What's new

Built by Israel, flown by India, shot down by Pakistan

. . .
@Primus , was it a secret that came out now?
Look at the date of when it was shot down and look at the date today

Look at the comments.
They have a right to be upset. Then again, that doesn't give them the right to hurl abuse at the armed forces for things like this as well at hurl abuse at the OP
 
. . . . .
You mean all the American drone strikes that happened with our explicit consent. In fact, even helped our ops out. Their strikes didn't stop magically.

Anyways good job trying to divert the topic pajeet
Consent or money? If it helped you why did you ask them to stop?
Anyway its not the topic so I leave it there.
 
.
Consent or money? If it helped you why did you ask them to stop?
Anyway its not the topic so I leave it there.
Both. Pakistani generals made a lot of the dollars from those drone strikes. Most people did not even know that majority of them took of from a base leased by CIA in Balochistan.
 
. .
You mean all the American drone strikes that happened with our explicit consent. In fact, even helped our ops out. Their strikes didn't stop magically.

Anyways good job trying to divert the topic pajeet
Yeah especially this one really helped out our ops (Chenagai Madressa Strike):

Religious school attacked
It is one of the worst incidents of the entire drones campaign, yet one of the least reported. A CIA strike on a madrassa or religious school in 2006 killed up to 69 children, among 80 civilians.
The attack was on a religious seminary in Chenegai, in Bajaur Agency.

CIA drones attacked on October 30, flattening much of the school. Their target was reportedly the headmaster, a known militant. According to some reports, there was also a token late contribution to the assault by Pakistani military helicopters. But dozens of children were also killed, the youngest aged seven.

Veteran BBC Urdu journalist Rahimullah Yousufzai, speaking from Peshawr, recalls visiting the village just after the strike: ‘People were devastated. I met with a father who had lost two children. He was very patient, talking of how God must have willed this, but he was clearly traumatised.’

Initially the Pakistan Army claimed that it had carried out the bombardment, even as shops and offices closed across the region and protests spread. But as the scale of the attack unfolded, the story changed. The Sunday Times carried a report from a key aide to Pakistan’s then-President Musharraf stating:


We thought it would be less damaging if we said we did it rather than the US. But there was a lot of collateral damage and we’ve requested the Americans not to do it again.
A week after the attack, The News published the names and home villages of 80 victims. 69 were reported as children aged 17 or under. According to the paper’s sources:

It was claimed that one of the deceased was only seven-year old, three were eight, three nine, one was 10, four were 11, four were 12, eight were 13, six were 14, nine were 15, 19 were 16, 12 were 17, three were 18, three were 19 and only two were 21-years-old.
 
.
Yeah especially this one really helped out our ops (Chenagai Madressa Strike):

Religious school attacked
It is one of the worst incidents of the entire drones campaign, yet one of the least reported. A CIA strike on a madrassa or religious school in 2006 killed up to 69 children, among 80 civilians.
The attack was on a religious seminary in Chenegai, in Bajaur Agency.

CIA drones attacked on October 30, flattening much of the school. Their target was reportedly the headmaster, a known militant. According to some reports, there was also a token late contribution to the assault by Pakistani military helicopters. But dozens of children were also killed, the youngest aged seven.

Veteran BBC Urdu journalist Rahimullah Yousufzai, speaking from Peshawr, recalls visiting the village just after the strike: ‘People were devastated. I met with a father who had lost two children. He was very patient, talking of how God must have willed this, but he was clearly traumatised.’

Initially the Pakistan Army claimed that it had carried out the bombardment, even as shops and offices closed across the region and protests spread. But as the scale of the attack unfolded, the story changed. The Sunday Times carried a report from a key aide to Pakistan’s then-President Musharraf stating:


A week after the attack, The News published the names and home villages of 80 victims. 69 were reported as children aged 17 or under. According to the paper’s sources:
"Yeah especially this one really helped out"

It was copy pasted from a pro army source. I will edit it. So there is no confusion from my side.
 
.


Just like these film actresses like to celebrate every little victory,
they should also come up and own up their blunders of which there a list too long.
They should also own up to their laziness, and their organizational inefficiency.


How come criticizing them is a crime when critique is true ?
 
. .

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom