Bismillah ar Rahman ar Rahim REALPakNationalists

January 27, 2011

PAKISTAN NATIONALISTS REJECT JIHADI KILLERS

Real Pak Heroes

Real Pakistan Heroes Police and Military Saving Lives

Following deadly attacks on Pakistani citizens in Lahore and Karachi this week, Chief of Police Lahore Aslam Tareen told The Nation that “religious elements are playing in the hands of enemies of Pakistan in the name of Islam”. Pakistani nationalists must unite to defeat these Trojan Horses who seek to destabilize and break up the Pakistani nation.

Federal Minister for Interior Senator Rehman Malik condemned the attacks carried out by jihadi suicide bombers and declared Pakistan Police Medal (PPM) to those heroes who have sacrificed their lives in the line of their duty. The injured Manzoor ASI has also been awarded Pakistan Police Medal (PPM) on the recommendation of IG Sindh.

Pakistani police and military are the true heroes against such anti-Pakistan elements as TTP, LeT, SSP and other jihadi groups that murder innocent Pakistani citizens and attempt to create chaos and division among the masses. True Muslim leaders will take an effective role to counter the recruitment of Pakistani youth by these groups.

The government must take concrete steps to deal with hostile elements to disrupt their nefarious designs. Moreover, religious leaders of different factions should play more effective role to counter this menace as the country is at war in which the enemy is unseen.

There is a need for general awareness among the public about terrorists’ techniques used to subvert the uneducated youth and their method of infiltrating communities and masses to gain their support during planning and execution phases.

Police experts emphasise on the importance of resumption of local community vigilance system, coordination with police and monitoring of children’s activities by their parents.

Also the proud Pakistani citizen must exercise vigilance by being aware of jihadi techniques and tell-tale-signed and alert law enforcement of these when they are noticed.

‘We need the cooperation of public and activation of community vigilance system as it will enable law enforcing agencies to deliver more effectively and efficiently’, police officers say.

The communities and the masses should learn the techniques used by the terrorists to subvert their off shorts. The masses should be motivated to offer cooperation to the community leaders and the law-enforcing agencies to counter the menace of terrorism.

Most important the Islamist parties must not put their own ambitions ahead of the national interests. Islamist parties must issue declarations condemning the jihadi militant groups and call on true Muslims to work within the political process to protect the country and reject sectarian violence.

Political set up in Pakistan is moving in divergent directions where they would be exposed to more vulnerable risks and mutual destructive moves. Under such atmosphere, the government should give a clear message to all the Islamist parties, whose role is enshrined in our cultural life, to choose their aims and strategies correctly beyond sectarian considerations to set the domestic policies in order to shed away charges of breeding terrorism in the world.

A unified Paksitan is stronger than a thousand nations and will never fall prey to the threats and attacks of miscreants and evil groups that twist the teachings of Islam to justify their violence against our people.

December 29, 2010

NEW TERROR SYNDICATE THREATENS PAKISTAN

Filed under: Defense,Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 11:11 am

In the past one lashkar was different from another lashkar and each could be treated differently with regards to its position towards the state. But today that has changed. New evidence reveals that a new terror syndicate is threatening Pakistan’s sovereignty as traditionally independent and opposing militant groups are joining forces to attack Pakistan’s military and government according to a report in The New York Times.

Increased cooperation among insurgent factions also is being reported inside Pakistan, where many of the extremist organizations are based or where their leaders have found a haven.

American and NATO officials said they had seen evidence of loose cooperation among other insurgent groups, including Lashkar-e-Taiba and Tehrik-i-Taliban.

Lashkar is a Punjabi group and is considered one of the most serious long-term threats inside Pakistan. The Punjabi groups, many of which were created by Pakistani intelligence to fight against India’s interests in Kashmir, now appear to be teaming up with Pashtun groups like the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban to fight their creators, the Pakistani intelligence and security services.

Pentagon and military officials who routinely engage with their Pakistani counterparts said officials in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, agreed with the new American and NATO assessments.

