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US asks Pakistan to stop the groups that carry out terrorism in India

And we aren't - period.

The evidence on that count is clear, regardless of your 'assurances'.

India should fix her homegrown problems herself instead of blaming Pakistan for every incident to deflect responsibility and brainwash its citizens into hating Pakistan.

Thanks.
Actually the evidence suggests to the contrary, if that weren't the case this topic wouldn't even exist. The link between Pakistan and the export of terrorism is rather blatant, highly researched, largely substantiated and widely talked about. It is also rather unique in that there aren't too many nations in the world who have a similar set up or are involved in terrorism like the way Pakistan has been. Again, if this weren't true, Pakistan wouldn't be under the microscope or find itself isolated like it is now, and certainly not on account of some global conspiracy.

I don't think anyone is suggesting that India has or will refrain from pursuing solutions to other problems not linked to Pakistan on account of the Indo-Pak tensions. Everyone, particularly the Indian government, seems to be well aware of the fact that these issues aren't mutually exclusive. At the same time no nation in its right mind will tolerate continuous terrorist attacks and other severe transgressions upon its people from another state; that is simply unacceptable.

The scope of tension and the subsequent comments and references in relation to this issue are largely limited to Pakistan's long standing policy of directing terrorism toward India and its direct outcome. Even if it has partially spiraled out of control, it doesn't mean that the nation is suddenly and automatically absolved of all responsibilities.

Lastly, when it comes to Pakistan, Indian citizens seem to be far more affected by unceasing acts of terrorism than by any underhanded "brainwashing" from the government. There are no conspiracies here, only terrorist attacks and the highly predictable outfall and aftermath of said attacks.
 
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While it is true that Pakistan is no longer sponsoring terrorism after 2002 & Musharraf, the evidence is far from clear. You live in the US right ? Have you read the newspaper reports about Swat fights ? Most reports will at least mention once that Pakistani Army is supporting/was supporting terrorists. Similarly, many Indians do not trust the Pakistani claims after Mumbai.
Based on IA reports on insurgent infiltration and presence in Kashmir, and the IOK CM's statements, Pakistan's role in not supporting the insurgency post 2002 is quite clear.

And this is the second time you have mentioned Swat and made erroneous assertions - please take the time to read through the Acts of Terrorism and Swat threads - the issues surrounding the events there have been thoroughly explored. If you are referring to the lack of offensive action by the PA, then it has been established quite clearly that the PA was under orders from the GoNWFP and GoP to not engage in offensive actions against the Taliban, while they pursued their election time promises of attempting 'dialog' to resolve the violence.

Why don't you pick up a random American and ask what he thinks of Pakistan ? I have a Pakistani friend (with a Canadian passport) who still gets stopped at every US international airport. No Indian Muslim gets treated that way (I know quite a few) even when flying with an Indian passport.
Why should I care about anecdotal evidence? Please, don't resort to inane arguments such as these. If you have evidence present it, otherwise don't make a fool out of yourself.

So while Pakistan may no longer support terrorists, the evidence is scant. Of course, it is impossible to prove a negative, so that makes Pakistan's case much harder.
As I said above, the evidence on Pakistan cooperating in reducing the insurgency is clear, and there is scant evidence that Pakistan continues to support terrorism or has ever supported terrorism, since the Freedom Movement in IOK is not terrorism.

"American officials say there is no hard evidence to link the spy service, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, to the Mumbai attacks. But the ISI has shared intelligence with Lashkar and provided protection for it, the officials said, and investigators are focusing on one Lashkar leader they believe is a main liaison with the spy service and a mastermind of the attacks."

I can pick up a hundred articles like this from US newspapers or British ones... So what should I believe ? Newspapers from around the world or someone who gives no backing to his claims and who calls himself an "Agnostic Muslim" but was earlier advocating truce with Taliban ?

Thank you for making my point with the underlined part above. The part you highlighted only refers to the ISI's alleged connections with the LeT in the past, when it was primarily fighting against Indian occupation of Kashmir, and not support for the Mumbai terrorist attacks or any other terrorist attack.

