What's new

Imran Khan: US responsible for terrorism in Pakistan

Nahraf

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Mar 24, 2010
Messages
1,508
Reaction score
0
The Pakistanis in Pakistan and abroad are in agreement that US is responsible for terrorism in Pakistan.

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | Latest News, Pakistan, World, Business, Cricket and Multimedia

US responsible for terrorism in Pakistan, says PTI chief
Saturday, 03 Jul, 2010

SARGODHA: Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI) Chief Imran Khan declared the government of Pakistan a slave of the US and added that the ongoing terrorism in the country would continue until Washington stopped meddling in the internal affairs of Islamabad.

Imran, while talking to media in Sargodha, criticized the government and opposition dependency on US.

He said that present situation directed the country towards worst condition and blamed bad policies of provincial government were responsible for Data Darbar suicide attacks.

Imran expressed his hope that mid-term election will be held this year and clarified that PTI will also take part in by-election. — DawnNews
 
.
polar-bear-face-palm_thumbnail1.jpg


Imran has become a disgrace to himself. The dashing persona, the charm, the charisma all have been lost to this insane xenophobic idiocracy he has learnt in his sittings with Qazi sb and co.
 
.
The most dangerous thing for Pakistan is not US meddling, it is the ability to terrorist groups to produce suicide bombers in mass, almost like a factory. I think they have kind of created a method on how to produce a suicide bomber. In other parts of the world also suicide bombers are used but never did they found them in such large numbers (minus Afghanistan which I consider similar in this term) .

The second most difficult challenge would be that terrorist and weapons seems to be spread across the country and in mass. Going by past reports of weapons recovery it seems like there is huge cache of arms in Pakistan. Which means that it is very easy for person with ill intention to get hold of this, third it seems like getting money and weapons are become very easy. All this will take time compare to 2009 events have gone down but it seems like once in 2 months something will keep happening.

Pakistan badly needs US in clearling this mess if they really cooperate. USA has very strong network to help them trace money, listen to their conversation and spot the terrorist. So USA IMO is a help and not other way round, it also depends how you take their help. They helped India a lot after 26/11.
 
.
Even though the media chose to highlight his criticism of the US, he was pretty much criticizing the government, the provincial policies and the government's dependency on towing the US line not something literal like the US is actively sending in suicide bombers into the country.

However just in case he isn't then, Pakistanis really do need to take responsibility for the state of terrorism. Every social factor of Pakistan has something or the other in it that would gradually make way for terrorism. Rather than shift blame on to others. Others can't be expected to take care of us or not do anything against us. Blaming them is useless.

One thing Imran did say before on this was that Pakistan's fundamental problem is of Insaaf (Justice). A person who doesn't get justice from the system, searches for it elsewhere. Terrorists are highly political and fundamentally they are idiots searching for justice by inflicting the same injustice they might have had at some point.
 
.
Pakistanis blame US after shrine attack kills 42
By BABAR DOGAR (AP) – 1 day ago


