Bismillah ar Rahman ar Rahim REALPakNationalists

March 9, 2011

PAKISTAN AT WAR

Filed under: Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 8:13 am

The country is at war. This week we have suffered two attacks from Taliban militants that have killed almost 100 people and injured hundreds more.

Tuesday’s bomb attack by Taliban in Faisalabad struck directly at the heart of national security when the attackers detonated car bomb near the PIA building and security services office killing 32 innocent civilians and wounding 125 others.

Faisalabad Bomb Attack

The following day Taliban militants detonated a bomb in Peshawar targeting the grieving civilians attending a funeral procession. In a display of maximum cowardice, the attackers strapped the bomb to a young boy who had been brain washed by the diabolical jihadists.

Peshawar Bombing

Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan declared the attack against Pakistan and vowed to destabilise the country and bring down the government.

THIS IS NOTHING LESS THAN DECLARATION OF WAR BY TALIBAN AGAINST PAKISTAN.

Real Pakistani Nationalists in Pak military fighting back. General Officer Commanding 7-Division Major General Ghayur Mehmood gave briefing with the title, ‘MYTHS AND RUMOURS ABOUT DRONE STRIKES’ and said drone strikes targeting the terrorists who plotting against Pakistan.

The Military’s 7-Dvision’s official paper on the attacks till Monday said that between 2007 and 2011 about 164 predator strikes had been carried out and over 964 terrorists had been killed.

Of those killed, 793 were locals and 171 foreigners, including Arabs, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Chechens, Filipinos and Moroccans.

In 2007, one missile strike left one militant dead while the year 2010 was the deadliest when the attacks had left more than 423 terrorists dead.

In 2008, 23 drone strikes killed 152 militants, 12 of them were foreigners or affiliated with Al Qaeda.

In 2009, around 20 predator strikes were carried out, killing 179 militants, including 20 foreigners, and in the following year 423 militants, including 133 foreigners, were killed in 103 strikes.

In attacks till March 7 this year, 39 militants, including five foreigners, were killed.

This proofs a lie the Taliban propaganda against Pak-US military partnership spread to cause division in Pakistan and undermine the success of military operations. Real Pak Nationalists will not be such fools.

November 13, 2010

Soldiers Give Their Lives, Lawyers Run And Hide

Filed under: Defense,terrorism — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 6:09 am

Every day our soldiers are offering their very lives for their country. Militants have taken a war against Pakistan. What else can it be if these brazen miscreants will attack CID? But our brave soldiers will never run scared.

Pakistani military soldiers guard a street in Swat Valley

But a slap in the face to our military comes from the lawyers and the courts who refuse to do anything to stop these militants once they are captured. This has been known for some time that there is something suspicious going on in the judiciary. Why the military can sacrifice so much for the nation to capture militants and the courts simply give them some ladoos and send them home?

Now we learn that lawyers are running to hide from these militants and refuse to show up to prosecute them!

Public prosecutors in Pakistan have refused to proceed with cases involving suspected militants on the pretext that the banned terror outfits are threatening them with dire consequences if they appeared in court.Media reports Saturday said the anti-terrorism court in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest metropolis, could not try cases against arrested suspects belonging to militant outfits because no public prosecutor was present.

‘Judge Anand Ram was scheduled to hear a case against arrested suspects of Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, while Judge Hasan Bokhari was to hear a case against an accused linked with Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan,’ Aaj TV reported.

‘We are receiving constant threats from accomplices of these terrorists and can’t risk our lives anymore,’ a public prosecutor were quoted as saying.

Now we know who are the COWARDS! Where are the patriots who will not hide in fear from Pakistan’s enemies? Where are the brave souls who will defend her honour and her sovereignty?

These lawyers ask for protection, but they will not do any assistance of even doing their very own job to protect the security of the nation. It is a disgrace!

November 3, 2010

Attacking shrines and the culture of peace

Filed under: terrorism — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:59 pm

Allah, Farid, juhdi hamesha
Au Shaikh Farid, juhdi Allah Allah.

