Spitfighter
SENIOR MEMBER
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Taimikhan, I'm sorry, I really have no idea where you are going with your post but I suspect you are about to blame the RAW-CIA-Mossad nexus. So I think I'm done talking to you.
Moving on,
ajpirzada, half ready isn't ready enough, if you chase two rabbits you will lose them both. Its Pakistan that stands to lose everything. The Americans will go back to their homes thousands of miles away, India has learned to live with the status-quo, we've dealt with it all these years anyways, and Afghanistan will simply turn into Asia's very own Somalia, and you think you have a refugee crisis now.
If this war goes downhill, and it will unless there is a dramatic shift in Pakistan's approach, Pakistan will find itself practically isolated and heavily dependent on China and Saudi Arabia.
Pakistan is stuck between a rock and a hard place, so you will be have to be the ones making compromises and hard decisions. I think Pakistan will continue on it's current path because it believes that the fallout can be adequately contained. By the time they make the switch it might simply be too late. My only concern is that this might eventually become India's problem which is why I initially favored less aggressive stance on India's part, but I think India isn't in a position to cut Pakistan any slack at the moment, it might come back to bite us later. I fear that things will have to get a lot worse before they get any better.
Moving on,
ajpirzada, half ready isn't ready enough, if you chase two rabbits you will lose them both. Its Pakistan that stands to lose everything. The Americans will go back to their homes thousands of miles away, India has learned to live with the status-quo, we've dealt with it all these years anyways, and Afghanistan will simply turn into Asia's very own Somalia, and you think you have a refugee crisis now.
If this war goes downhill, and it will unless there is a dramatic shift in Pakistan's approach, Pakistan will find itself practically isolated and heavily dependent on China and Saudi Arabia.
Pakistan is stuck between a rock and a hard place, so you will be have to be the ones making compromises and hard decisions. I think Pakistan will continue on it's current path because it believes that the fallout can be adequately contained. By the time they make the switch it might simply be too late. My only concern is that this might eventually become India's problem which is why I initially favored less aggressive stance on India's part, but I think India isn't in a position to cut Pakistan any slack at the moment, it might come back to bite us later. I fear that things will have to get a lot worse before they get any better.