“This is actually a syndicate of related and associated militant groups and networks,” said one American officer, summarizing the emerging view of Pakistani officials. “Trying to parse them, as if they have firewalls in between them, is really kind of silly. They cooperate with each other. They franchise work with each other.”

Just as the American support for al Qaeda as proxy fighters in Afghanistan during the Cold War has come back to haunt it in the case of 9/11 and other attempted attacks on American soil, so our own support for militia groups as proxy fighters to liberate Kashmir has turned its venom upon us.

September 9, 2010

Let Government Take Over Flood Rehabilitation, Let Army Fight Taliban

Source: Daily Times

Merciless and vengeful, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has struck once again, this time in a police colony in Kohat. Detonating an explosives-laden pickup inside the compound, just behind the guarded police lines, the blast ripped through almost 300 buildings, including schools, markets and residential homes. The scenes were truly horrific as the majority of the 20 killed were women and children who were inside their homes during iftaar time. It is expected that the death toll will rise as there were still some people trapped under the rubble of the TTP’s latest attack.

Vowing to take revenge for the drone strikes in the tribal areas, the TTP has promised more attacks on security and government officials. Such grim announcements and brutal massacres should not come as a surprise as the past week has demonstrated just how determined the militants are to step up their game now that the military’s attention has been diverted towards flood relief. Anyone who thought that the softest targets in society — women, children and residential areas — would be safe, has not understood the reality of the shadowy enemy we are up against. The militants aim to cause maximum damage, widespread fear and loss of lives to prove their point; what better way than to target the most vulnerable? That is why Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain has urged the security forces to implement well-coordinated and effective action against the terrorists. He has stated that it is vital that military attention be diverted from the floods to the insurgency once again.

After such an attack and chilling warning, it is vital that all efforts be taken to protect such areas. When it has been proclaimed that government, security and police officials are under the most threat, nothing should be left to chance; check-posts, apart from being an irritant, have done nothing to secure the urban and settled areas. We need better intelligence to prevent the militants from moving ahead with their dastardly mission. An insecure security force translates into one that is incapable of securing the citizenry.

As further evidence of the virulent spread of terrorism in all its manifestations, the Vice Chancellor (VC) of Islamia College University, Dr Ajmal Khan, was kidnapped on Tuesday by suspected militants. Dr Ajmal is the cousin of Awami National Party’s Chief Asfandyar Wali Khan. It is suspected that the VC has been taken to the Khyber Agency in an eerily similar fashion to the November 2009 kidnapping of the VC of Kohat University of Science and Technology, Dr Lutfullah Kakakhel, who was also spirited off and kept in captivity by the militants for six months. Targeting senior academics is in line with the Taliban view of obliterating education. Another girls school has been blown up in Kalam. This is sadly a routine activity for the militants.

The terrorists are spreading and setting off their attacks like literal hand grenades in almost all regions of the country — tribal and urban. From Kohat to Hangu, where a blast targeting two police mobile vans killed one constable, and Karachi, where an activist of the Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat was gunned down, no place seems safe from the grip of terrorism. It is time that a full throttle plan is enforced against this scourge that is making its malignant presence felt every single day.

It is time that the flood relief transitioned into rehabilitation. It is time that the government and civil administration of the country take over managing the flood efforts from the army so that an organised military offensive once again strikes at the heart of the Taliban insurgency. Without the army fully engaging in eliminating the terrorists, such attacks are likely to be witnessed with increasing frequency.

May 15, 2010

THIS is what you are defending?

Filed under: Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , , — admin @ 11:15 am

For every one who writes comments defending Taliban, THIS is what you are defending? What kind of monster would write a threat to a school girl, a daughter of the nation? This is NOT Islam. This is NOT Pakistani. This is some bastards who do not deserve defending.

TTP writes threat letter to school

TTP writes threat letter to school

 

Source: http://dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\05\15\story_15-5-2010_pg1_8

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.