Acquiring Allah’s grace is the aim of my jihad, 0 Farid!
Come Shaikh Farid! Allah, Allah’s grace alone is ever the aim of my jihad
(Baba Guru Nanak Sahib to Baba Shaikh Farid Sahib)

The recent attack on Baba Fariddudin Ganj Shakkar’s shrine in Pakpattan was yet another brazen strike in the ongoing campaign of willful, malevolent and malicious attack on a section of society that believes in the teachings of pluralism and tolerance. Baba Farid, who is revered by Muslim, Sikhs and Hindus alike, is considered to be one of the founders of the Punjabi language in the thirteenth century. The message was unequivocal, “We will keep attacking if you continue with heretic practices and do not follow the interpretation in which we believe in.”

Neither the nature of the attack was new nor was the response of the authorities any different. It is already an established that militant organisations have been attacking whatever they consider ‘unIslamic’ according to their puritanical version of Islam. They do not just have a global agenda, rather they believe in imposing their own version of Sharia in the country.

The attacks on shrines have been taking place all over the country. In March 2005, 35 people lost their lives in a blast at the shrine of Pir Rakhel Shah in a remote village in Jhal Magsi district, Balochistan. In the same year in May, a suicide attack at Bari Imam Islamabad, a mausoleum that attracts people from above and across sectarian divides, took 20 lives and at least 100 people were injured. At first the attacks were mainly concentrated in areas adjacent to militancy-hit region. In December 2007, militants blew up the shrine of Abdul Shakoor Malang Baba near Peshawar. Next year in March, a 400-year-old shrine of Abu Saeed Baba was attacked by Mangal Bagh’s Lashkar-e-Islam with rockets in Shaikhan village of Sarband, which is adjacent to Bara Tehsil of Khyber Agency.  In the same year, 2008, militants detonated explosives in the shrine of Ashaab Baba on the outskirts of Peshawar. Surprisingly, some of these incidents have had little or no coverage in the media.

Then on March 5, 2009, what made headlines was the brazen attack on Rehman baba’s shrine in Hazarkhwani near Peshawar, where the famous Pashtun mystical poet is buried. Though no one was hurt in the attack, it was a rude awakening for many on how the militants have started attacking sites that are considered holy by many. The shrine’s watchman had been receiving threats from militants as many female devotees frequently visited the site. In May 2009, it was the shrine of Sheikh Omar Baba, which was hit.

In the current year, these attacks expanded to the other main cities of Pakistan. First in July, a barbaric attack at Data darbar in Lahore, and then in October  another devastating attack at Shah Ghazi shrine in Karachi led to scores of casualties.

Those who have been perpetrating such attacks are very clear in what they are doing. Sadly, we are not. This is not indiscriminate violence nor are these senseless attacks. The targets selected by the terrorists are symbolic in nature. This is an attack on the culture and practices followed by the majority. Yet our state of denial still exists. Even after all these years, we still hear statements like, ‘Who are these people?’ and, ‘They can not be Pakistanis’ and of course, ‘No Muslim can do it’ not only from common citizens but also from the authorities. There are people among us who very conveniently put the blame on ‘foreign elements.’ As we refuse to realise that we are in a state of war against an ideology of hate and intolerance, which very much threatens to subdue the majority, we will continue to be attacked by them. This ideology is practiced by only a few militant organisations and banned outfits. As long as we allow the few bigots to dictate to us what is right and what is wrong, we will continue to be terrorised.

It is very important to identify the culprits and make an example out of them. It may not be possible to provide fool-proof security to all the holy sites in the country and neither is this the solution. What needs to be done is to go after such terror networks irrespective of where they exist or whatever they are called. The judicial system should be overhauled in order to secure infallible prosecution of such criminals. It will be pertinent if the present wave of judicial activism is directed towards this cause. We have been listening to too many investigation inquiries being conducted but very few have actually produced the desired results. So far, the terrorists are scoring, as far as the reports in media are concerned, and we are just producing knee-jerk reactions.

Voltaire had rightly remarked more than two centuries ago, “So long as the people do not care to exercise their freedom, those who wish to tyrannise will do so; for tyrants are active and ardent, and will devote themselves in the name of any number of gods, religious and otherwise, to put shackles upon sleeping men.”

Source: http://blog.dawn.com/2010/11/03/attacking-shrines-and-the-culture-of-peace/

March 23, 2010

On whose side are the Taliban apologists?