So please do believe this newspaper, since it validates my assertion that there has been no institutional Pakistani involvement in terrorism including the Mumbai attacks.

godsavetheworld, pay attention to the above report in the NYT - and I reiterate, unless you have evidence that Pakistani institutions were involved in terrorism, take your brainwashed rants elsewhere.
 
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And we aren't - period.

The evidence on that count is clear, regardless of your 'assurances'.

India should fix her homegrown problems herself instead of blaming Pakistan for every incident to deflect responsibility and brainwash its citizens into hating Pakistan.
Thanks.


What is this homegrown problems that keep reaccuring, the only problem that pakistan is concern about is what happens in Kashmir, other then that Pakistan has no remorse for other problems in India.

The blaming is justified 99% of time, since the masterminding happens in your soil.

And most of all Mr. Am I very surprised you used the word "Brainwashing", that is childesh in nature. As you are well aware brainwashing and propaganda machine are very effective in a state of less freedom and in singularity thought. You cannot today catagorise India being such a state, with its culturely and language difference in virtually each state. There is no benefit for GoI to mass market Pakistan hatred, unless it wants to grow it's defense spending, and infact that has shown slight decline this year compare to GDP.
 
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What is this homegrown problems that keep reaccuring, the only problem that pakistan is concern about is what happens in Kashmir, other then that Pakistan has no remorse for other problems in India.

The blaming is justified 99% of time, since the masterminding happens in your soil.
Not at all - that is just what your leadership wants you to believe, to deflect blame on their failure at controlling homegrown terrorism.
And most of all Mr. Am I very surprised you used the word "Brainwashing", that is childesh in nature. As you are well aware brainwashing and propaganda machine are very effective in a state of less freedom and in singularity thought. You cannot today catagorise India being such a state, with its culturely and language difference in virtually each state. There is no benefit for GoI to mass market Pakistan hatred, unless it wants to grow it's defense spending, and infact that has shown slight decline this year compare to GDP.
Unfortunately that brainwashing is exactly what we see in India today - I believe it is akin to the brainwashing in the US during the cold war against the communists, where the other side was denigrated and painted as evil. The Indians have gone even further and blame almost every ill in India on Pakistan.
 
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Actually the evidence suggests to the contrary, if that weren't the case this topic wouldn't even exist.

Perhaps I should have been clearer - institutional Pakistani support for terrorism does not exist, and no evidence indicating that exists.

Pakistan has supported the freedom movement in kashmir against Indian occupation, but the right to struggle against occupation is internationally recognized so that cannot be considered terrorism.

I don't think anyone is suggesting that India has or will refrain from pursuing solutions to other problems not linked to Pakistan on account of the Indo-Pak tensions. Everyone, particularly the Indian government, seems to be well aware of the fact that these issues aren't mutually exclusive. At the same time no nation in its right mind will tolerate continuous terrorist attacks and other severe transgressions upon its people from another state; that is simply unacceptable.
Strawman - 'tolerating' terrorist attacks is not what is being suggested - what is being pointed out is that one hundred percent assurances cannot be given by any nation, and jingoism aside, were another attack in India to occur, India would have to go through the GoP to punish the perpetrators - you simply do not have the military superiority to take punitive action against Pakistan without suffering severely in turn.

That is the reality of the situation.
The scope of tension and the subsequent comments and references in relation to this issue are largely limited to Pakistan's long standing policy of directing terrorism toward India and its direct outcome. Even if it has partially spiraled out of control, it doesn't mean that the nation is suddenly and automatically absolved of all responsibilities.
Since Pakistan has not directed terrorism at India in the past or present the issue of responsibility does not arise. Pakistan is responsible for acting against groups that may have operated out of Pakistani soil against India (not Kashmir), and it should, but there can be no fool proof guarantees here.
Lastly, when it comes to Pakistan, Indian citizens seem to be far more affected by unceasing acts of terrorism than by any underhanded "brainwashing" from the government. There are no conspiracies here, only terrorist attacks and the highly predictable outfall and aftermath of said attacks.
Those citizens are so affected since the GoI chooses to deflect all blame at Pakistan (though the Mumbai attacks were obviously correctly identified as originating from Pakistan) as a means to absolve itself of ineptitude. Nothing conspiratorial about this - after all, this is the same charge of 'brainwashing the Paksitani public' levelled by Indians against the Paksitani establishment.

You can't have it both ways and claim 'conspiracy theory' when the same allegation made by Indians is directed back at you.
 
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France too..

The Hindu : International : Stop terrorist activity on Indian soil, France tells Pakistan

Paris: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari continued his charm offensive in Europe, meeting French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris on Friday.

Mr. Zardari, accompanied by his Interior and Foreign Ministers, is seeking help, support and a show of confidence in his government from Western leaders. Mr. Sarkozy promised Pakistan €12 million in aid to help the persons displaced by the fighting in the Swat district while stressing that it was “imperative” for Pakistan to continue its fight not just against Taliban extremists but also against terrorists threatening the territory of its neighbours.

In what could be interpreted as a firm exhortation to cooperate with India and to stop Pakistani terrorist activity on Indian soil, the official communiqué published by the Elysee presidential palace read: “The President underlined that it is imperative for Pakistan to pursue efforts against Taliban extremism as well as against other terrorist formations that threaten its territory and that of its neighbours and to cooperate closely towards this end with countries bordering Pakistan. In this spirit, the Head of State underscored France’s desire to deepen its cooperation with Pakistan in the fight against terrorism.”

Mr. Zardari flew in from London after holding talks with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, after having summoned Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Interior Minister Rehman Malik to Paris for assistance during his talks with French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Press reports from Pakistan suggested that Mr. Zardari had also flown out top security officials to Paris, particularly the ones engaged in the war against the Taliban, but The Hindu was not able to ascertain if this was actually the case.

Asked about the situation in Swat, Mr. Zardari replied: “There is worry everywhere. But we have the support and the confidence of the world and democracy always wins.” He described the current military operation against the Taliban as “a fight against a particular mindset which will continue.”
Cooperation

Referring to Mr. Sarkozy, Mr. Zardari said: “My friend the President was very kind, very generous. He has promised us help for persons displaced by the conflict. We agreed on wide ranging cooperation to strengthen Pakistan and to support the war under way in the region as well as to strengthen out bilateral ties.”

In recent months France has adopted a sterner tone with Pakistan vis-a-vis India in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks and especially after the visit to Paris by Indian Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon a few months ago.

The rise of the Pakistani Taliban in the Swat valley has also set alarm bells ringing in Paris. France has named Pierre Lellouche, a right wing member of Parliament and expert on geo-strategy as its special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan. Mr. Lellouche is reportedly very favourable to New Delhi and has been accused of holding anti-Islamic views.

Indeed, senior researcher Mariam Aboyu Zahab and author of Islamic Networks: the Afghanistan Pakistan Connection described Mr. Lellouche as “exceedingly anti-Islamic and pro Indian”.

Ironically, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and Mr. Lellouche are both currently in Kabul for talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
 
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Perhaps I should have been clearer - institutional Pakistani support for terrorism does not exist, and no evidence indicating that exists. .

I didn’t except this from a senior member like you. This is one of the latest article that contradicts your claim


Ex-major’s loyalties embody jihad woes.

Tuesday, 08 Jun, 2010

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect...e137be291/buner-taliban_ap608.jpg?MOD=AJPERES

LAHORE: A former major who trained fighters for war in Afghanistan and occupied Kashmir keeps cropping up in terrorism investigations in Pakistan. But police say the grey-haired grandfather is shielded by his links to the army and powerful intelligence agencies.

The case of Ahsanul Haq shines a light on a murky side of the militancy infecting the country: the extent to which retired members of the security agencies allegedly support or tolerate militants they once nurtured for foreign policy aims.

The recent arrest of another retired army major with alleged links to the suspect in New Yorks Times Square bomb plot rekindled these concerns. The man has since been released, but the army says he was dismissed from the force.

Speaking to The Associated Press, Mr Haq seemed to embody the contradictions of this shadowy struggle. He said he sees nothing wrong with “jihad against infidels” but strongly denies being linked to terrorism.

The most recent allegations against him appear in a report by investigators of last year’s ambush of the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore.

The document claims Mr Haq gave logistical support to unspecified Taliban and other fighters. It says cellphones used by the attackers were traced to locations close to a large garment factory owned by Mr Haq and his brother.


