muse
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I can talk about this in great detail, unfortunately, that would be a very long discussion. We would have to go over each & every event that has transpired in Pakistan & South Asia since 1947. I really don't want to go into that, but there were times when the Army was in the wrong, at other times, there was justification for their actions.
Pakistan nurtured the monster created by the US in 1979 by Carter & Brzezinski, & yes, it continues to bear the brunt of that decision, as well as the whole region. However, nations do 'favor' extreme elements if they are serving some 'sort of interest': for example: the US gave money, supplied weapons to the same people they are fighting today in Afghanistan; India trained LTTE terrorists against Sri Lanka, but in 1991, the same LTTE suicide bomber who got training in India blew up Rajiv Gandhi; & Pakistan is in the process of slaying the monster it helped nurture in the 80s. What cannot be doubted is the resolve of the Pakistan Army & the tribal people who have joined forces, & are eliminating this monster in Kurram & Mohmand. The Pakistan Army & the people have showed extreme bravery, & are busy eliminating the threat nurtured by Pakistan in the 80s.
First of all, if the ISI is not accountable to the Supreme Court or the Law of Pakistan, does not make the ISI at fault, but the civilian legal institutions/bodies. If the civilian government cannot do its job & govern the country, & the Army does the wrong thing by overthrowing that civilian government (& does a better job), the root cause of the problem is the inept government. It is wrong for the Army to overthrow democratic civilian rule, that is not their job: their job is to be on the battlefield; but the root cause of the problem is the inept civilian institutions.
There are 3 intelligence gathering bodies in Pakistan: the MI, the ISI & the IB. The MI is under the jurisdiction of the Army. The ISI is a foreign intelligence gathering agency under the jurisdiction of the civilian government, not the Army. The IB is a domestic intelligence gathering agency under the jurisdiction of the civilian government as well.
The Pakistan Army & intelligence recognize the facts on the ground, & work for Pakistan's safety. The fact is that very little is known about the ISI, it is an extremely efficient, a very powerful & discreet agency; & most people (Islamists or secular people) only pass their opinions about the ISI, & know very little about it.
Bilal
The above quoted post is ill informed and poorly argued - Let me come back to a stronger position, a little later in my response.
First, note that you have not been able to highlight a single victory -- now, instead of learning from this, you are choosing a "depends what the meaning of "is" is" position - it's a disservice to your position, because it challenges the intelligence of those who may be persuaded by your position.
I strongly encourage you to research further, why, the Pakistani choose "Islamism" as a state policy - suffice to say that in the context of the loss of East Pakistan and a endemically weak state, it was argued that Islamism would provide the state with legitimacy and allow the state to become relevant to lives of Pakistanis -- Now, as you research this, you will find that Malaysia adopted the same general path, but was their version of "Islamism" was informed by very ideas, Pakistan adopted the Jamaati version, rooted as it was in the corrosive Marxist anti-colonial narrative relevant to the 30 and 40's, with a strong dose of Wahabi ideology, complete with clerics from Saudi to create legislation that formed the Huddood laws, of which, Blasphemy laws still blight the Pakistani conscience.
Alright, so they choose Jamaati Islam, what of it? Easy, lets first ask who choose it - is that fair? If you agree that's fair to ask, then of course you must accept the answer, Army did. And then of course you cannot deny that it's equally fair to ask, if this project was "successful"? And of course, only those of murderous intent, will conclude that this was successful.
To date, the Pakistan army is allied with Jamaatis and their vision, this is a reflection of the intellectual and ethical bankruptcy of the Army - lets be clear, we are not arguing that Pakistan should not have a strong state or legitimacy, quite the contrary, we are strong proponents of this, we are questioning the the quality of ideas that inform policies to arrive at that objective.
Yes, it's a fact that Pakistan army is fighting islamist insurgency, but lets be clear, the same Pakistan army was arming and making deals with the same islamists insurgents, pointing them westward and eastward - and the same islamists have now seen that the core of Pakistan is itself rotten and Pakistan is for the taking - another army success??
You concede that the ISI is beyond the law and offer that this is the fault of the government, you fault the government for being weak -- Would you similarly argue that criminals are not to blame for being criminals and that police are to blame for the existence of criminals because police have failed to make them convicts???
You then offer that ISI is not a army organization - even the Inter-SERVICES part is not persuasive to you? But reality is that it is an army agency, headed by a uniform, accountable to the army -- now if as you say ISI is beyond the law, can the institution to which it belongs be other than "beyond the law"???
Ok, so lets make a stronger argument --- first look at the suggestions that the author of the lead article offers -- then ask, how would we get that done??
See, brother man, we all want a SMARTER more effective, more efficient army, one that is national in it's orientation, not one dedicated to an international Jihad nor one sectarian in nature - lets never abandon conscience, Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right.