March 21, 2010

We Must Unite To Defeat Taliban

Filed under: Taliban — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 5:56 am

Ismail Khan’s column in Dawn today should be read by all. With all the talk from the Sharif’s about sparing Punjab and sacrificing the rest of the country, the flames of provincialism have been fanned. But if Pakistan is to survive, if we are to come out of this war stronger and with a secure future for our children, we must do away with this provincialism and stand united as on Pakistan.

How does it feel caught in the eye of the storm? For nearly seven years, the people of the NWFP and the adjacent tribal regions and the security forces braved bombings and terrorist attacks, laying down their lives and offering unprecedented sacrifices. That was, when terrorists had turned the NWFP and the tribal regions into killing fields, while those living further a field to the east in the Punjab and Sindh were lived a relatively unscathed life.

The lull in terrorist attacks during the February, 2008 elections and the months afterwards because of the government’s peace-overtures towards the militants, were followed by a dramatic uptick in deadly bombings that exacerbated human toll with every passing day.

Those have been one of the most difficult times in the history of the NWFP, when every new day brought in more blood and gore. Still, nobody seemed moved in Islamabad and Rawalpindi. Such was the frustration that people began to seriously ask if the NWFP had been abandoned to its fate.

The irony was that while Pakistani militants spilled the blood and slit the throats of their own countrymen, our drawing room intellectuals, right wingers and armchair anchors split their hair if the war being fought in the tribal regions was Pakistan’s own.

That was rubbing salt into the wounds of those in the NWFP suffering the pain of a thousand cuts not just at hand of the militants’ brigades but also the apathy and indifference of their brethren in the rest of Pakistan.

That changed in 2009, when the military establishment finally woke up from its deep slumber to the existential challenge to the state by the aggressive and more ambitious militants menacingly setting their eye on areas across the Indus.

Swat was the turnaround followed by South Waziristan. Newton’s third law of motion says that every action generates an opposite and equal reaction. Holed up in North Waziristan and relatively smaller pockets in Orakzai, Tirah and Mohmand, the militants are now fighting their own survival war. So, it would have been naïve, if not downright stupid, on our part not to expect retaliation; and they will hit where it hurts the more: Punjab.

This, because in the militants’ own calculation; and unfortunately, it was a perception many in the NWFP had come to hold too, due to the seeming indifference to their plight in Punjab and elsewhere, that to change the course of military action, take the battle to the heartland of the military power — the Punjab.

Nor that the militants would think twice before striking anywhere in the NWFP, if an opportunity presents itself. Attacks continue across the length and breadth of the NWFP, though the scale and recurrence of these attacks have, mercifully, shown a remarkable downward trend.

So, should the chief minister of Punjab, Shahbaz Sharif, be surprised over the outrage caused by his appeal to the Taliban to spare his province because both opposed foreign dictation? Does he still wonder, no matter what spin his advisers try to weave around his rather timid statement, why the Taliban are now choosing to hit the citadel of his power; Lahore? And was he taken aback when the military chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani summoned him to Rawalpindi to give him a piece of his mind?

It took the military nearly two years, of course with the much needed crucial and critical support of the political leadership, to turn the tide against the militants by shaping up public opinion, to own this war as Pakistan’s own.

So, was Mr Sharif implying that the war that was being fought in the volatile tribal regions of South Waziristan, Bajaur, Khyber, Orakzai and other places is not Pakistan’s own and was being carried out on foreign dictations?

Did he realise what toll would his statement take of the morale of the forces fighting in some of the world’s toughest regions? Did he know how much effort it took to motivate the forces to take on an enemy that claimed to be fighting a holy war in the name of Islam?

Did he know the possible implications his statement could have, for reaching out to the militants to seek reprieve for a province that is a major contributor of manpower to the armed forces?

These are pretty serious questions and that is precisely why the controversy his statement generated refuses to die down. Statesmanship is not just about rendering Faiz Ahmad Faiz, it requires foresight as well. It was therefore, all the more ironical that this could have come from a man, which the establishment once wanted to hoist on Pakistan.

Wonder why, those who have had no love lost for the present dispensation, have now come to like them more than they liked the Sharifs for being the new saviors of the country.