Senior Lahore police investigator Zulfikar Hameed said the force reported its suspicions to the ISI, which told him the major was not involved.

Therefore Mr Haq was no longer wanted by the police in connection with the attack, he said, though other high-ranking officers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they still harboured suspicions about him.

Otherwise calm and soft-spoken, Mr Haq grew angry as he sat in his upscale Lahore home reading the report into the cricket team attack.

“The police are doing this just to say they have completed the case, to get promotions,” he said. “This is absolutely wrong.”

Mr Haq served in the army when it and the ISI created and fostered fighters in the US-backed war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

After the Soviets were driven out, the ISI trained thousands of young Pakistanis to wage guerilla war in occupied Kashmir.

Following the 9/11 attacks in US, the government of president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf outlawed the most notorious groups, and was believed to have purged several hundred ISI staff for being too close to the extremists.

But the crackdown was patchily enforced, and many of the militants behind the suicide attacks now rocking Pakistan are linked to the outfits created by the ISI. One such group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, is accused of masterminding the 2008 Mumbai attacks.

Mr Haq says he served with a Pakistani army unit close to the Afghan border during the jihad against the Soviet Union, supporting fighters there. He left the army in 1990 and says he began working for the ISI to train fighters for Kashmir.

On police radar

In 2007 Mr Haq showed up on the police radar, when a police investigation report identified him as a member of the “Mufti Sagheer” militant network which it said transported bomb-making equipment to Lahore.

Mr Haq said several of the group’s members trained under him in Azad Kashmir, but he insisted they had done no wrong.

“These men are behind bars just because they have beards and believe in jihad against infidels,” he said.

The police report calls Mr Haq “sympathetic to the core of his heart to the jihadi groups in Afghanistan and Kashmir. He supports jihadi organisations financially.”On Nov 1, 2007, came the suicide bombing of a Pakistan Air Force bus in Sargodha. Mr Haq was arrested and intelligence officials said he was suspected of being one of the masterminds behind the attack. They said he had travelled to Afghanistan and met Sirajuddin Haqqani and his father, Jalaluddin Haqqani, Taliban leaders blamed by the US for much of the violence against western troops in Afghanistan.

Mr Haq says he was cleared of involvement in the bus attack and “treated like a VIP” during his detention.

Now in his 60s, he says he lives a quiet life devoted to Tableeghi Jamaat.

Authorities say the militants who raided two places of worship in Lahore 10 days ago had stayed at the Tableeghi centre in the days before the attack. — AP

DAWN.COM | National | Ex-major?s loyalties embody jihad woes

Pakistan has supported the freedom movement in kashmir against Indian occupation, but the right to struggle against occupation is internationally recognized so that cannot be considered terrorism. .

Here you go again…right to struggle against occupation is internationally recognized - Is this struggle recognized by UN?
Your country is still leaving in denial mode. Terrorism which started in the name of Kashmir Is paying back with lot of blood . There are other peaceful ways to struggle, if you want. Follow Gandhi , Mandela ways.
If India starts sponsoring terrorism in the name of IOK, will you accept that?
Have to say it again, for the world Hamas, LET, JeM, Talliban,Pakistan-Taliban, Al Qaeda, Sipah-e-Sohaba Pakistan and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi are all terrorist organization.

Some of the memebers of this forum are out of that denial mode and many are still acting like as if they are still leaving in that mode.

Strawman - 'tolerating' terrorist attacks is not what is being suggested - what is being pointed out is that one hundred percent assurances cannot be given by any nation, and jingoism aside, were another attack in India to occur, India would have to go through the GoP to punish the perpetrators - you simply do not have the military superiority to take punitive action against Pakistan without suffering severely in turn.

That is the reality of the situation. .

Its not about military superiority, its about being wise and concentrating on the economy. We want to grow our economy, and jump forward. We don’t that to be screwed by a war. Mark my work, India will a big economy power in our life time. Better catch up, or stay with these freedom fighters…
Also, Wondering how you are able to talk about " military superiority" after being drubbed for four times, including the latest Kargil adventure.

Since Pakistan has not directed terrorism at India in the past or present the issue of responsibility does not arise. Pakistan is responsible for acting against groups that may have operated out of Pakistani soil against India (not Kashmir), and it should, but there can be no fool proof guarantees here. .

