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The 1950s, when the U.S.A. took over as Pakistan's patron from the Brits, arming Pakistan to the teeth for the purpose of countering potential Communist aggression. That relationship cooled due to Pakistan's invasion of Kashmir in 1965. Using American weapons for conquest was seen by Americans as a betrayal: Pakistani leaders, on the other hand, felt fully justified in lying to get the weapons and military aid they wanted and spread the story to their own people that it was the Americans who betrayed Pakistan by failing to support Pakistan!looking at our previous encounters who knows.. maybe a litter bit longer like the 50s.
It was Zia's idea, imposed over American opposition, to destroy the weak Soviet-sponsored Afghan government and leave a mess behind instead. You broke it, you own it - and so the U.S. withdrew. The rest of the story was written by Pakistan, until the U.S. invaded Afghanistan from the Taliban in 2002....when despite their material support we don't do what they ask us since we have been left with cleaning up the mess few times already.
Lol. Where do you get your information from. Your bum? Tyoical American arrogance and shifting the blame onto others to hide your failure. I hate the Taliban but I am surely glad that you have a bloody nose and have been kicked out of Afghanistan.The 1950s, when the U.S.A. took over as Pakistan's patron from the Brits, arming Pakistan to the teeth for the purpose of countering potential Communist aggression. That relationship cooled due to Pakistan's invasion of Kashmir in 1965. Using American weapons for conquest was seen by Americans as a betrayal: Pakistani leaders, on the other hand, felt fully justified in lying to get the weapons and military aid they wanted and spread the story to their own people that it was the Americans who betrayed Pakistan by failing to support Pakistan!
It was Zia's idea, imposed over American opposition, to destroy the weak Soviet-sponsored Afghan government and leave a mess behind instead. You broke it, you own it - and so the U.S. withdrew. The rest of the story was written by Pakistan, until the U.S. invaded Afghanistan from the Taliban in 2002.
On the 1965 war from the declassified Foreign Relations of the United States 1965: South Asia. On the endgame of the Afghan-Soviet war there are multiple sources but the first that comes to mind is Deception: Pakistan, the United States, and the Secret Trade in Nuclear Weapons[/quote]Lol. Where do you get your information from -
Your question was reasonable but your rudeness, unsupportable insults, and retreat into diversions and denial are really inexcusable. If you apologize I will think better of you but if not, then not.Tyoical American arrogance and shifting -
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Keep watching fox news...On the 1965 war from the declassified Foreign Relations of the United States 1965: South Asia. On the endgame of the Afghan-Soviet war there are multiple sources but the first that comes to mind is Deception: Pakistan, the United States, and the Secret Trade in Nuclear Weapons
Your question was reasonable but your rudeness, unsupportable insults, and retreat into diversions and denial are really inexcusable. If you apologize I will think better of you but if not, then not.
I hope not.I think they actually told us to brace ourselves, another 50,000 of us are going to fall by a mess created by them, and then they will end up imposing some idiotic sanctions over us because of ABB getting caught near abbotabad.
Well played, very well played.
And since when Iran and specially Hizbollah are your friends?
And I am pretty sure they will end up supporting Daesh against Taliban in Afghanistan, just saying..... Who knows what CIA is cooking.
I hope not.
because Daesh is a death cult, nothing else.
The 1950s, when the U.S.A. took over as Pakistan's patron from the Brits, arming Pakistan to the teeth for the purpose of countering potential Communist aggression. That relationship cooled due to Pakistan's invasion of Kashmir in 1965. Using American weapons for conquest was seen by Americans as a betrayal: Pakistani leaders, on the other hand, felt fully justified in lying to get the weapons and military aid they wanted and spread the story to their own people that it was the Americans who betrayed Pakistan by failing to support Pakistan!
It was Zia's idea, imposed over American opposition, to destroy the weak Soviet-sponsored Afghan government and leave a mess behind instead. You broke it, you own it - and so the U.S. withdrew. The rest of the story was written by Pakistan, until the U.S. invaded Afghanistan from the Taliban in 2002.
I dont beleive that such supporters are in such big majority than what seems to be the case. its mostly out of ignorance or jsut a simple if someone is against America it HAS to be RIGHT .. kind of thinking. .. our parliament avenue would have become execution square if your fears were true..things should be better yes and there are some overt very bad people who have access to media and means to influence people and disrupt the country but its not Libya or SyriaYou may think that, but the real danger is that a lot of people think of it as a budding caliphate that will bring peace and prosperity and all things great and good with a resurgent Islam. Guess which viewpoint has more supporters?
I dont beleive that such supporters are in such big majority than what seems to be the case. its mostly out of ignorance or jsut a simple if someone is against America it HAS to be RIGHT .. kind of thinking. .. our parliament avenue would have become execution square if your fears were true..things should be better yes and there are some overt very bad people who have access to media and means to influence people and disrupt the country but its not Libya or Syria
Are you willing to deploy the Pakistani Army overseas to fight Daesh? Not just for a month or a year, but for a generation? To fight jihadists abroad and at home not in a battle but as a culture? I would guess not, which is why I'm not optimistic.well that was history, what about now? you not optimistic I see?
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JOSEPH S. NYE
[ "All roads to understanding American foreign policy run through Joe Nye."]
Published — Wednesday 9 September 2015
The terrorist organization, Daesh, has captured the world’s attention with gruesome videos of beheadings, wanton destruction of antiquities and skilled use of social media. It has also captured a large part of eastern Syria and western Iraq, proclaimed a caliphate based in Raqqa, Syria and attracted foreign militants from around the world.
US President Barack Obama says that Daesh must be degraded and ultimately defeated. He has appointed Gen. John Allen to lead a coalition of some 60 countries in the task, relying on air strikes, special forces and training missions. Some critics want him to send more American troops; others say that the United States should settle for a doctrine of containment.
In the current US presidential campaign, some candidates are calling for “boots on the ground.” They are right: Boots are needed. But the soldiers who wear them should be Sunni Arabs and Turks, not Americans. And that says a lot about the nature of the triple threat that the US and its allies now face.
Daesh is three things: A transnational terrorist group, a proto-state, and a political ideology with religious roots. It grew out of Al-Qaeda after the misguided US-led invasion of Iraq; and, like Al-Qaeda, it appeals to extremist elements. But it has gone further, by establishing a caliphate and is now a rival to Al-Qaeda. Its possession of territory creates the legitimacy and capacity for offensive jihad, which it wages not only against infidels but also other Muslims.
Daesh is extremely adept at using twenty-first-century media. Its videos and social-media channels are effective tools for attracting a minority of Muslims — primarily young people from Europe, America, Africa and Asia — who are struggling with their identity. Disgruntled, many are drawn to “Sheikh Google,” where Daesh recruiters wait to prey upon them. By some estimates, there are more than 25,000 foreign fighters serving in Daesh today. Those who are killed are quickly replaced.
The tripartite nature of Daesh creates a policy dilemma. On the one hand, it is important to use hard military power to deprive the caliphate of the territory that provides it both sanctuary and legitimacy. But if the American military footprint is too heavy, the terrorist organization’s soft power will be strengthened, thus aiding its global recruiting efforts.
That is why the boots on the ground must be Sunni. The presence of foreign or Shiite troops reinforces Daesh’s claim of being surrounded and challenged by infidels. So far, thanks largely to effective Kurdish forces, who are overwhelmingly Sunni, Daesh has lost some 30 percent of the territory it held a year ago. But deploying additional Sunni infantry requires training, support, and time, as well as pressure on Iraq’s Shiite-dominated central government to temper its sectarian approach.
After the debacle in Libya, Obama is reluctant to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, only to see Daesh take control of more territory, accompanied by genocidal atrocities against Syria’s many non-Sunnis. But Assad is one of Daesh’s most effective recruiting tools. Many foreign militants respond to the prospect of helping to overthrow a tyrannical Alawite ruler.
The US diplomatic task is to persuade Assad’s supporters, Russia and Iran, to remove him without dismantling the remains of the Syrian state structure. A no-fly zone and a safe zone in northern Syria for the millions of displaced people could reinforce American diplomacy. And providing massive humanitarian assistance to the refugees (at which the American military is very effective) would increase US soft power enormously.
As it stands, the funding and coordination of America’s soft-power strategy is inadequate. But we know that hard power is not enough, particularly to contest the cyber territory that Daesh occupies — for example, by developing a capacity to take down botnets and counter hostile social-media accounts.
Even if the US and its allies defeat Daesh over the coming decade, we should be prepared for a similar Sunni extremist group to rise from the ashes. Revolutions of the type the Middle East is experiencing take a long time to resolve.
Looking ahead in a region where the US has interests, American policymakers will need to follow a flexible strategy of “containment plus nudging.” However, US foreign policy toward the Middle East will have to develop a higher level of sophistication than the current debate reveals.
Are you willing to deploy the Pakistani Army overseas to fight Daesh? Not just for a month or a year, but for a generation? To fight jihadists abroad and at home not in a battle but as a culture? I would guess not, which is why I'm not optimistic.
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