Hyperion
RETIRED TTA
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2012
- Messages
- 12,564
- Reaction score
- 26
- Country
- Location
Do research. Prove me otherwise. Wait, no need: I know, what I know.Please go ahead and correct me.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Do research. Prove me otherwise. Wait, no need: I know, what I know.Please go ahead and correct me.
Obviously since their present endeavors inside Afghanistan are too "successful".
A sign of desperation and depression without cost-saving supplies.
Do research. Prove me otherwise. Wait, no need: I know, what I know.
US's objectives were never to be pinned down in Kabul. It's more of a frustration that meager AK thumping, little dark people are fighting back.I think they have achieved all of their objectives in AfPak region for which they went to war. How else do you define success?
Whatever floats your boat.So you wanted to come across as Intelligent instead it back fired On you Next time stay out of Subjects you have no knowledge off.
1900 American soldiers killed, 16,000+ wounded, Cost of War in Afghanistan $536,486,446,560, Cost of War in Iraq $804,270,417,582, all to locate and find one man. source - Cost of War to the United States | COSTOFWAR.COMI think they have achieved all of their objectives in AfPak region for which they went to war. How else do you define success?
I think they have achieved all of their objectives in AfPak region for which they went to war. How else do you define success?
dear i am doing what i have to do.There is no need for you to worry. Study hard at whatever you're doing and leave such decisions to the people at helm. Everything, will be fine.
No need to get emotional, all that you see is well choreographed "diplomatic tango". No worries, have trust in our new generation of officers and consultants, they're all really good at it.
...like in Abbottabad.
he is a troll and living a fairy tale life thinking Pakistani officials are keeping the country safedear i am doing what i have to do.
and as for this drama (world politics) i am closely watching it since 2001 and i know all these things. but a hypothetical situation if(IF) any one attacked we cant let your army alone.
As I said, whatever floats your boat. Now shoo shoooHyperion
Ignorant And stupid.
i don't even think an apology is going to open the NATO supply routes - when relational ties are worst right now‘Pakistan, US working on draft of apology’
20 hours ago.
WASHINGTON: The United States and Pakistan are working on the language of a possible US apology to end their stalemate and reopen Nato’s supply routes to Afghanistan, diplomatic sources told Dawn.
Pakistan wants the United States to apologise over a Nov 26 air raid that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers at the Salala military post. The United States had initially agreed to apologise but changed its mind after aides warned President Barack Obama the move could harm his re-election campaign.
Pakistan closed Nato’s supply routes to Afghanistan after the raid and is refusing to reopen them unless the Americans apologise.
The sources who spoke to Dawn said they “now see a stronger desire on both sides” to resolve this dispute.
They said the two sides had already exchanged several drafts of the expected apology and might soon agree “on a draft that meets everybody’s requirements”.
The sources rejected recent reports in the US media that Pakistan was refusing to reopen the routes because it wanted higher tariffs from the United States for using its highways.
A team of US experts has been based in Islamabad for the past six weeks, trying to end the dispute and reopen the supply routes. On Friday, another senior US official, Assistant Secretary of Defence Peter Levoy, also joined the team.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington, Sherry Rehman, urged US officials to avoid making remarks that could further deteriorate an already tense relationship between the two countries. Commenting on Secretary Panetta’s recent statement that the United States was losing patience with Pakistan, Ambassador Rehman said: “This kind of public messaging from a senior member of the US administration is taken very seriously in Pakistan, and reduces the space for narrowing our bilateral differences at a critical time in the negotiations.”
Such statements, she noted, “adds an unhelpful twist to the process and leaves little oxygen for those of us seeking to break a stalemate”.