Check my first news article…

Those citizens are so affected since the GoI chooses to deflect all blame at Pakistan (though the Mumbai attacks were obviously correctly identified as originating from Pakistan) as a means to absolve itself of ineptitude. Nothing conspiratorial about this - after all, this is the same charge of 'brainwashing the Paksitani public' levelled by Indians against the Paksitani establishment.

You can't have it both ways and claim 'conspiracy theory' when the same allegation made by Indians is directed back at you.

I think PA is the master of 'conspiracy theories'….read this. Sounds really funny

U.S. Is a Top Villain in Pakistan’s Conspiracy Talk

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/05/26/world/PSTAN1/PSTAN1-articleLarge.jpg

Supporters of the Islamic political party Jamaat-e-Islami at a rally in Karachi, Pakistan, in February. Pakistani suspicion of the United States is fueled by political parties and media pundits.

By SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: May 25, 2010

No one seems to know its name, but everyone has an opinion about it. It is powerful and shadowy, and seems to control just about everything in the American government, including President Obama.
“They have planted this character Faisal Shahzad to implement their script,” said Hashmat Ali Habib, a lawyer and a member of the bar association.
Who are they?

“You must know, you are from America,” he said smiling. “My advice for the American nation is, get free of these think tanks.”
Conspiracy theory is a national sport in Pakistan, where the main players — the United States, India and Israel — change positions depending on the ebb and flow of history. Since 2001, the United States has taken center stage, looming so large in Pakistan’s collective imagination that it sometimes seems to be responsible for everything that goes wrong here.

“When the water stops running from the tap, people blame America,” said Shaista Sirajuddin, an English professor in Lahore.

The problem is more than a peculiar domestic phenomenon for Pakistan. It has grown into a narrative of national victimhood that is a nearly impenetrable barrier to any candid discussion of the problems here. In turn, it is one of the principal obstacles for the United States in its effort to build a stronger alliance with a country to which it gives more than a billion dollars a year in aid.
It does not help that no part of the Pakistani state — either the weak civilian government or the powerful military — is willing to risk publicly owning that relationship.

One result is that nearly all of American policy toward Pakistan is conducted in secret, a fact that serves only to further feed conspiracies. American military leaders slip quietly in and out of the capital; the Pentagon uses networks of private spies; and the main tool of American policy here, the drone program, is not even publicly acknowledged to exist.

“The linchpin of U.S. relations is security, and it’s not talked about in public,” said Adnan Rehmat, a media analyst in Islamabad.
The empty public space fills instead with hard-line pundits and loud Islamic political parties, all projected into Pakistani living rooms by the rambunctious new electronic media, dozens of satellite television networks that weave a black-and-white, prime-time narrative in which the United States is the central villain.

“People want simple explanations, like evil America, Zionist-Hindu alliance,” said a Pakistani diplomat, who asked not to be named because of the delicate nature of the topic. “It’s gone really deep into the national psyche now.”

One of those pundits is Zaid Hamid, a fast-talking, right-wing television personality who rose to fame on one of Pakistan’s 90 new private television channels.

He uses Google searches to support his theory that India, Israel and the United States — through their intelligence agencies and the company formerly known as Blackwater — are conspiring to destroy Pakistan.

For Mr. Hamid, the case of Mr. Shahzad is one piece of a larger puzzle being assembled to pressure Pakistan. Why, otherwise, the strange inconsistencies, like the bomb’s not exploding? “If you connect the dots, you have a pretty exciting story,” he said. But the media are only part of the problem. Only a third of Pakistan’s population has access to satellite channels, Mr. Rehmat said, and equally powerful are Islamic groups active at the grass roots of Pakistani society.

Though Pakistan was created as a haven for Muslims, it was secular at first, and did not harden into an Islamic state on paper until 1949. Intellectuals point to the moment as a kind of original sin, when Islam became embedded in the country’s democratic blueprint, handing immense power to Islamic hard-liners, who could claim — despite their small numbers — to be the true guardians of the state.
Together with military and political leaders, these groups wield Islamic slogans for personal gain, further shutting down discussion.