Filed under: Defense,Taliban — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 6:30 am
Imran Khan and Shahbaz Sharif: Taliban Apologists

Imran Khan and Shahbaz Sharif: Taliban Apologists

by Babar Ayaz in Daily Times

To give apologists of the Taliban and jihadi groups among the politicians and journalists the benefit of the doubt, let us presume that either they are politically naïve or they are suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. Their usual refrain is that the Taliban’s terrorism would go away if the government stops taking foreign dictation. I wish it were that simple. Statements of Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Saad Rafiq, Imran Khan and many fellow journalists reflect this mindset and one is amazed how they tend to forget the historical and ideological background of the rise of militant Islam in Pakistan. Blaming the government in this regard is just political point scoring, though sadly on a wrong issue.

Nobody can deny their assertion that interference in the national security policy should not be allowed. But for a moment let us assume we have no US interference in deciding our policy regarding the local and Afghan Taliban. And there is no pressure to wind up the India-specific terrorist networks. Suppose the PML-N is in power trying to work out the national security policy, if at all the GHQ would permit them to enter this sacred zone. In this situation, would they be able to deliberately gloss over the historical and ideological basis of the terrorists’ war against the state?

They will have to analyse the objectives of the people of Pakistan, the Afghan Taliban and the local jihadi organisations and then see whether these objectives are reconcilable with the interest of the majority of Pakistanis.

Once burdened with the power to rule, their analysis would have to be dispassionate, not idealistic. Their government’s ultimate responsibility would be to protect the democratic rights of the people and work towards raising their living standard. I am sure the PML-N realises that in a country where almost every third person lives below the poverty line, we cannot afford to fight the world in the name of promoting an Islamic caliphate.

So let us see what the major actors of this sad saga want:

1) The people of Pakistan: end of Talibanisation and religious extremism in the country; putting a stop to interference in Afghanistan; protection of Pakistan’s legitimate interests in Afghanistan; good relations with the Afghan government and the US; normalisation of relations with India.

2) The local Taliban and jihadi organisations: control over all the tribal areas to begin with, and enforcement of their version of shariah by force; support of the Afghan Taliban’s war against the US and Afghan government; fighting with Pakistani forces if they try to stop militants from joining the Afghan war and entering India for terrorist attacks; continue to support to al Qaeda; bring down the Afghan government; oust the US and NATO forces from Afghanistan; and liberate Kashmir through an armed struggle.

3) The Afghan Taliban: Take over Afghanistan by force and establish a government with their brand of shariah; resist any move by Pakistan to stop them from using its territory as a hinterland.

4) Al Qaeda: Help the Taliban in restoring their government in Afghanistan; continue using Afghanistan as their headquarters to export Islamic revolution through the barrel of the gun to the world; bring down the Pakistani government, which does not support al Qaeda’s ideals.

Now if we look at these demands keeping in view the interest of the people of Pakistan, it is clear that whether we listen to the US or we make indigenous policies, no compromise can be made with the Taliban and jihadis.

First, the people of Pakistan are Muslims, but they do not approve of extremism. They support democracy, which in essence is pluralistic and means tolerance of dissent.

Second, it does not suit Pakistan to help the Afghan Taliban who want to enforce religious fascism in Afghanistan and annoy the West.

Third, Pakistan has to stop interference in Afghanistan. There can be no two views about it. The UN Resolution 1373 “decides also that all states shall: refrain from providing any form of support, active or passive, to entities or persons involved in terrorist acts, including by suppressing recruitment of members of terrorist groups and eliminating the supply of weapons to terrorists.”

True, Pakistan should neither support the Taliban nor the US and NATO forces. But this would only be possible if the Taliban stop using Pakistan as their base and join the Afghan democratic process.

Fourth, Pakistan’s legitimate interest can only be protected in Afghanistan if there is a stable government in Kabul. A prerequisite of achieving this objective is to find a regional solution instead of a Pakistan-India proxy war in Afghanistan.

Fifth, we have to have good relations with the Afghan government. Those who suggest that we should stop supporting the Karzai government tend to forget it is recognised by the entire world and the UN.

Sixth, Pakistan cannot afford to have adversarial relations with the US and other Western countries. There is no reason that we should be fighting with them. Almost the entire economy of Pakistan is dependent on these countries. Over 50 percent exports go to these countries, leave alone the investments and loans, which we get from them. Any conflict with them would lead to sanctions that would mean closure of industries and immense damage to the economy — directly hurting the poor.

Last, no country is supporting the al Qaeda agenda because it is not in sync with 21st century political, social and economic values. Also, their terrorist means and Salafist ideology is unacceptable to the majority of Muslims around the world.

