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Why stop here? Where did Islam come from? Saudi A.? So all the terrorism in the world can be traced back to Saudi Arabla.
But then that would be 'oversight'
I could say all the world's terrorism that is caused by Muslim can be tied to India, since most of the venomous sects of Islam sprung from places within India. Therefore, everything traces back to India. However this would be oversight, just as your above comment is ridiculously foolish at best.
Indian Muslims are peaceful except for very few.
My friend why has image of Pakistan tarnished world over ? Most of the terrorist attacks have roots in Pakistan. Earlier when India used to accuse with evidence very few used to believe, Now quite a few of the nations who matter (NATO , US) have first hand experience.
Also sympathy factor is lost when such nation says it is the victim, History says you reap what you sow (grow).
Nothing. There is no evidence, if there is, why are the people responsible being protected?
ok then why did an american official came to pak and warned u for links with taliban
But you get the general picture dont you? Why is it that most of the Islamic terrorism has some kind or other connection with Pakistan. The training camps run by the ISI to train terrorists for Kashmir and Afghanistan have been used extensively by almost any and every Islamic terrorist worldwide.I'll won't take your 99 percent comment literally since you don't really need me to point out why that is highly flawed.
However why are some terrorists able to operate out of Pakistan, primarily the lawless area called FATA that the GoP has never really exercised control over, because of its special status in the constitution, continued from British days, and our proximity with Afghanistan.
Terrorists dont just come in and train themselves mate, they need training camps, camps which are operated by ISI and your military in a supportive role.When law and order is missing, when LEA's are non existent, such areas will become havens for crime, and terrorism is one such crime.
So you are saying that those camps are run by individuals with no connection to the ISI?You are trying to construct an institutional relationship to terrorism when there is no evidence to that effect. The problems are of a lack of institutional systems - governing, social and economic.
Indian govt is making a terrible mistake in kashmir. this economic blockade has turned even neutral kashmiris against india. we have to lift this blocakde, and in my opinion, issue an apology to the people of kashmir.
But you get the general picture dont you? Why is it that most of the Islamic terrorism has some kind or other connection with Pakistan. The training camps run by the ISI to train terrorists for Kashmir and Afghanistan have been used extensively by almost any and every Islamic terrorist worldwide.
Terrorists dont just come in and train themselves mate, they need training camps, camps which are operated by ISI and your military in a supportive role.
So you are saying that those camps are run by individuals with no connection to the ISI?
Do you disagree that the major part of Islamic terrorism started when US started funding Pakistan to train the Afghans to throw out the Russians. After that was succesfully completed, Pakistan simply diverted the outflow of these trained terrorists from Afghanistan to Kashmir,and many new camps sprung up.
Yes, Pakistan would not have been involved had US not been there, but once on a path, you need to know when to stop. And that time had come long before for Pakistan.Malay, the majority of your comments revolve around the camps, and as you rightly pointed out, the US was enthusiastically supportive of those camps while doing the exact same thing in Afghanistan, that Pakistan did in kashmir. Pakistan would not have taken the initiative to start a proxy war with the Soviets had the US not been involved.
So if you want to call Pakistan's support for insurgents in Kashmir 'terrorism', then do the same to the US, which has done even more in Latin America and was also responsible in large part for the camps in Afghanistan - read up on covert US interventions in LA.
From where did you pull that out of?Agnostic do tell me, dont you think there is a reason why 99% of the terrorist attacks in the WORLD have some kind of link to Pakistan?
Yes, Pakistan would not have been involved had US not been there, but once on a path, you need to know when to stop. And that time had come long before for Pakistan.
Zia did the same thing India did with the Mukti bahini in East Pakistan and what the US has done in countless nations time after time, as I have pointed out. Lets not single out Pakistan for criticism on this count and call it terrorism - if Pakistan supported terrorism, so did India and the US, agree upon that and we can proceed more evenhandedly.Yes, but look at how the US went about it. ITs not US that is suffering today, its Pakistan!
