
Sporting a black beard and a round cap on his head, 31-year-old Shah has been working with Khan for four years and says he sees his job as a religious obligation.
"We share others' grief. They come to us crying. We sell them coffins and it reminds us that we also have to die. This life is temporary," he said.
Jehanzeb Khan admits the business can take a depressing toll on those who profit from it
The horrific Taliban school assault left him "devastated", he said. "There have been attacks in this city which broke my heart in the past, but this was much more terrible and worrying. They were all our own children, our young children."
The Al Khidmat trust, an Islamic charity which provides coffins to the poor and unknown victims of attacks, says not all of the vendors are as scrupulous.
"There are businessmen who increase prices of coffins in emergencies whenever there is a big attack in the city," said Khalid Waqas, the charity's vice president.
"Some people get unjustified profits, even in the most tragic of times."
Cheers
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
They are not moving na? Why helmet ji?VikasRaina wrote:and that almost everyone is without helmet
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
The lad in the Diesel T-shirt better be careful the Maulaners surrounding him don't start swipe their cards on him and start mining him for fuel.....
Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec 2014
After declaring War on India Four Times - of course losing all four - Bajbhadur feels insulted.
Insult to question Pakistan army’s competence, DG ISPR tells CNN
Insult to question Pakistan army’s competence, DG ISPR tells CNN
During an interview with senior CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour, Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Asim Bajwa on Monday night said that it was an insult to question the capability of the Pakistan Army in the fight against terrorism.
"I would say this is an insult to the Pakistani people and Pakistani forces if you ask this kind of question. When I say we're very clear and we are capable of dealing with them," he said.
CheersAnswering a question about the armed forces' viewpoint of militant groups, the ISPR DG said: "There are no good terrorists.....We are going against all terrorists without any discrimination of hue and color."
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Insult to question Pakistan army’s competence, DG ISPR tells CNN
Izzat Hi Nahi tubb Insult Kaise Hoggi? Paki Hai Hum Khasam Hai Sarra Jahan Hamara
Izzat Hi Nahi tubb Insult Kaise Hoggi? Paki Hai Hum Khasam Hai Sarra Jahan Hamara
He also compared the performance and efficiency of Pakistan's military with that of the US and Isaf forces in Iraq and Afghanistan."If you see the nature of this conflict, you see the US forces in Iraq, then in Afghanistan, they've been there for so long, you look at the Isaf forces. The scale and magnitude of the forces and resources which are employed and look at the performance of Pakistani forces, they have done an excellent job," the DG ISPR said.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
I think it is a mard with long hair. Impossible to think of a wimmens left ungroped by all those abduls. Even Al-Groper could not resist himself!shiv wrote:There is a wimmens just behind pink T shirt and to the R sideBrad Goodman wrote:Look at that picture posted above not a single female in sight. Less beards than I expected. One guy has a pink diesel tee shirt . How come leftist females not see the glaring gender segregation / subjugation that happens in Islamic lands? Where does the love ooze from?
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Its time air drop Charlie's art work near every petrol pump in Pakistan and let every Paki know that its the guy standing next to him is either Murtad or Ahmadi.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
http://odysseuslahori.blogspot.in/2015/ ... dabad.html‘Bakistan’ zindabad
16 January 2015
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Folks do not like the new film Zero Dark Thirty. This film is about the 10-year long hunt for the most evil terrorist the world has known since Hasan bin Sabah, the Old Man of the Mountain — the two having much in common.
I am not a movie fan and know little about films, but the gripe of most reviewers is that this film features Arabic being spoken on the streets of Pakistan in the year 2011. One reviewer even ridiculed the scene of a camel train somewhere in Abbottabad. This poor reviewer may actually never have left his TV lounge where he writes his reviews because we have camels aplenty in this country.
I have no idea what director Kathryn Bigelow and her team had in mind when they put Arabic in the mouths of men who should actually have been speaking Hindko, but I fear this film may well turn out to be prophetic: that one day, we will totally succumb to Arab imperialism and actually make their language the official language of Pakistan. That we will then be seen running around with bed sheets for clothes with our heads bound with fan belts.
This is no unfounded fear, mind. The change has begun. In Punjab, it is creeping in. And it is coming by car. Or, at least, by car registration plates. Ever since the incumbent chief minister banned the official registration plates that came encrypted with every detail of the car and the owner, we have once again reverted to plates of all patterns and colours.