LAHORE, Pakistan — A pair of suicide bombings that killed 42 at a popular Sufi shrine in Pakistan's east stirred outrage among many in this terror-scarred nation Friday. Several blamed the U.S. presence in Afghanistan for spurring the attacks, while some faulted a minority sect that itself was viciously targeted just weeks before.
The bombings of Lahore's Data Darbar shrine, the burial site of a famous Sufi saint, struck at the heart of the moderate Islam most Pakistanis still practice. The assault wounded 180 people and again demonstrated the potent nature of militant groups that are linked to but operate far from the northwest tribal areas bordering Afghanistan.
Thousands of people had gathered late Thursday at the green-domed shrine when bombs went off minutes apart in separate sections. The blasts ripped concrete from the walls, twisted metal gates and left the white marble floor awash with blood. Worshippers scattered as white plumes of smoke blanketed the area, footage showed.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Islamist extremist groups consider Sufism to be heretical, and they have previously struck non-Sunni sects. Still, several Pakistanis interviewed Friday said the real root of the problem was the U.S. presence in Afghanistan and its missile strikes against militants in Pakistan's tribal regions.
"America is killing Muslims in Afghanistan and in our tribal areas, and militants are attacking Pakistan to express anger against the government for supporting America," said Zahid Umar, 25, who frequently visits the shrine.
Pakistanis are suffering because of American policies and aggression in the region, said Mohammed Asif, 34, who runs an auto workshop in Lahore. He and others said the attacks would end if the U.S. would pull out of Afghanistan.
Several others interviewed blamed the Ahmadis, a minority sect that has long faced discrimination in Pakistan. On May 28 in Lahore, gunmen and a suicide squad targeted two Ahmadi mosques, massacring at least 93 people.
"I think the Ahmadis were behind the attack" on the Sufi shrine, said Lahore resident Mohammad Amir, accusing the minority sect of seeking revenge. He offered no evidence to back up his claim.
Lahore, capital of Punjab province, is a key military, political and cultural hub. The city has witnessed several audacious attacks on a diverse set of targets over the past two years, from crowded markets to Sri Lanka's cricket team.
The Pakistani government has been criticized for lacking the will to crack down on militants in Punjab, the country's most populous and most powerful region. Many of the militants are part of now-banned groups launched with government support in the 1980s and '90s to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan and pressure archenemy India.
Many of these groups have formed links with the Pakistani Taliban, which has recruited militants to carry out attacks in parts of Pakistan far from its sanctuary in the northwest.
During Thursday's attack, the first bomber detonated his explosives in an underground room where visitors sleep and wash themselves before praying. Minutes later, a second bomber struck upstairs in a large courtyard in front of the shrine as people tried to flee.
Police initially said they were investigating the source of a third blast, but concluded there were only two suicide bombers, whose heads were later found, said Khusro Pervez, a senior government official in Lahore. Overnight, the death toll rose to 42, he said. Police said 180 were wounded.
Pakistani officials condemned the bombings, using language they have frequently used to try to convince the population that the fight against militancy is not one they can ignore. The efforts have had limited success in a country where anti-Americanism is widespread and engaging conspiracy theories is a national pastime.
"Those who still pretend that we are not a nation at war are complicit in these deaths," said Farahnaz Ispahani, a spokeswoman for Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.
The attacks have fueled anger against Pakistan's weak police forces, who appear helpless to stop the killings. In the hours after Thursday's bombings, demonstrators gathered outside the shrine to protest the security lapse, only to be dispersed after police fired into the air and threw rocks at them.
Pervez said recent intelligence alerts about possible attacks lacked details.
"The intelligence agencies alerted us that terrorists could target prominent places, shrines and mosques in Lahore. They mentioned names of major places as a possible target, but no specific information was available to us," he said.

The Associated Press: Pakistanis blame US after shrine attack kills 42


How can you even begin to fight if you can't even properly identify the enemy?
 
. . .
Imran Khan is expressing the views of vast majority of Pakistanis both in Pakistan and abroad. Imran Khan has world view and understands geo-political issues.

If this is true then not even God can help Pakistan. No people so blind to reality can ever heal themselves of their mental sickness. I pity Pakistan if what you say here is true. Pakistan will NEVER get well by blaming the USA for its cultural dysfunctions.
 
. .
Imran bhai jitne achay socialist hain.... utne hi buray politician hain

ab banda kya keh sakta hai inko
 
.
Pakistan will NEVER get well by blaming the USA for its cultural dysfunctions.

Nobody is blaming US for so called dysfunction. It is the common perception among Pakistanis that US is directly or indirectly responsible for these terrorist incidents in Pakistan. US is bombing Pakistan and killing people using drones. So people think these incidents are also being directed by US and/or their proxies. The common perception in US is that all Muslims are terrorists. Is that also cultural dysfunctions and mental sickness of Americans ?
 
.
In whole of pakistan I see no leader as capable as Imran Khan. He is BORN to LEAD. I have seen a lot of his interviews. The stuff he says makes sense unlike most of politicians of Pakistan. People like Zardari,Musharraf etc do not have the courage and confidence to look USA in the eye and say that Pakistan is a sovereign country for Gods sake, so stop meddling. Listening to Mr Khan I believe that Pakistan still has leaders which can lead Pakistan out of these troubled times. He has already done so much for poor people in the tribal areas and is the only pakistani politician protesting against killing of innocent civilians along the Pak-Af border.
Pakistan will be well served in electing him as prime minister otherwise they will only climb in rankings on the most unlikely of the lists i.e the failed states one:wave:
 
. . .
Nobody is blaming US for so called dysfunction. It is the common perception among Pakistanis that US is directly or indirectly responsible for these terrorist incidents in Pakistan. US is bombing Pakistan and killing people using drones. So people think these incidents are also being directed by US and/or their proxies. The common perception in US is that all Muslims are terrorists. Is that also cultural dysfunctions and mental sickness of Americans ?

Let me ask a logical question here:

Why would the US invest/give billions to a country that it plans to destabilize? Let's say you want to put money down to buy a house. Let's say you put 20% down (which is what US money is as a percent of Pakistani budget) to own a stake in this house. When you do that, would you destroy your own house knowing that a significant amount of money has gone toward this? If not for anything else, it would be really stupid for the US to destabilize and sink pakistan, when it thinks of pakistan as a long term investment. I hope the pakistani population gets this.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom