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That, and remove Taliban sympathizers from P.A. counterintelligence. How do I know they're there? Because the former U.S. Secretary of Defense, Mr. Gates, observed that EVERY time the U.S. tipped of Pakistan's Army to the presence of militants the terrorists escaped before Pakistan Army units could reach them. It's not even suspicious anymore; the Taliban presence in Pakistan Army counterintelligence is merely an obvious fact.
Thank you for the education. I accept that there aren't necessarily Taliban sympathizers in P.A. counterintelligence; nevertheless, the Talibs are extremely well-informed regarding information collected by the Pakistani Army....you get a vehicle out of compound of a tribal area office, to carry polio workers, or ISI officers, or police, or teachers, or doctors, or even students Someone spots them and tribals up in the mountains get this info...
May be there is a group of ISI soldiers who are sympathatic to Islamist causes.
Who can deny that.
It doesn't help America (instead it hurts it big time) when you (or other writers) start throwing cr@p on the SINGLE largest pro-US entity aka Pak army.
As the P.A. won't revise its operational methods to frustrate Taliban intelligence, it's apparent that the best way to help the P.A. is for the U.S. to keep it in the dark about America's own counter-intelligence operations.Instead of throwing $hit on your ally institution, you all should be helping them to the max.
..... the Talibs are extremely well-informed ....
....the U.S. to keep it in the dark about America's own counter-intelligence operations.
that has lot more to do with geography than intelligence
That's a matter of propaganda, and that's Pakistan's responsibility, not America's; the U.S. bargained away its rights to engage directly in Pakistani public political matters decades ago.What you say results in hostile relationship and not team work.
that has lot more to do with geography than intelligence
What you say results in hostile relationship and not team work.
This could be OK for individual hits, and goals.
But it is hardly a long term strategy.
U.S. soldiers believe the relationship is much more intimate than you suggest. At the very least, I suppose, the Talibs have tapped into P.A. electronic communications: apparently all intel the U.S. shares with the P.A. is made known to the Taliban very quickly.that has lot more to do with geography than intelligence.
U.S. soldiers believe the relationship is much more intimate than you suggest. At the very least, I suppose, the Talibs have tapped into P.A. electronic communications: apparently all intel the U.S. shares with the P.A. is made known to the Taliban very quickly.
Long term strategy should consist of repeated individual hits
hahahahaha
tap.
hahahah
So KSM and Kansi intel was tapped too?
Man you live far far far far away dipping into sound bites for a living.
Sadly
you talk like how Commies treated Afghanistan.
Not only did you have to reach back a decade for counter-examples, you neglect to realize that KSM and Kansi were located through Pakistan's internal security, not counter-intelligence. Since some parts of Pakistan succeed in the struggle while others fail, this suggests Pakistan can defeat the militants - if it cleans house first.So KSM and Kansi intel was tapped too?
Not only did you have to reach back a decade for counter-examples, you neglect to realize that KSM and Kansi were located through Pakistan's internal security, not counter-intelligence. Since some parts of Pakistan succeed in the struggle while others fail, this suggests Pakistan can defeat the militants - if it cleans house first.
WHat other solution can there be? You want to talk peace with Taliban? Hit their top leaders and watch them collapse like a pack of cards. Taliban is just an organization after all.
U.S. soldiers believe the relationship is much more intimate than you suggest. At the very least, I suppose, the Talibs have tapped into P.A. electronic communications: apparently all intel the U.S. shares with the P.A. is made known to the Taliban very quickly.
Yeah like killing of their ex-leader have tore them into pieces. BSWHat other solution can there be? You want to talk peace with Taliban? Hit their top leaders and watch them collapse like a pack of cards. Taliban is just an organization after all.
In the 90's Pakistan told the Afghans that Taliban were good for them and supported and aided the Taliban regime in Kabul. Now, when Taliban wants to bring their goodness to Pakistan, the Pakistani's don't want it...
Defeating the ideology is not easy, this is a long battle, that we would have to fight.