But what is probably more worrying in this whole sordid affair is the ethnic dimension that terrorist incidents have assumed.

That Punjab has been in perpetual self denial about the existence of Punjabi Taliban and what is cooking in its own backyard in southern Punjab will have its own implications for Pakistan’s most populous province and by extension on the whole of the country.

But what has begun to happen does not bode well for national unity — the witch-hunt bordering on ethnic profiling after terrorist attacks in the Punjab and Sindh, when Pashtuns invariably become a suspect and is picked-up for questioning. Sadly, the electronic media cannot exonerate itself from playing up this ethnic dimension.

It is unfortunate that the militants are probably more united than our own political leadership across the broad political spectrum. Instead of seeking a common cause with the militants, the chief minister of Punjab should at least have learnt one thing from the Taliban — their unity. The Taliban may be known by their origin but when it comes to fighting an enemy, they are one, be that in Afghanistan or in Pakistan.

March 17, 2010

Remove Shahbaz Sharif

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 7:46 am
Punjab Chief Minister Mian Shahbaz Sharif Surrenders to TTP

Punjab Chief Minister Mian Shahbaz Sharif Surrenders to TTP

What is the difference between asking for a truce with TTP and trying to surrender Pakistan? This action by CM Shahbaz Sharif makes me sick. Why hasn’t PML-N at least kicked him out? How can he stay in office after this act of TREASON???

Of course he is trying to back up and save his own skin after his words were caught. But for all the talk about corruption in government, is there anything so sinister as trying to SURRENDER TO TALIBAN!!!???

PLEASE CONTACT PML-N HEAD OFFICE AND DEMAND THAT SHAHBAZ SHARIF BE REMOVED!!!

PML-N Head Office
House No 20-H streets 10, sector F-8/3 Islamabad.
Secretary General Direct NO : 051-2852661
Secretariat Phone and Fax No : 051-2852662,
051-2852663 and 051-2852665
E-mail : pmlisb@hotmail.com

March 3, 2010

Debate About Taliban Appeasement Is Over

Pakistan or Taliban: Whose side are you on?

The debate about Taliban appeasement is over. We have wasted too much time and energy fighting about whether or not there is a difference between Afghan Taliban and Pakistani Taliban. We have argued with each other about whether or not we should be fighting Pakistani Taliban and working out deals with Afghani Taliban. Now we know certainly that there is no difference. Whether fighting in Afghanistan or bombing schools in Pakistan, Taliban are the same group. And this group is our enemy.

The News yesterday makes plain the reason – events over the past few days have proved for all that Taliban and Afghanistan and Pakistan are one group of militant butchers.

There are significant and far-reaching shifts in the way in which the ruling establishment perceives and interacts with the Pakistani Taliban and the Afghan Taliban. Until very recently they were seen as discrete entities, separate but having complementarities and some shared interests. Today, there is a recognition – somewhat belated but no less welcome for all of that – that both the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Quetta Shura Taliban (QST) are essentially one and the same; jihadi organisations which have the overthrow of the state of Pakistan as well as Afghanistan as their core objective. Over the last eight weeks we have seen nine of the eighteen key members of the Quetta Shura detained by our security forces in several parts of the country. Whilst it is not possible to second-guess what will come next, it may be reasonable to assume that other detentions will follow, and if so, this will weaken the QS and by extension the TTP – which is a very long way from the position long-held wherein a benign linkage was maintained with both groups as a hedge against the future withdrawal of coalition troops in Afghanistan.

When viewed together the TTP and the QS are a large, flexible, adaptive, resourceful and well-equipped single entity that has the capacity to inflict death and destruction to a wide range of targets. Together, they are now seen to represent an institutional threat to our country. They have the ability to terrorise and destabilise large parts of our sovereign territory, and to threaten our infant democracy. That we today recognise this is not just because the Americans have demanded it, but because we have recognised that it is no longer in our best interests to maintain this dubious dark alliance. Other regional players, closer friends than Uncle Sam, have had a role in our rethinking of the concept of strategic depth. It is alleged that the Saudis have played a part, and if true we may have much to thank them for in the future. Now is the time to move away from old and increasingly irrelevant doctrinal positions towards positions that reflect new and emerging realities. Understanding that the TTP and the QS are conjoined is a step in the right direction for both us and Afghanistan, and can only strengthen our hand in fighting militancy and terrorism.