The new one, very likely paid for by the Saudis as they pay for most seminaries in this sorry land, is now in Urdu lettering. The red band on top is marked ‘Al-Bakistan’. Mind, it is not ‘Al-Pakistan’ but BAKISTAN. At the bottom, another red band reads ‘Al-Bunjab’. In between are the alphabets and numerals of the registration number in Urdu. By the way, that was how Ibn Battuta pronounced the name of this province.
While ‘Bakistan’ and ‘Bunjab’ have been sold, for some curious reason, alphabets like ‘p’ or the palatal ‘d’ continue to be written in Urdu as they should be. That is, they retain their sounds. I suspect the sluggish Arab mind behind this sneaky move to colonise us in terms of language did not realise this snag. But, sooner than we know, this will be changed with ‘p’ on the registration plate replaced with ‘b’. And if that throws everything out of kilter at the registration office, so be it. Now, as this assault on language continues (and grows, as all evil must), we will soon have some idiot wanting to banish the hard and aspirated sounds that make Punjabi (and Urdu) the languages that they are. True, Lahoris from the inner city who simply cannot pronounce the palatal ‘r’, and with some difficulty, the palatal ‘d’, and for this handicap are made fun of by the rest of us, will be delighted. They may even claim that having embraced the one and only true religion, they knew the way the language would ultimately change and had adjusted their language accordingly centuries ago.
But why Bakistan? If ‘Falisteen’ (as it is pronounced in Arabic) can become Palestine in European languages, why can Pakistan not be ‘Fakistan’?
Every time I see a car with the ‘Al-Bakistan’ and ‘Al-Bunjab’ plates, I want to stop the louts to ask them why they should corrupt the name of their land. But the ugly, thuggish characters driving these cars make me desist. Because as things stand in ‘Fakistan’, it is impossible to attempt to talk sense to anyone, least of all to a yahoo.
In Karachi, they shoot you before you have delivered the first admonishing word. In ‘Bunjab’, they first abuse you and then ask if you are the mama (maternal uncle) of ‘Bakistan’. Since everyone except you is known either to some politician with a bogus degree or some thug of a police thanedar, you decide discretion and cowardice really are the best part of valour and withdraw.
‘Bakistan’ zindabad.
Stop relying on english media papers like Dawn & look for Blogs to get a feel of ground situ in Al-Bakistan
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... TJRhkTsFOA
Short but interesting: host Mariam Atash Nawabi sits down with Ambassador Dennis Kux; Lisa Curtis, a senior fellow on South Asia at the Heritage Foundation and Marvin Weinbaum, a scholar-in-residence at the Middle East Institute, to discuss the future of Indian-Afghan relations.
Hostess is hot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... mgtrYXDz30
Old one from Amrullah Saleh - some of the newbies may not have seen it. Listen to it. The man cuts into Pak like no other.
Short but interesting: host Mariam Atash Nawabi sits down with Ambassador Dennis Kux; Lisa Curtis, a senior fellow on South Asia at the Heritage Foundation and Marvin Weinbaum, a scholar-in-residence at the Middle East Institute, to discuss the future of Indian-Afghan relations.
Hostess is hot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=p ... mgtrYXDz30
Old one from Amrullah Saleh - some of the newbies may not have seen it. Listen to it. The man cuts into Pak like no other.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
JEMJi, boss who is she? She sure is, and seems to have some Arabish or Sub continental look . Anyway, on substance though, Dennis Kux while saying that India is concerned about Talibunnies and TSP, was wrong in this India TSP proxy war BS in Afghanistan, and he brings in Kashmir. HTF is India being concerned about Afghanistan becoming a terrorist haven become a proxy war between India & TSP is beyond me. Sheer colonial arrogance that India does not have any legitimate interests in Afghanistan except to pick a fight with TSP.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
^^I think she's Afghan. Probably an anchor of the "Pul" channel.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Muhajir at .39. really knows how to rub paki nose in public pakistanisoil
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Lets Barty!!!!!
6E ladies selling betrol.
6E ladies selling betrol.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
I agree. We need the window into the Urdu media in Pakistan.Paul wrote: Stop relying on english media papers like Dawn & look for Blogs to get a feel of ground situ in Al-Bakistan
But.
Just FYI.
March 23, 2014, Dawn
http://www.dawn.com/news/1094959
Ahlan Wasahlan, Al Bakistan!
A couple of years ago Pakistan was hit by a sign that it may have actually taken the first (or possibly 15th) step towards becoming an Arab colony, at least culturally. Out of the blue emerged these vehicle registration plates with the number either in Urdu or simple numbers and ‘Al Bakistan’ painted in white Arabic font on a red strip. Jaws dropped, frowns were formed, laughs were had and people were rendered speechless at this totally new and unexpected phenomenon. Why would Pakistan be called ‘Bakistan’? When did the name of the country change? Why borrow Arabic words or alphabet sounds while the national language still remains Urdu?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
BENIS, always waaaay ahead of the curve! Pretty soon they will declare Pingreji the Ophishial Nashunal Language. Face it, beebals. Whiyar else on the Internet can you find a 400% Bure Bro-Bakistan Brobaganda except on BENIS?
But see this:Imran Khan’s wife’s short skirt is causing more outrage in Bakistan than Charlie Hebdo
But see this:Imran Khan’s wife’s short skirt is causing more outrage in Bakistan than Charlie Hebdo
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Just like that, Petrol Crisis Over!
http://www.pakistantribe.com/story/2964 ... in-punjab/
http://www.pakistantribe.com/story/2964 ... in-punjab/
KARACHI – The nation’s leading oil marketing company, Pakistan State Oil (PSO) has successfully managed to overcome the fuel shortages occurring in some parts of Punjab.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/201 ... 3275320805&
n 1965, a Pakistani military delegation traipsed to Beijing in hope of replacing equipment they'd lost in the previous year's war with India.
Premier Zhou Enlai, meeting the delegation, was bewildered by their request for only 14 days' ammunition. 'How can a war be fought in that short time?' Zhou then asked: 'I would be interested to know if you have prepared the people of Pakistan to operate in the rear of the enemy...I am talking about a People's Militia being based in every village and town'. The Sandhurst-educated generals were taken aback. 'What does Zhou Enlai know about soldiering anyway?'
This story appears early in Andrew Small's outstanding new book The China-Pakistan Axis: Asia's New Geopolitics. It is a reminder that the two countries are odd bedfellows, lacking the cultural affinity that might be implied by General Xiong Guangkai's quip that 'Pakistan is China's Israel'.
China has repeatedly left Pakistan to stew in its own juices in moments of peril, from 1965 to more recent crises.
During Pakistan's dismemberment in 1971, its desperate commanders sent delusional messages to troops, promising US and Chinese intervention: 'yellow from the north and white from the south'. But the cavalry never came. The economic statistics are also resoundingly underwhelming. Vietnam, with an economy half the size of Pakistan's, has four times the bilateral trade. China pledged US$66 billion of assistance to Pakistan between 2001 and 2011, but only 6% ever materialised.
But Pakistan's real value to China, explains Small, is 'an India that is forced to look nervously over its shoulder at its western neighbour is easier for Beijing to manage'.
A few themes stand out.
The first is a generational shift in China's South Asia hands, at the same time as disquiet began to rise about Pakistan's stability. Small explains that 'the older generations are almost exclusively India experts, and still stress the need for "balance" in China's relationships with the two South Asian powers'. But the younger analysts include a 'growing number of Pakistan hands who generally believe that China should accept its rivalry with India and embrace the strategic relationship with Pakistan'.
For instance, as Small notes, 'Beijing's counterterrorism strategy has been essentially parasitic on the United States being a more important target for transnational militant groups than China'. It's unclear how long that can last.
This volume makes a credible case that China is likely to respond to these challenges not by cutting Pakistan loose, as India might hope, but by deepening an admittedly complex relationship with its only real friend in the world. The question is whether the areas of growing friction will be more serious than in previous post-American spells.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
http://customstoday.com.pk/tariff-line- ... -loss-fbr/ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has suffered a loss of Rs 21.8 billion due to tariff line concession granted to Chinese exporters under China-Pak Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in last fiscal year.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Imran Khan’s wife’s short skirt is causing more outrage in Pakistan than Charlie Hebdo
http://qz.com/328890/imran-khans-wifes- ... lie-hebdo/
http://qz.com/328890/imran-khans-wifes- ... lie-hebdo/
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
India, Pakistan had a solution for Kashmir in 2001: Kasuri - Nirupama Subramanian, The Hindu
“Are you a hawk or a dove on India, Kasuri saheb?” Those were General Pervez Musharraf first words to the man he was going to appoint as his foreign minister in 2002 after that year’s general election in Pakistan cemented the military ruler’s 1999 coup and a controversially won presidency.
Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri held the foreign affairs portfolio to the end of the Musharraf government in 2008, playing a leading role in the India-Pakistan peace process that formally began in 2003 with the ceasefire along the Line of Control (LoC).
In a book to be published next month, the former minister is set to provide an insider account of those years, one of the most secretive and fascinating periods of India-Pakistan diplomacy, and also the best time in recent decades for bilateral relations.
As the title of the book suggests, Neither Hawk Nor Dove was Mr. Kasuri’s response to the military ruler’s question. More exactly, the former foreign minister told The Hindu in an interview from Lahore, he has been “a great believer” in peaceful relations between the two countries “for decades, from even before the time I became a foreign minister.”
Declining to divulge any specifics from the book as that would violate his contract with the publishers, Mr. Kasuri nonetheless said it would contain details that are “true” even if “it is going to make people angry.”
“I have given the exact details that have never been revealed. I have given the background in which the peace process took place, and the context in which it happened,” said Mr. Kasuri. He is now a prominent member of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party. He is in India this week to speak at the Jaipur Literature Festival which begins on Wednesday.
Earlier accounts have suggested that robust backchannel diplomacy had helped the two sides arrive at a non-paper, a secret document outlining the contours of a political settlement on Kashmir.
It was widely believed then that only five people in Pakistan were privy to the peace process. Mr. Kasuri, who is admittedly one of them, said his book would lay bare the details of that non-paper beyond the generally known ‘four-point formula.’
“It will go beyond the four points. People will be able to understand what we did on the backchannel framework on Kashmir,” Mr. Kasuri said.
That framework, Mr. Kasuri said, “is still the only workable solution. It took three years, so many drafts were exchanged. You can’t reinvent the wheel.”
It was “pretty much finished, only one or two little things needed ironing out,” Mr. Kasuri said, and after that “we would have presented it to the governments, to the public, to the media.”
There is a full chapter in the book on the Pakistan Army based on Mr. Kasuri’s five years of dealing with the country’s most powerful institution first hand. Dismissing suggestions that the Pakistan Army was not on board regarding the Musharraf-Vajpayee-initiated peace process, Mr. Kasuri said: “I have quoted secret cables to show that all the others in the Pakistan Army were fully on board… It will help understand the role played by the Army in that process.”
The only way to break the impasse in the India-Pakistan relations, Mr. Kasuri said, was “to take forward the legacies of Pervez Musharraf and Atal Bihari Vajpayee.” Both, he said, had “travelled a long distance [in their thinking] to arrive at the wisdom that the only option is peace.”
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
That is a revelation that fortifies well-known theories about the Pakistani Army. Pakistan knew (and knows) that there is no way it can do anything else apart from trying to hoist a short war and crow of capturing some land in some advantageous sectors (even if it loses more in the bargain everywhere else) and also accuse India of starting a war etc. It also knew (and knows) that 'world powers' would intervene and halt the war and status-quo ante would be restored somehow within 2 or three weeks. Hence the request for ammunition for a fortnight. Besides, all that the Pakistani Army needs to do is to survive miraculously to fight another day after recuperating from the losses.A_Gupta wrote:http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/201 ... 3275320805&
Premier Zhou Enlai, meeting the delegation, was bewildered by their request for only 14 days' ammunition.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
So this Kasuri wants us to believe that the Indian govt. was willing to sign up and "solve J&K" barely a year after the pakis had orchestrated the kandahar hijacking? These pakis think that just because they have a short memory from all the fine heroin they seem to be smoking, it follows that everyone in India also has a short memory like them. 2001 was the year musharraf landed in New Delhi and the stupid turd Shekhar Gupta and the rest of morons in the Indian media feted him and slurped their ommelettes with Musharraf.
We are supposed to believe Musharraf acted like a disgraceful oiseaule in New Delhi because he had "stitched up a deal" with the Indian govt -- the Indian govt. did not take kindly to Musharraf's aholish behavior in New Delhi as it was reported back then. Pakis seem to be simultaneously experiencing short supply of petrol, memory and neurons it would seem from this Kasuri's BS.
