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Not sure if this is elsewhere, if move this or delete.
Pakistan crackdown to backfire: Imran | The Australian
Christina Lamb | June 15, 2009
Article from: Times Online
PAKISTAN'S military offensive against the Taliban will backfire and fuel extremism and bomb attacks, Imran Khan has warned.
"I have never been so depressed in my life," the cricketer-turned-politician said. "Pakistan is on a suicidal course."
Mr Khan was speaking in London, where he was visiting his two sons by former wife Jemima Goldsmith before going to the US to raise funds for refugees displaced by the fighting.
The 56-year-old leader of Pakistan's Movement for Justice Party has been branded pro-Taliban for speaking out against the military crackdown, which has forced 2.5 million people to flee from their homes.
"I'm not pro-Taliban," he said. "But my point is, shouldn't we have looked at other options?
"How do you justify using heavy artillery, helicopter gunships and F-16 fighter-jets on civilian areas? Who in the world does this? Meanwhile, all the top Taliban leaders have escaped. It's so inhuman what the military has done. It will backfire."
Mr Khan said the launch of the offensive coincided with President Asif Ali Zardari's visit to Washington in late April, after which the US agreed to a five-year aid package of $US1.5billion ($2bn) a year.
"Was this operation to save the people of Swat or to get dollars from the Americans?" he asked. "Only 10 days earlier parliament had passed a resolution endorsing a peace deal in Swat with the Taliban. Why was there no discussion? A military operation should have been the last resort."
Pakistan would never contain extremism as long as US troops were fighting across the border in Afghanistan. "Hatred of America is much more than of the Taliban," he said.
The first EU-Pakistan summit will be held in Brussels this week, when Mr Zardari will call for more aid for the refugee crisis.
The Sunday Times
One thing I keep noting with this gentleman is that he objects to the fighting but offers little as an alternative.
It would appear he is very good at doing the necessary things like social service concerns, raising funds for the displaced people, but as a politician he appears very weak.
Not sure if this is elsewhere, if move this or delete.
Pakistan crackdown to backfire: Imran | The Australian
Christina Lamb | June 15, 2009
Article from: Times Online
PAKISTAN'S military offensive against the Taliban will backfire and fuel extremism and bomb attacks, Imran Khan has warned.
"I have never been so depressed in my life," the cricketer-turned-politician said. "Pakistan is on a suicidal course."
Mr Khan was speaking in London, where he was visiting his two sons by former wife Jemima Goldsmith before going to the US to raise funds for refugees displaced by the fighting.
The 56-year-old leader of Pakistan's Movement for Justice Party has been branded pro-Taliban for speaking out against the military crackdown, which has forced 2.5 million people to flee from their homes.
"I'm not pro-Taliban," he said. "But my point is, shouldn't we have looked at other options?
"How do you justify using heavy artillery, helicopter gunships and F-16 fighter-jets on civilian areas? Who in the world does this? Meanwhile, all the top Taliban leaders have escaped. It's so inhuman what the military has done. It will backfire."
Mr Khan said the launch of the offensive coincided with President Asif Ali Zardari's visit to Washington in late April, after which the US agreed to a five-year aid package of $US1.5billion ($2bn) a year.
"Was this operation to save the people of Swat or to get dollars from the Americans?" he asked. "Only 10 days earlier parliament had passed a resolution endorsing a peace deal in Swat with the Taliban. Why was there no discussion? A military operation should have been the last resort."
Pakistan would never contain extremism as long as US troops were fighting across the border in Afghanistan. "Hatred of America is much more than of the Taliban," he said.
The first EU-Pakistan summit will be held in Brussels this week, when Mr Zardari will call for more aid for the refugee crisis.
The Sunday Times
One thing I keep noting with this gentleman is that he objects to the fighting but offers little as an alternative.
It would appear he is very good at doing the necessary things like social service concerns, raising funds for the displaced people, but as a politician he appears very weak.