Apologists of the Taliban should realise that no matter who is ruling, it is high time that these terrorists should be dealt with. There should be no confusion that it is the agenda of the people of Pakistan. This is what Pakistan needs. Just because the US is saying the same thing does not mean we should foolishly tell the Taliban that we are on their side. There are no two options. Of course talks with the local and Afghan Taliban are possible if they renounce violence and join the democratic process in their respective countries. The interest of the people of Pakistan should be at the top of our list instead of anti-government and anti-US emotions. The Taliban have offered a deal to the Punjab government. It has a Faustian choice that no apologist can afford to make.

January 16, 2010

Pak-Afghan-Iran united against terror!

Filed under: Afghanistan,Defense,Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , — admin @ 4:20 pm

It is a sign of our sovereignty and regional status that Pakistan conceptualized and participated in the Tri-Nation Conference. Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, along with his Afghan and Iranian counterparts, Rangin Dadfar Spanta and Manouchehr Mottaki, respectively, met and discussed the issues all three nations must focus on together.

After the conference, a declaration was issued stating the following:

1 – All three nations vowed not to allow terrorists any harbor or protection within their borders. Militants and terrorism would find no safe haven under the federal laws of all three nations.

2 – They pledged to work together against cross-border crimes.

3 – A committee would be formed to ensure that the agenda of the meeting is carried out, and also strengthens ties between the neighbors.

“We acknowledge that terrorism poses a common challenge that can only be addressed through concerted efforts,” the three ministers said in the joint declaration issued at a press conference.

The fact is, such conferences are key to our stability and that of our region. We are a strong, vibrant people, and it is our duty to assist our Afghan and Iranian neighbors, especially when we are all battling the same demons.

December 22, 2009

An Existential Threat

The following column by retired Ambassador Javid Husain was first published in The Nation on December 22.

The monster of terrorism stalks the land from one corner to the other posing an existential threat to the nation. Hardly a day passes without a terrorist incident taking place in some part of the country resulting in the loss of innocent lives and causing material destruction. Security establishments, mosques and markets have been the target of this madness. It seems that nothing is safe from the hands of the terrorists who pose a serious threat to the security and economic well being of the nation. The need of the hour is to face and overcome this challenge which otherwise has the potential to tear apart the social fabric of our nation. This would require an objective and dispassionate analysis of the genesis of this threat, the formulation of a comprehensive strategy to eradicate it and the resoluteness of purpose on the part of the nation and the government to implement this strategy.

A successful strategy to overcome the evil of terrorism requires in the first place an understanding of the factors which gave birth to it. After all, terrorism is relatively speaking a new phenomenon in Pakistan’s history. The country was more or less free of this evil till 1990′s when it became the victim of sectarian terrorism. I cannot recall terrorist incidents now causing so much pain and sorrow to us taking place in the country with such ferocity or frequency even in 1980′s when we were deeply involved in supporting the Afghan jihad against the Soviet occupation. 

The problem of terrorism, from which we are suffering now, took roots after the withdrawal of the Red Army from Afghanistan and the commencement of the civil war in Afghanistan between the Pashtuns and the non-Pashtuns after the fall of the Soviet-installed Najibullah regime in Kabul in 1992. Ideally, Pakistan, Iran and other regional countries should have steered clear of this civil war and allowed the Afghan people to decide their destiny without external interference. Unfortunately, that did not happen either because the political leadership in Pakistan and Iran lacked the requisite sagacity and farsightedness or because their security agencies, which were guided by short-term considerations and the goal of military gains instead of a political settlement in Afghanistan, became so powerful that they were able to defy the political leadership. Pakistan extended its support to the Pashtuns led initially by Gulbadin Hikmatyar and later the Taliban despite their retrogressive character while Iran aligned itself on the side of the non-Pashtuns led mainly by the Northern Alliance in the see-saw struggle for power in Afghanistan which continues till today. Unfortunately, Al-Qaeda was able to entrench itself in Afghanistan during the Taliban rule. The present political dispensation, particularly the composition of the security forces in Afghanistan, established after the fall of the Taliban regime in the aftermath of 9/11 when Pakistan decided to support the US invasion of Afghanistan, by far favours the non-Pashtuns and is the real cause of the deep and widespread dissatisfaction felt by the Pashtuns. It also underlies the continued Taliban insurgency and the conflict between the Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns in Afghanistan. A peace settlement between the two warring sides together with the withdrawal of the foreign forces is, therefore, an essential pre-requisite for durable peace in Afghanistan.