We are supposed to believe Musharraf acted like a disgraceful oiseaule in New Delhi because he had "stitched up a deal" with the Indian govt -- the Indian govt. did not take kindly to Musharraf's aholish behavior in New Delhi as it was reported back then. Pakis seem to be simultaneously experiencing short supply of petrol, memory and neurons it would seem from this Kasuri's BS.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
The stuff in the bottle seems to have an interesting color. It is quite possible that the dude peed into the bottle and is selling that as petrol. That would explain why he's wearing the burkha, so that he can hide from the angry customer that he sells the bottle to .Neela wrote:6E ladies selling betrol.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
more like he used the burkha to hide so that he can easily get petrolArmenT wrote:The stuff in the bottle seems to have an interesting color. It is quite possible that the dude peed into the bottle and is selling that as petrol. That would explain why he's wearing the burkha, so that he can hide from the angry customer that he sells the bottle to .Neela wrote:6E ladies selling betrol.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
..and hopefully ended up buying a bottle of vintage cow/dog/swine piss for his efforts and used it to try and start his motorcycle with hopefully spectacular results.krishnan wrote:more like he used the burkha to hide so that he can easily get petrol
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
^ Only Burka clad in Pakistani crowd to enjoy groping.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
But the cavalry did come. Repeatedly. From the north and south. They were the Mounted Yellow and White GUBO Brigades.A_Gupta wrote:http://www.lowyinterpreter.org/post/201 ... 3275320805&
...China has repeatedly left Pakistan to stew in its own juices in moments of peril, from 1965 to more recent crises.
During Pakistan's dismemberment in 1971, its desperate commanders sent delusional messages to troops, promising US and Chinese intervention: 'yellow from the north and white from the south'. But the cavalry never came. ........
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
The #BetrolShortage continuze to amaje me.
Collection of dweets here - Tribune Plog
I ishpechially like this tweet for which I know answer
Question:
BTW WTF is "Cost of economic losses" ?
Collection of dweets here - Tribune Plog
I ishpechially like this tweet for which I know answer
Question:
Answer: Nothing.What will be the cost of economic losses caused by countrywide paralysis? #PetrolShortage
5:35 PM - 19 Jan 2015
BTW WTF is "Cost of economic losses" ?
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
There is no loss but savings of billions of $ since people are not wasting oil - and then not paying for it anyways.
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Voila, there is a breed of paki donkeys that run on oil. This is next-Gen pure land of integrated opportunities for owners of donkeys.
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Voila, there is a breed of paki donkeys that run on oil. This is next-Gen pure land of integrated opportunities for owners of donkeys.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
If you go to sites like Foursquare & TripAdvisor and check out Baki cities, not smaller cities (which are really Tier 4/5 kasbas in Indian context, like Peshawar, Rawalpindi etc) but their biggest cities - Karachi & LaWhore, you'll be surprised to see how dead they really are. They are incomparable to even our second tier metros like Bangalore, Pune, Chandigarh, leave alone Delhi/Mumbai/Chennai, they are in a different league altogether. And this is a country that aspires to match us, no, defeat us!Paul wrote: Stop relying on english media papers like Dawn & look for Blogs to get a feel of ground situ in Al-Bakistan
I wonder what happens to RAPEs when they come to Indian metros, I bet they are stunned beyond belief looking at the sheer magnitude & development of Indian cities compared to the shit hole that even their poshest areas are. They, however, do a mighty impressive job at hiding their shock & awe to prevent loss of (non-existent) H&D.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
^^ These inbred Pakis whose IQ's are smaller than the donkey driving the cart are the most cruel and disgusting people on the planet. Completely shameless b_astards.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
For those who know Tamil - Pakistan runs mainly on "yembool" oil. (roughly translatable as oil of my dick)vishvak wrote:There is no loss but savings of billions of $ since people are not wasting oil - and then not paying for it anyways.
Voila, there is a breed of paki donkeys that run on oil. This is next-Gen pure land of integrated opportunities for owners of donkeys.
Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/new ... 968545.cms
Pakistan arrests local Islamic State commander: Report
Pakistan arrests local Islamic State commander: Report
LAHORE: Pakistani security forces have arrested a man they believe is the commander of the Islamic State group in the country as well as two accomplices involved in recruiting and sending fighters to Syria, intelligence sources said on Wednesday.
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Three intelligence sources, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said the man, Yousaf al-Salafi, was arrested in the eastern city of Lahore and confessed during interrogation that he represented IS in Pakistan.
"Al-Salafi is a Pakistani Syrian who reached Pakistan through Turkey five months ago," said one source. "He crossed into Turkey from Syria and was caught there. Somehow he managed to escape and reached Pakistan to establish ISIS (IS)."