Lawyers in Pakistan have a strong streak of political Islam. Mr. Habib, who has had militants as clients, argues that Al Qaeda is an American invention. Their pronouncements are infused with anti-Semitism, standard for Islamic groups in the region.

“The lobbies are the Jews, maybe some Indians, working in the inner core of the American administration,” said Muhammad Ikram Chaudhry, vice president of the bar association.
Liberals on Pakistan’s beleaguered left see the xenophobic patriotism and conspiracy theories as a defense mechanism that deflects all responsibility for society’s problems and protects against a reality that is too painful to face.

“It’s deny, deny, deny,” said Nadeem F. Paracha, a columnist for Dawn, an English-language daily. “It’s become second nature, like an instinct.”


Mr. Paracha argues that the denial is dangerous because it hobbles any form of public conversation — for example, about Mr. Shahzad’s upper-class background — leaving society unequipped to find remedies for its problems. “We’ve started to believe our own lies,” he said.

For those on the left, that view obscures an increasingly disappointing history. For 62 years, Pakistan has lurched from one self-serving government to the next, with little thought given to education or the economy, said Pervez Hoodbhoy, a physics professor at Quaid-i-Azam University. Now Pakistan is dependent on the West to pay its bills, a vulnerable position that breeds resentment.


“We acknowledge to ourselves privately that Pakistan is a client state of the U.S.,” Mr. Hoodbhoy said. “But on the other hand, the U.S. is acting against Muslim interests globally. A sort of self-loathing came about.”

There are very real reasons for Pakistanis to be skeptical of the United States. It encouraged — and financed — jihadis waging a religious war against the Soviets in the 1980s, while supporting the military autocrat Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, who seeded Pakistan’s education system with Islamists.

But Mr. Hamid is more interested in the larger plot, like the secret ownership of the Federal Reserve, which he found on the Internet. After three years of fame, his star seems to be falling. This month his show was canceled, and he has had to rely on Facebook and audio CDs to make his points. But it is not the end of the conspiracy.
“Someone else will be front row very soon,” said Manan Ahmed, a professor of Pakistani history. “It is the mood of the country at the moment.”
 
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I didn’t except this from a senior member like you. This is one of the latest article that contradicts your claim


Ex-major’s loyalties embody jihad woes

Tuesday, 08 Jun, 2010

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect...e137be291/buner-taliban_ap608.jpg?MOD=AJPERES
Nothing in the article you posted is credible evidence that institutions in Pakistan support terrorism. The individual in question in the article denies it, very emotionally according to the report, and is retired from the military to boot. The opinions suggesting he is involved are just that, opinions, not facts or evidence.

Here you go again…right to struggle against occupation is internationally recognized - Is this struggle recognized by UN?
Yes it is recognized - If the Chinese occupy India in a war, the residents of India would be justified in fighting back against that occupation, as were the residents of France, Poland etc. in WWII in fighting against the Nazis.
Your country is still leaving in denial mode. Terrorism which started in the name of Kashmir Is paying back with lot of blood . There are other peaceful ways to struggle, if you want. Follow Gandhi , Mandela ways.
If India starts sponsoring terrorism in the name of IOK, will you accept that?
Have to say it again, for the world Hamas, LET, JeM, Talliban,Pakistan-Taliban, Al Qaeda, Sipah-e-Sohaba Pakistan and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi are all terrorist organization.

Unless groups have policy of deliberately targeting civilians I do not see how they can be terrorists - this is not 'denial' it is simple logic.
And since you are advocating 'Gandhi and Mandela ways' how about India ending the occupation of J&K and allowing the people to choose which nation they wish to be a part of through a plebiscite as called for under the rules of partition and the UNSC resolutions.
Its not about military superiority, its about being wise and concentrating on the economy. We want to grow our economy, and jump forward. We don’t that to be screwed by a war. Mark my work, India will a big economy power in our life time. Better catch up, or stay with these freedom fighters…
Also, Wondering how you are able to talk about " military superiority" after being drubbed for four times, including the latest Kargil adventure.
It is about military superiority, or you did not understand the post and need to read it again.

As for drubbing, the only war against Pakistan India has been victorious in is the 1971 war, in some pretty unusual circumstances of EP separated by thousands of miles of Indian territory and local terrorism sponsored by India -that dynamic shall not be available to India in the future.