Pakistan became the target of the current tidal wave of terrorism after it tried, under the American pressure, to deny sanctuary in its tribal areas to the Taliban/Afghan Pashtuns fighting the US forces and particularly after it tried to stop its Pashtun tribesmen from going to the support of their brethren in Afghanistan. The fury of the Pashtuns in Afghanistan and in our tribal areas which was to be directed against the coalition forces has instead been aimed now at the military and civilian targets in Pakistan. Thus, the presence of the US forces in Afghanistan and their efforts to bludgeon the Pashtuns in that country into submission in total disregard of their justified political aspirations and cultural sensitivities have not only destabilised our tribal areas but also pose a serious threat to the peace and security of the rest of the country.

In a nutshell, the current tidal wave of terrorism in Pakistan can be ascribed to the following factors. Firstly, it can be attributed to our willingness, for a variety of reasons, to tolerate the continued existence on our soil of the ideological and training infrastructure which had been created initially for supporting the Afghan jihad against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Secondly, it is the logical outcome of our policy of involvement in the civil war in Afghanistan and our ill-conceived and short-sighted policy of support to the retrogressive Taliban regime in 1990′s despite regional and international isolation. The current wave of religious extremism and terrorism in Pakistan is the blowback effect of those flawed policies. Thirdly, we have become the victim of terrorism because of our meek surrender in the face of the US demands to “do more” militarily without impressing upon the Americans the imperative of combining the use of military force against Al-Qaeda and other terrorist elements with political initiatives to engage moderate Taliban elements and promote a peace settlement in Afghanistan.

A comprehensive strategy to overcome the menace of terrorism must be based on a judicious combination of the use of force and political initiatives. The first and foremost element of this strategy should be the dismantlement of the ideological and training infrastructure which we inherited from the days of the Afghan jihad against the Soviets. This infrastructure now poses a serious threat to Pakistan’s internal and external security. Secondly, we should abide by a policy of non-interference in Afghanistan’s internal affairs and support efforts to promote national reconciliation and a peace settlement in Afghanistan free from outside interference. Other neighbours of Afghanistan must be encouraged to follow similar policies. Thirdly, Washington must be advised to combine the use of force against terrorists with political initiatives aimed at promoting a just peace settlement in Afghanistan with the promise of the early withdrawal of its troops from that country. Fourthly, we should engage the moderate elements among the Pakistani Taliban politically to isolate and overcome the extremists within them while continuing the fight against the terrorists who refuse to lay down arms. In view of the cross-border links between the tribes in Afghanistan and those in Pakistan, the chances of success of the political initiatives by the US and Pakistan will improve if they are taken simultaneously. Fifthly, we must revamp our intelligence agencies which so far have failed miserably to do their job of identifying, infiltrating and eliminating the terrorist cells in different parts of the country. Finally, the nation and the government must promote the Islamic principles of tolerance and moderation in our society. This is the demand of the nation’s internal and external security as well as of its economic progress and well being.

December 18, 2009

Attacks Will Never Diminish Our Resolve

Filed under: Defense — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 2:36 pm

For the second time n two weeks, a mosque used by Pakistani security forces has been attacked. Ten people are confirmed dead.

They had been praying Jum’ah namaaz.

This once again goes to show there is no logic in the war against extremism. We are dealing with an ideology that demands cold-hearted murder of anyone who wants freedom and harmony. Our enemy is spiteful, vicious and will not hesitate to kill fellow Pakistanis.

Innocent men, women and children have been dying at the hands of these monsters for years. We are now at a point where the federal government has pledged all possible resources to fighting these extremists. We see efforts and bravery by our military and civilian population. We see small victories when Pakistani villagers step up against the evil pervading their lives and fight back. We see large victories by our resilient army, as they demonstrate success in their undertaken offensive.

We are all Pakistanis, and we are committed to security and peace for our nation.

The people who died today will add to the astronomical figure of Pakistanis killed at the hands of extremists. With all the suicide bombings and attacks, it is perhaps easy to become desensitized but that would be an insult to the dead.

With every suicide bombing and attack, our resolve must become stronger and our unity ever more solid.

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.

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