It is no surprise that some of us have held the American with suspicion. They have not always been honest, and they have not always been looking out for anything but their own interests. Even now, America is probably looking out for its own interest, yes. But what has changed has been that this fight is in PAKISTAN’S INTEREST. This is a fight for OUR nation, a fight for OUR culture, a fight for OUR independence.

The people who are attacking and killing our innocents are foreigners from many countries including even those of our Muslim brothers in Egypt, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia. But these killers are not fighting for us, they are killing us. They are butchering our people so that they can invade our country and change our nation into a backwards country ruled by crazed butchers. We will not stand for it.

TTP and QST are two names for the same thing – enemy of Pakistan. The debate is over. Now you must decide for yourself – WHOSE SIDE ARE YOU ON???

December 26, 2009

No Talks With Butchers

TTP has expressed willingness to engage in talks but only with Imran Khan. This is same TTP that has been bombing schools, GHQ, and markets during Eid shopping. This is same TTP that butchers innocent Pakistanis as they go about their business in their own country. Every day they are murdering our people. Now they want to have us for tea? We say ‘No Talks With Butchers.’

The news report of TTP’s interest in talking with Imran Khan is especially intriguing because why would they not want talks with PML-N? This is the center-right party that has always been friendly with religious groups. Also they are not even asking for talks with JI who is their natural ally. Why announce that they want to negotiate with Khan? Perhaps they are only seeking his autograph.

Whatever the TTP say is a lie. When there have been deals made in the past, TTP was always quick to cheat the deal and make futher attacks. This is a classic guerilla tactic. Negotiate some peace deal, then make attacks when the defenses are down. We have fallen for this tactic before, but we will not be caught off guard again. Nooruddin Muhammad says he will make peace in Malakand Division, but we do not need his lies. Peace will be made in Malakand Division when TTP is removed forever.

TTP can try all they might to meet Imran Khan. They can even have an autograph. But negotiations with the people who are killing our people is not a question. Even Fazl ur Rehman has said there is no question of talks with Taliban. No talks with butchers.

December 9, 2009

New Attack on ISI Proves TTP Must Be Destroyed

Filed under: Defense — Tags: , , — admin @ 6:38 am

There can be no more deliberating about whether or not TTP is a group that can be reasonably negotiated with. The attack on ISI in Multan by TTP shows once and for all that these militants are not honestly negotiating with government and military, but only buying time to further their goal of overthrowing Pakistan and dismantling it to be another colony of a new jihadi imperialism. Furthermore, this attack once again demonstrates the ruthless brutality of these killers as they indiscriminately murder children who get in their way without even the blink of an eye.

Inter-Services Public Relations in-charge Major Farooq Feroze said that 10 people had died in the twin-attack, including two army personnel, Faisal and Shakeel, five children, a civilian and the two attackers.

He said the attackers fired two rockets before detonating their vehicle. DIG Arif Ikram told reporters that the blast took place at 12.02pm and the main target of the attackers was the ISI building.

AFP adds: ‘It was a suicide attack. There were two attackers who were stopped at a checkpost, but they tried to flee and security personnel fired at them,’ DIG Ikram said.

‘The attackers returned fire and also launched two rockets, and later exploded their vehicle.’

Given the opportunity, TTP would wipe out Pakistan from the map. Our heritage, culture, and institutions would be dismantled. Our way of life would be destroyed like the buddhas of Bamyan and we would be left to the whims of self-proclaimed ulema with no instruction or trainig in Qu’ran or Sunnah, only a whip to give lashes and stones to throw at their enemies.

Now is the time we must unite behind Army and work as one nation to defeat our enemies TTP who are every day murdering our children. If we do not defend ourselves, we are through.

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