And please don't flame and troll next time with stupid and false comments like 'drubbed four times'.
Check my first news article…
Debunked already.
I think PA is the master of 'conspiracy theories'….read this. Sounds really funny

As I said, Those citizens are so affected since the GoI chooses to deflect all blame at Pakistan (though the Mumbai attacks were obviously correctly identified as originating from Pakistan) as a means to absolve itself of ineptitude. Nothing conspiratorial about this - after all, this is the same charge of 'brainwashing the Paksitani public' levelled by Indians against the Paksitani establishment.

You can't have it both ways and claim 'conspiracy theory' when the same allegation made by Indians is directed back at you.


BTW, the Americans have little room to complain about 'conspiracy theories' when they engage in their own set of them about the 'ISI and the Taliban'. Even respected Think Tanks such as the CFR had an author claiming that Pakistan was behind the firing of Amrullah Saleh by Karzai.
 
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did USA ever ask india to stop terrorists activities in balouchistan and other parts of Pakistan? USA faced 9/11 in 2001 and india faced 26/11 once and pakistan is facing 03/03 everyday .......and india is funding the terrorists in PAKISTAN. did USA took any action against them ??? and the ans is no because evil (usa) loves evils(india,israel) shame on them..............
 
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Interesting how Boucher's comments get turned into something else to sensationalize for Indian audiences.
Agreed. These comments are not a formal request. The U.S. may be disgusted by Pakistan's support of Pakistan-based anti-India terrorists, but I have yet to find an official statement by a U.S. Administration recognizing such a direct relationship and requesting Pakistan to cease doing so.

Not that the U.S. is complicit in this matter; rather, it probably wishes to avoid embarrassment all around. After all, Pakistan doesn't officially admit to supporting such terrorists. If Pakistan complied with such a request people would say the GoP is an American stooge; if it didn't comply the U.S. would look weak and stupid.

In the end, Pakistan has to stop supporting terror for its own reasons. And those reasons are pretty good.
 
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Nothing in the article you posted is credible evidence that institutions in Pakistan support terrorism. The individual in question in the article denies it, very emotionally according to the report, and is retired from the military to boot. The opinions suggesting he is involved are just that, opinions, not facts or evidence..

Please come out of the denail mode. Do you except a PA major coming out and calling the media to announce like "Wilh respect I want to tell you that I support terrroist and I am signing this paper in behalf of that..."
Please read the articl again and see who has blocked the proceedings..
Even Kasab had not accecpted his role..

PA news paper is reporting that not an American/Indian. I rest my case here.

Yes it is recognized - If the Chinese occupy India in a war, the residents of India would be justified in fighting back against that occupation, as were the residents of France, Poland etc. in WWII in fighting against the Nazis...

Poor comparision.. Its not the same case here. Also Time had changed, please keep up with the change..

For another 1000 years, you can keep on fighting and remain where your are now. Nothing is going to change except India's growth.

Unless groups have policy of deliberately targeting civilians I do not see how they can be terrorists - this is not 'denial' it is simple logic.
And since you are advocating 'Gandhi and Mandela ways' how about India ending the occupation of J&K and allowing the people to choose which nation they wish to be a part of through a plebiscite as called for under the rules of partition and the UNSC resolutions....

If its occupied....so ur logic fails :). If its occupied people wont come and vote in elections..
More civilians have been killed in India by PA sponsered terror. Have you heard about the story of a Kashimir girl droving a milintant using the kitchen tools....

May be you should urge the Tibetan people to take up arms..

It is about military superiority, or you did not understand the post and need to read it again.

Gotcha...I prefer India better spend on Infra, Education and research than this superiority..

As for drubbing, the only war against Pakistan India has been victorious in is the 1971 war, in some pretty unusual circumstances of EP separated by thousands of miles of Indian territory and local terrorism sponsored by India -that dynamic shall not be available to India in the future.

And please don't flame and troll next time with stupid and false comments like 'drubbed four times'.

Thats the truth and the world, except PA, accecpts that.

My stupid comments are meant for Intellectuals. After your comment , I wont be cosidering you in that circle.Is telling the truth called troll and flame and stupid?. Being a moderator, I expect you to be more respectful.

