Bismillah ar Rahman ar Rahim REALPakNationalists

December 7, 2009

Fighting the Madness

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 2:04 pm

The madness must end. Immediately following an attack on a Rawalpindi mosque and a Peshawar court house, we are not watching the events unfold from a blast at a women’s market in Lahore.

The extremists are becoming increasingly more deranged and desperate, and trying their best to paralyze the country! We must band together and stand united against this madness!

The tactics are becoming a bit more sophisticated. According to a New York Times article, Pervez Rathore, the Lahore police chief, said there was a strong possibility that the bombs were detonated by remote control, rather than suicide attack. But the authorities still had not determined the exact cause of the bombing by late Monday night.

Hafiz Anwar, who works in a crockery shop in the market, said the attack on Monday had come without warning and had flung pots to the ceiling of his shop. Afterward, he was searching for friends who had vanished in the blast.

“We are unable to trace many of our friends,” Mr. Anwar said, his eyes filled with tears.

As Pakistanis, we have to continue to fight for peace in our country, though at times it looks like it is hard to see through the smoke of such attacks.

November 30, 2009

We will take our country back!

Filed under: Defense — Tags: , , , — admin @ 10:01 am

The philosopher John Stuart Mill once said “War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things.”

I do not like wars, but then, who ever does? Families are torn apart, lives are ended brutally early, and inconceivable potential is gone to waste. But when we look back through the course of human history, we recognize the moments where war was a necessity, because the alternative was, as Mill would say, “the uglier thing.”

I see my country torn apart with bombing after assassination after bombing. Schools are bombed and UN aid buildings are blown up. I read the stories of courageous police officers who are killed trying to protect everyday Pakistanis. Men, women and children in cities and villages all over the country are dying. After every incident, there is a sorrow but after so many, there is numbness. .

To me, living under the dark, hate-filled, miserable world of extremism is the uglier thing. The cancer of extremism has been allowed to seep in over the past several decades, and now the Zardari administration has decided to confront it.

In his recent article, Anwar Shakir quotes military spokesman Athar Abbas who said Pakistani forces have killed fighters in the South Waziristan offensive.

Nobody should doubt Pakistan’s sincerity in the fight against terrorism, Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said, according to the official Associated Press of Pakistan.

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We are working hard to take our country back, and inshallah, we will win.

November 3, 2009

The heart desires more!

Agha Haider Raza puts forward an argument articulating to look more towards the future rather than harping upon the past.

Looking at the past week, one can see how resilient Pakistanis have become.  Suffering numerous suicide bomb attacks and wide-spread military action, we are here yet again, still standing.  But how long can we sustain ourselves at this current rate of demolition? How many times will we resist smacking the hammer on our own foot? Nowadays we seem to have become the offspring of Glenn Beck and the Republican Party.  With a constant denial of the harsh reality and a love for misconstruing and fabricating baseless facts that just aim to maim the United States, we seem to be struggling.  And when we struggle, we play the role of a secluded, spoilt child.

Prior to 9/11, we perfected this character, but now the circumstances have changed. We can no longer do as we please without being held accountable for our actions.Pakistan has suffered.  Thousands of innocent lives have been lost at the hands of suicide bombs and ambush attacks.  Women have lost husbands, sons and brothers and it is despicable at the number of families that have suffered.  Much to the dismay of our right-wing journalists, I am not going to be making a presumed argument as to how India, Israel or even the United States are after Pakistan’s existence.  It’s just not happening, guys! I feel it would also be fruitless to engage in a history lecture as to who gave rise to the mujahedeen since various institutions in our country groomed them.  But by excluding so much, the foreign influence and historic aspect many would argue that I have no argument.  But for a split second, would it be possible to sit and analyze how we can carry ourselves into the future rather than dissecting the past?

Many times a day, we read in the newspapers and on the internet, the extent by which America has extended its influence within Pakistan.  From Blackwater to US diplomats wielding weapons and the constant chatter in regards to the Americans taking over our nuclear arsenal, we’ve heard it all.  I would like to take this opportunity and remind my avid readers that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are not hidden in any underground garage that can be easily picked up by “US diplomat”.  I have more faith in my military that protects such weapons than those journalists and commentators who seem to believe otherwise.

The United States Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, came and went.  Although she was given a red-carpet upon landing, there were times where her reception was – well – jagged.  Criticism and resentment towards the United States is understandable.  Issues ranging from drone attacks (which is debatable!), alleged presence of US personnel and expansion of the US embassy are some of the concerns Pakistanis share.  But how much credit have we given Hillary Clinton for taking the initiative of reaching out across the political spectrum?  Firstly, she stayed for three days.  Both President Bush and President Clinton had to arrive in secrecy in Pakistan, and the statements they made seem more like a photo-op than anything substantive.  Upon meeting specific people, both Presidents took off and that was the end of their journey into Pakistan.

Secretary Clinton on the other hand, not only met those in office, but those outside of office as well.  She took a step further and held a town-hall debate with students and met various journalists while giving time to Pashtun elders as well.  But was this enough to please our right-wing journalists? Of course not! They had problems with the type of journalists she met, the transparency of the business leaders she conversed with and the lack of money she brought with her.  Did they even dare comment on the extent to which she tried to rectify the failure of previous administrations?  We only felt too proud, when a journalist claimed that we are fighting America’s war.  Proud because we assumed someone was able to stand up to the mighty Clinton.  Unfortunately, the moderator failed to realize that when a Pakistani is killed on a daily basis, it becomes the responsibility of our government and our military, thus our war.

I fail to understand how we keep asking for more aid money and assistance from around the globe, but at the same time are completely unwilling to be held accountable for the pennies we spend.  We lambasted the IMF for bailing us out of near bankruptcy.  No doubt the IMF places stringent conditions when offering loans, but is it safe to assume that if we had the money, we would not need to be borrowing? Pakistan’s tax-GDP ratio is a number that is so micro, I don’t think it would be visible here.  On the other hand we enjoy receiving other countries money, as long as we do not tell them, where and how it is being spent.  Frankly speaking, it is not fair to use aid money in this manner of secrecy, nor should we allow other countries to micromanage us, just because we have been given their aid money.  This mantra of dil maange aur (the heart desires more) needs to stop.  And can only stop if we are faithful to ourselves.  Although we tend to be very egotistical when it comes all other issues, but taking a kashkol (begging bowl) to other countries seems to make us forget all about our ego.

Pakistan is at its wits end.  We must take the reins of our future and grasp them tightly.  Rooting out militants from South Waziristan is only a step towards cleansing our country of this disgusting and twisted ideology that causes inhumane persons to blow themselves up and kill others.  Condemning the United States will not stop a child in Lahore from gathering a bogus understanding of Islam that will cause him to take the lives of others, nor will it rid us of the poverty in Karachi and unemployment issues in Peshawar.  To counter this we need a united front in order to stop the ethnic tensions rising between us.  This is where your role as a Pakistani citizen comes into play.  All our lives we learnt not to point fingers at others, and now when the going gets tough, we find it only to easy blaming others for our predicaments.  At the end of the day, we all know our destiny lies only in our hands; no other country has control over it.  Believe it!


If ignorance is bliss, Sumayya Chawla is the happiest woman on the planet.

Another scorcher from Sana! If you’re not reading Sana’s blog, please you must add it to your list!

If ignorance is bliss, Sumayya Chawla is the happiest woman on the planet.

In her fantastically ridiculous piece, Is Pakistani Media Awake?, she is unflinchingly absurd, demonstrating to us all she has somehow escaped any character trait remotely resembling reasonableness.

It would be wrong to deride a work without citing the offensive statements, so here, dear Reader, is a small sampling of her rock-filled dish:

The ‘tough love’ response of Mrs Clinton to this was something along the lines of  ‘ well I am sorry you feel that way but it wasn’t our intention, you don’t have to take the money you know, if you don’t want to’. What exactly is going on here? Why isn’t anyone telling madam secretary that your country is killing innocent Pakistanis, killing babies rather, as she was so keen on pointing out in her address to university students in Lahore. Why didn’t any of our esteemed journalists ask her why the US is busy killing and bombing Pakistanis if we are such great friends and allies? Why wasn’t it politely suggested to her that she perhaps should not have come to Pakistan as she wasn’t very welcome here. Why don’t we see a revolt in the Pakistani media against the freak show that was Clinton’s visit to Pakistan? Why didn’t the big shot media anchors boycott the interview with Hillary Clinton while more than a 100 Pakistanis were being blown up in Peshawar and hundreds more were fighting for their lives? If Mr. Zardari and his government are not human enough to feel any empathy for his fellow Pakistanis who suffered terribly in this outrageous attack, where was the Pakistani media, why didn’t they refuse to cover her visit due to a national tragedy?  If they are such torchbearers of truth, then how dare they sat in their suits and ties and conducted an interview that amounted to nothing in terms of expressing the real sentiments of the majority of the Pakistani public? American Govt. has taken off its gloves and is now openly hostile to the Pakistani state and people, so why in God’s name are we still walking on eggshells.