It was Pakistani Genral Zia, who decided to use terrorism as a state policy. Because he could not match India in the conventional arms race, he made terrorism a state instrument! This was the biggest mistake that Pakistan could make. I call what US has done in other parts of the world terrorism as well. But they have used other countries. They have not inflicted harm on their own society by radicalizing it.
The US left, and Pakistan continued to use those camps for its own ends, and created dozens of new ones. When i say that most of the Islamic terrorists have some link or another in Pakistan, it is because most of them have been trained there. Its because Pakistani governments have supported terrorists by providing safe havens, funds, arms.
Agno, just look at the Pakistani school textbooks, the radicalization has started even at such small levels. Being 'shaheed' or 'dying for your country' and 'Jehad' is glorified in such books. Fighting wars, dying is considered the best you can do.
Do you know the effect of that? Children at such small ages, when they read such stuff, these things are permanently engraved in their minds, and no amount of reasoning can remove such things. All this just because Pakistan wants to punch above its weight.
It was not time for us to stop - its a question of protecting national interest, and any other country would have done the same.
I suppose you can call what India did with Mukti Bahini as terrorism. But the difference was that India was not encouraging its own people to go to such camps and fight for the greater good. Neither was it based on the 'religious jehad' concept that Pakistan used. It was a clear concept-to make East Pakistan free. It did not entail all the consequences of a global jehad. Whilst Pakistan chose that path, all the muslims the world over came to those camps to train for their jehad, and the governemnt only encouraged it in the name of Islam-that is the problem. Had Pakistan made it Kashmir specific and not made it a Jehad against Hindu's in Kashmir, things would not be this bad. Pakistan could have merely gone for the self determination/sovereignty route, but it chose religious extremism as a catalyst for its purpose. It encouraged its own people to join in. General Zia chose to radicalize its own population with Sharia laws and whatnot.Zia did the same thing India did with the Mukti bahini in East Pakistan and what the US has done in countless nations time after time, as I have pointed out. Lets not single out Pakistan for criticism on this count and call it terrorism - if Pakistan supported terrorism, so did India and the US, agree upon that and we can proceed more evenhandedly.
The US cut its losses or victory and left long ago mate. Pakistan continued on that path. Its not US who's having the problems Pakistan is having now is it?To your points about extremists from various places training there, a lot of those extremists trained there while the US was involved, and at the time everyone thought it was a great way to get volunteers. The concerns did not really start rising until after the activities and connections of some of them came to light later. So again, singling out Pakistan as 'having links to most terrorism' is incorrect, since the involvement of the US would indicate that it too had links to much of the terrorism that Pakistan was linked too.
One last point on the camps - any time you support covert groups and activities, you run the risk of abuse of the system. The system was abused when the US was involved, and it was abused when only Pakistan was involved. The reason for the camps was support for the insurgency in Kashmir and training for first the Mujahideen and later Taliban volunteers - unfortunately they also ended up being used by other groups, and also by individuals who may have engaged in terrorism in India, beyond the insurgency. But that is an unavoidable cost, and it is a lesson that both the US and Pakistan have paid for.
Your call. However we are discussing terrorism and that encompasses the entire spectrum, including how its harming your society. Should you not wish to continue in this aspect, i will not post on this particular issue.Thats just a complete digression form the subject. Lets not start ranting about every complaint in your mind about Pakistan now, which unfortunately these discussions on issues with Indians almost always tangentially go off on.
I do not see anything wrong in glorifying martyrdom for your nation, I do see a problem with glorifying Jihad without taking into account the conditions and nuances the concept involves.
The system and curriculum that is a problem is the Madrassa system, and hopefully the attempts to regulate it will bear fruit. But that system too was not deliberately and systematically set up to become what it is now, it has morphed into its current status much like the Taliban morphed out of the chaos of post Soviet Afghanistan.