I repeat it, PA has been drubbed four times by India

1) 1947 - Kashmir war - Failed to capture Kashmir
2) 1965 - Did PA won? Indo-Pakistan War of 1965
3) You accecpted
4) Kargil - Where you able to acheive your goal? - The Prime Minister of PA doesnt know, wht the army is doing!

What are these called? When you are not able to acheive your goal in a war,initated by you! wht do you call them





As I said, Those citizens are so affected since the GoI chooses to deflect all blame at Pakistan (though the Mumbai attacks were obviously correctly identified as originating from Pakistan) as a means to absolve itself of ineptitude. Nothing conspiratorial about this - after all, this is the same charge of 'brainwashing the Paksitani public' levelled by Indians against the Paksitani establishment.

You can't have it both ways and claim 'conspiracy theory' when the same allegation made by Indians is directed back at you.


BTW, the Americans have little room to complain about 'conspiracy theories' when they engage in their own set of them about the 'ISI and the Taliban'. Even respected Think Tanks such as the CFR had an author claiming that Pakistan was behind the firing of Amrullah Saleh by Karzai.


Ever country has 'conspiracy theory' but none other than PA thrives in that.
 
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anyone noticed ?

Thread started 1 year ago :what:

Here's a more recent comment on the same lines by US


Pak ending terror more important than Kashmir: US: Rediff.com India News


The US does not think the Kashmir issue is on the table for resumption of a composite Indo-Pak dialogue saying the "real question" right now is how Pakistan progressed in ending cross-border terrorism and trial of Mumbai [ Images ] attacks' suspects.

The Obama [ Images ] Administration however acknowledged that Kashmir is a "very important issue" between India [ Images ] and Pakistan and hoped the two neighbouring countries would make progress on resolving this issue.

It also said there is "no change" in its Kashmir policy.

"I don't think Kashmir is really the question that's on the table now," said Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Robert Blake [ Images ] in an interview to BBC.

"The real question right now is to first, I think, get some progress on the trial of the Mumbai suspects, those who are already in custody in Pakistan and also from the Indian perspective to see progress by Pakistan on stopping actions by Lashkar-e-Tayiba [ Images ] and other Punjab-based terrorist groups against India," Blake said.

Giving the American perspective on the Indo-US talks, Blake said the above mentioned issues were the real "redlines" for re-establishing the composite dialogue between India and Pakistan.

State Department spokesman P J Crowley told journalists at his daily news briefing: "We recognise that this (Kashmir) is a very, very important issue between India and Pakistan." He was responding to a question on the visit of the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh [ Images ] to Jammu and Kashmir [ Images ] and his offer of talks with the separatist if they abandon violence and abide by the Indian constitution.

"As the dialogue between India and Pakistan, continues to expand, including at the leader level, that we would hope that India and Pakistan can make progress in understanding this issue and moving forward, just as they did a few years ago," Crowley said. Appearing at a State Department Blog Forum, Blake said there was no change in America's policy on Kashmir.

"No, there's no change right now," Blake said in response to a question.

"I think at this point the top priority for India and Pakistan is, first, to kind of get their own bilateral dialogue going in a more systematic way," he said.

"As I said, there is very important meetings that will be taking place in Islamabad [ Images ] over the next two months and the Indians have in Prime Minister Singh [ Images ] somebody who I think is personally and deeply committed to achieving peace with Pakistan," Blake said.

"But he (prime minister) needs to see progress on these two important issues that I spoke of: that is, progress to stop some of the cross-border infiltration that's taking place into India, but also progress on the trial of the Mumbai suspects," said the state department official.

"If we can see that, I think that there will be a flourishing of the dialogue that could take place but those are very important things that need to take place," he said.

Blake noted that from 2004 to 2007, the two countries did make quite a lot of progress on Kashmir, where they had this bilateral back channel through which they had a chance for the first time to sit down quietly and explore the outlines of an agreement.

"They didn't quite reach the end of it, but I think they made a great deal of progress. And that, again, could be picked up, I think, relatively quickly if they can sort out some of these other issues that I talked about," he said.


Assistant Secretary Robert Blake?s Interview with the BBC
 
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