As a lit major, the grammatical errors were enough to knock me down. However, I shall put forth a Herculean effort to ignore them all because we’re dealing with the bigger issue of her thought process mirroring that of a two-year old.

Within her bewildering rhetorical questions, I see her tripping over her own points.

I shall answer with my very own attempt at the Socratic method:

Is there anything wrong with a nation granting aid to another nation, especially one with which its aims are so closely aligned? Exactly what was wrong with Secretary Clinton pointing out Pakistan was under no obligation to take the aid? And exactly why are you viciously against the aid going to schools, police officers, health clinics, etc? Did you want to match the funds of Kerry-Lugar and supply the country with assistance? (That would be awfully generous of you!) Are you as upset with other international aid groups and private donors who donate to charitable causes within Pakistan? If not, I highly recommend you buy a dictionary and look up the word “consistency,” it’s a great word, one of my favorites. Ms. Chawla, do you have sympathy for any of the people killed by extremists or is your screeching reserved specifically for all things related to drones? Can you so easily ignore the suicide bombings and drive-by assassinations of brigadiers? If so, the Pakistani public envies you a good deal. Exactly why should the media have boycotted the interview with Secretary Clinton? How is closing our eyes and covering our ears going to solve problems? (See, this is where I see a vast wilderness of immaturity where your rationality should be, Miss Chawla.) Any notion of a “biased-in-favor-of-President-Zardari” media culture in Pakistan can be immediately dismissed, for even the President’s most outspoken detractors admit the media is staunchly anti-Zardari. In this way, do you realize you have outdone the Ahmed Quraishis of Pakistan? I advise you to be careful though, Mr. Quraishi tries his best to outdo everyone else in his nonsensical vitriol, he may not appreciate playing second fiddle to you. Also, please respect the office of the President and address him as such…he was voted in democratically, and if you must kick and scream, take that up with the public that voted overwhelmingly for the PPP. You wrote “American Govt. has taken off its gloves and is now openly hostile to the Pakistani state and people.” Did you consciously disregard the Secretary’s statements of friendship? I shall include one: “I am well aware that there is a trust deficit. My message is that’s not the way it should be. We cannot let a minority of people in both countries determine our relationship.” Miss Chawla, it appears you do a wonderful job on inducing amnesia and forget all the hard work both Americans and Pakistanis have done, currently do, and will continue doing to foster better relations.

You ask if the media is awake…I have to answer that no, the media — and you! — are fast asleep at the wheel.

Being ignorant is not so much a shame, as being unwilling to learn. If you cannot or are not willing to learn, Miss Chawla, then the knowledgeable and well-versed in nuance among us have a task: to continuously point out the flaws in arguments like yours and offer a vision of a world not driven by hate or fear-mongering.

November 2, 2009

Is this what they want?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 10:30 am

Today there were two suicide attacks in Pakistan, killing at least 37 and wounding at least 65. Two suicide attacks start off the week, continue to terrorize citizens, and to a great extent, end several UN programs.

In Rawalpindi, a suicide bomber detonated outside a bank, as men and women lined up in the heat to collect their salaries. At a checkpoint near Lahore, it was a white Suzuki that caught the eye of police officers, men with reliable instincts and a desire to protect civilians. They tried to stop it from entering the city and that was when it exploded.

In an earlier post, I wrote about the very clear signs that extremist attacks would no longer be limited to the far corners of the country. These attacks confirm it, and confirm something else, too: international aid groups fear for the safety of their workers and are pulling out.

The most obvious example of this is the United Nations. Its tireless work in the region has been overshadowed by the killings of UN workers. The attack on the UN World Food Program shocked Pakistanis and the world…how could an organization that worked to feed the poor be a possible target? The workers were Muslims — three men, two Pakistani and an Iraqi and two Pakistani women paid the ultimate price for their jobs in public service.

Are we going to let these brutes rip apart the lives of hard-working Pakistanis and prevent a brother from helping his own? Is that the kind of country they chase after, a barren wasteland of death and desolation?

Is that what they want?

It doesn’t much matter. The Zardari administration has decided failure is not an option, and will continue to work against extremism — short-term strategies include military offensives, long-term includes economic development and education. This, of course, is where we will sorely miss the NGOs if they cut activities due to security risks. It is a tough battle, but Pakistanis are strong-minded and will win.

The journalists and career-politicians attacking government initiatives should compare how easy it is for them to write rubbish and have checks float their way to that man who waited in line at the bank to collect his check and was massacred. By chasing their few minutes of fame with hyperbolic statements, these people give extremists the opening to continue and bolster their power.

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Is this what they want?

October 29, 2009

The truth will set you free

Sana A urges Pakistanis to counter the spreading threat of extremism:

How many deaths will take it til they know that too many people have died?

Innocence lost, lives brutally snatched away. Weeping women, stunned men, dead children.

It becomes easy to lose count of the terrorist attacks when they happen in rapid-fire succession. It becomes easier still to keep from crying, as the deaths desensitize you time and time again.

But some things become harder.

It becomes harder to call extremists “Islamic” when they insist on killing students at segregated Islamic universities. It becomes harder for men like Nawaz Sharif and Imran Khan to watch the families of the victims wail in agony, since their sympathies are only for terror suspects killed by American drones. It becomes harder still to box extremism in the far-flung regions of the country.

I see something in the images of terror’s after-math. Amidst blood-splattered rubble lies a complicated reality: extremism is not just in FATA and the NWFP. It is slowly seeping into the heartland of Pakistan and will continue this trend; it has already reared its ugly head in the capital city of Islamabad, and threatens the urban centers of Lahore and Karachi. The entire country is on its way to a culture of fear and paralysis.

Pakistanis must, absolutely must acknowledge this. When will the country realize that the problems and failings of Pakistan can never be pegged on conspiracy theories, involving any combination of Israel, America and India? The problems are home-grown, the failings are organic.

To save Pakistan, we must realize that extremism is breeding, at an alarming rate, throughout the nation. The threats are real, sickening in their unreasonable goals.

Just look at who they have killed.

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The dead are not enemies of Islam. They are teachers, police officers, aid workers, students, children too young to even understand why someone can hate. The victims are ordinary, hard-working Pakistanis, they lived with allegiance to their country’s flag and wanted a stable life. They are dead, and undoubtedly more will die. But the question is…how many more deaths will it take before Pakistanis fight back and save their nation?

October 21, 2009

Meaning of the attack at the IIU

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:53 am

Sana A blogs about what we can gather from the carefully selected location of the recent attacks at International Islamic University.

Yesterday, six people were killed when two suicide bombs went off at International Islamic University. It was the most recent in a series of attacks to rock the nation.

A video on the University’s website sums up its purpose, “At International Islamic University, Islamabad, we are for knowledge beyond boundaries.”

The Pakistani public and various media commentators seem to be bewildered at the choice for the twin attacks. After all, this is an institution that emphasizes Islamic principles and lifestyle choices with the technological world.

“International Islamic University represents the sphere of deliberation and institutionalized religion which attacks the very notion of militant warfare that is being espoused by groups like Al Qaeda and the Taliban that see themselves as counterrevolutionary forces,” said Rafia Zakaria, a columnist for Dawn, the country’s most prestigious daily newspaper.

Why would extremists harm this institution and Pakistani students?

The answer is simple: we are dealing with groups that have no respect for life or liberty, and they are entering into a new phase — one in which any death is acceptable. In the days leading up to the Pakistani Army’s offensive into South Waziristan (which began Saturday), Pakistan saw attacks and fatalities almost every day.

These are people who live in a world of inconsistencies and general hypocrisy. They would berate the US and the West for allegedly wanting to take over their country, while killing their fellow citizens. They claim to treat women better and respect them more than the West does, but will not hear of equal education. There is a reason a bomb was detonated specially in the women’s area of the University.

Public opinion has been staunchly against the Taliban, but has never transferred over fully into support for the administration’s anti-Taliban efforts.

It is time to fully support Pakistani initiatives to free the country once and for all…we need to stop losing the bright, caring and hard-working people to these extremists.

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