Awesome
RETIRED MOD
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- Mar 24, 2006
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Lol they are BSing about withdrawal. They want Pakistan to declare "ground positions". Which would after 10 years be converted into a Pakistan's acceptance of ground realities.
Like they don't pretty much know where we are and where they are! Why do they need us to declare where we are now! We'll declare where we will pull back to! They've played this game for too long.
If they want to be sure we don't invade let a mutual observer group oversee the withdrawal from both sides. Let them SEE the positions, but NEVER declare it.
They will make it sound like a security issue right now, but its all politics.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=8787§ionid=3510204
Like they don't pretty much know where we are and where they are! Why do they need us to declare where we are now! We'll declare where we will pull back to! They've played this game for too long.
If they want to be sure we don't invade let a mutual observer group oversee the withdrawal from both sides. Let them SEE the positions, but NEVER declare it.
They will make it sound like a security issue right now, but its all politics.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=8787§ionid=3510204
India says it will not agree on the withdrawal of troops from a glacier in disputed Kashmir until Pakistan reveals its positions there.
"We have to keep the history in mind. Both sides will have to agree on the actual ground position," India's Defense Minister A.K. Anthony told reporters Saturday, following a first visit to the Siachen region.
Anthony added "Pakistan will have to demarcate the actual ground position line -- both on the ground as well as on the map -- before any headway is made."
The Indian army, which has occupied most of the high-altitude battlefield since 1987, wants 'iron-clad' evidence of existing troop positions to dissuade Pakistan from moving its soldiers forward in the event of a pull-out.
"Our position from the beginning is very clear that before any forward movement is made, we must authenticate the actual ground position line," the minister stressed.
Pakistan fears that setting out its positions would be tacit acceptance of India's claims to Siachen and the area as a whole.
Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan have held many rounds of talks- the latest last month- on the withdrawal of troops from the 6,300 meter high Siachen glacier without narrowing their differences.
Kashmir -- of which Siachen is a part -- is divided between Pakistan and India and is claimed by both in full. It has caused two of the three wars between the neighbors since their independence from Britain in1947.