What's new

Mr. Zardari, Your Friend Sarkozy Is Bashing Pakistan

Pak123

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Mar 10, 2010
Messages
362
Reaction score
0
President Zardari risked his political career by insisting to visit his French buddy when Pakistanis were drowning in floods. Now, can he leash his Pakistan-bashing friend, please?


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—It is becoming easy to fool India and grab some of its money. If you are a world leader, this is what you should do:

Announce you’re coming to New Delhi for a ‘landmark’ three- or four-day visit, hurl a few curses at Pakistan while you’re on Indian soil and then sit back and watch India dole out your share of some of the billions of dollars that India is saving for military armor that it won’t spend on ending poverty, the world’s largest.

That’s what British prime minister and the US president did. The latest one to follow this line is Nikolas Sarkozy, the French president. He dashed this week to the Indian capital, spent four days cursing Pakistan, and then begged the Indians to give French companies a few deals. Cameron and Obama left with the booty. But not Sarkozy. This time around the Indians smelled a rat when the French president announced he’s coming for another ‘landmark’ visit. ‘Na babu, not again!’ This is how an Indian website quoted Indian foreign office officials whining about Mr. Sarkozy’s trip. Another ‘landmark’ visit to India means New Delhi will have to dish out money to reward the latest foreign leader to bash Pakistan on Indian soil.

Sarkozy was sent off with an Indian promise it would ‘consider’ buying two nuclear reactors worth a little over nine billion dollars, and some change thrown in to generate favorable headlines for the Frenchman and his celebrity wife as they returned home on Tuesday.

French president’s insulting remarks about Pakistan were astonishingly ignored in Islamabad. Almost no coverage whatsoever in the entire Pakistani media. This says a lot about France’s weight in the region. It also says a lot about how Pakistan-bashing has become business as usual for the Pakistani ruling elite.

What drew my attention was his visit to a memorial in Mumbai for 18 Indian policemen killed in the Mumbai attack in 2008.

I remembered some 61 innocent Pakistanis who perished on Indian soil in 2007. That’s triple the number of Indian policemen and more than a third of Mumbai attack victims. They believed in India’s peace pledges and traveled to that country on a train called ‘friendship’, or Samjhota Express. It was blown up inside India. Three Indian military intelligence officers and a Hindu terrorist organization were arrested for executing the attack. They wanted to create an opportunity to blame Pakistan’s ISI and Kashmiri freedom groups, hoping the pressure would force Pakistan into concessions during peace talks.

Today, everyone visits the memorial of 18 Indian policemen but no one remembers 61 Pakistanis burned alive in India.

The reason is that Pakistan’s pro-American ruling elite has sold Pakistan cheap into someone else’s war in exchange for US dollars. A former army chief General Musharraf did this first and now a pro-US Zardari government along with almost the entire Pakistani political elite, from Nawaz Sharif down to the rest of them, is doing the same thing to win the favor of the US embassy here.

Sarkozy is President Zardari’s buddy. They allegedly raked in a few millions from kickbacks on a submarine deal back in the early 1990s. In July, when half of Pakistan was under water in epic flooding, Mr. Zardari refused to cut short his visit to France because, in his words, the visit was important for Pakistani diplomacy. But despite Mr. Zardari’s robust diplomacy Mr. Sarkozy has condemned Pakistan on Indian soil and there isn’t even as much as a whisper from Mr. Zardari’s government. So much for diplomacy.

Pakistan’s ruling elite, civilian and military, is incapable to tell other countries not to make Pakistan-bashing a ritual for anyone visiting India. Interestingly, all those slamming Pakistan are our government’s and our military’s allies in Afghanistan.
 
.
Announce you’re coming to New Delhi for a ‘landmark’ three- or four-day visit, hurl a few curses at Pakistan while you’re on Indian soil and then sit back and watch India dole out your share of some of the billions of dollars that India is saving for military armor that it won’t spend on ending poverty, the world’s largest.

International trade relations and billion dollar deals are not instantaneous, where after an announcement is made in public , you sign a contract the next minute. It requires months of discussions and negotiations before the deal is finally inked and finalised.

To relate that to the public announcement by a foreign dignetory is something of a childish and un sensible argument to satisfy the imaginations of the readers by the media and strangely many fall into it.

Medias and their fiction writers. :disagree:
 
.
Announce you’re coming to New Delhi for a ‘landmark’ three- or four-day visit, hurl a few curses at Pakistan while you’re on Indian soil and then sit back and watch India dole out your share of some of the billions of dollars that India is saving for military armor ..........

Oops, now everybody knows the formula........

So, who's next?
 
.
Oops, now everybody knows the formula........

So, who's next?

China turns next ,hmmmm i wonder how much wen can get out of india, hopefully china will get more than the us. after all we are close neighbours
 
. . . . .
So true about the formula. The thing is Indians are extremely gleeful at these insults hurled at Pakistan. It doesn't even upset Pakistan any more and has had a negligible big picture impact.

Cameron's statement had more of an impact since he directly affected the flood relief campaign.

The failure to pay the same homage to the Samjhota express Pakistani victims tells us how we have to just listen from one year and take it out the next when it comes to these theatrical shining leaders of western duplicity morality.
 
.
So true about the formula. The thing is Indians are extremely gleeful at these insults hurled at Pakistan. It doesn't even upset Pakistan any more and has had a negligible big picture impact.

Cameron's statement had more of an impact since he directly affected the flood relief campaign.

The failure to pay the same homage to the Samjhota express Pakistani victims tells us how we have to just listen from one year and take it out the next when it comes to these theatrical shining leaders of western duplicity morality.

You think Pakistanis aren't ?

You seem more interested in Indian reactions rather than implications for your nation.
 
.
President Zardari risked his political career by insisting to visit his French buddy when Pakistanis were drowning in floods. Now, can he leash his Pakistan-bashing friend, please?


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—It is becoming easy to fool India and grab some of its money. If you are a world leader, this is what you should do:

Announce you’re coming to New Delhi for a ‘landmark’ three- or four-day visit, hurl a few curses at Pakistan while you’re on Indian soil and then sit back and watch India dole out your share of some of the billions of dollars that India is saving for military armor that it won’t spend on ending poverty, the world’s largest.

I find most Pakistani media to be very defensive at their approach. Here while discussing about Sarkozy bashing Pakistan, they ended up taking a dig at India's poverty.

In the end, no point has been made as to why Sarkozy shouldn't bash Pakistan and the article sounds more out of frustration than anything.

Typical Ahmed Quraishi rant.
 
.
Ahmed qureshi ,who cares. Dont know but why do pakistanis try to compare mumbai and samjhauta express attacks,loss of lives be it 61 people or 18 policemen is an irreparable loss,comparison of terrorist activites is a flaming act which is meant to encourage trolling
 
.
This man.............:angry:


One of the worst traitors of the humanity...:angry:
 
.
Mr Zardari.. please buy some more french hardware and get Sarkosky to shut up..
you and your peeps will get your share..
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom