THE US EDGES CLOSER TO INVADING PAKISTAN

By: Eric Margolis  

This writer has been warning for years that US and NATO efforts to defeat resistance to Western occupation by Afghanistan’s fierce Pashtun tribes would eventually lead to spreading the conflict into neighboring Pakistan, a nation of 175 million.

We’ve seen it all before in Vietnam.  It was then called, “mission creep.”

The focus of the Afghan War is clearly shifting south into Pakistan, drawing that nation and the United States forces ever closer to a direct confrontation.  This grim development was as predictable as it was inevitable.

This week’s fevered warnings from Washington of supposedly imminent terrorist attacks in Europe may be aimed at justifying intensifying US military operations against Pakistan.  If attacks do come in Europe, they will most likely be linked to anti-French militant groups in North Africa and the Sahara – nothing at all to do with Afghanistan or Pakistan.

Last week, Pakistan temporarily closed the main US/NATO supply route from Karachi to the Afghan border at Torkham after the killing of three Pakistani soldiers by US helicopter gunships. Three US/NATO fuel supply convoys were burned by anti-American militants.

Eighty percent of the supplies of the US-led forces in Afghanistan come up this long, difficult route.  Along the way, the US pays large bribes to Pakistani officials, local warlords, and to Taliban.  The cost of a gallon of gas delivered to US units in Afghanistan has risen to $800.

US helicopter gunships have staged at least four attacks on Pakistan this past week alone, in addition to the mounting number of strikes by CIA drones that are inflicting heavy casualties on civilians and tribal militants alike.   US Special Forces and CIA-run Afghan mercenaries are also increasingly active along Pakistan’s northwest frontier.

Pakistan’s feeble, discredited government has long closed its eyes to CIA’s drone attacks.  Washington does not even seek permission for the raids or give advance warning to Islamabad.  Pakistan’s media claims over 90% of the casualties in US air raids are civilians.
The failing government in Islamabad is caught between two fires.  Pakistanis are furious and humiliated by the American attacks. Each new assault further undermines the inept, US-installed Zardari government.  Even Interior Minister Rehman Malik, the government’s strongman, protested last week’s US attacks.

But Pakistan is on the edge of economic collapse after its devastating floods. Islamabad is now totally reliant on $2 billion annual US aid, plus tens of millions more “black” payments from CIA.  Washington has given Islamabad $10 billion since 2001, most of which goes to renting 140,000 Pakistani troops to support the US-led Afghan war.  CIA also has 3,000 mercenaries operating inside Pakistan.

As Osama bin Laden just pointed out in a new audio tape, the Muslim nations have been derelict in coming to Pakistan’s aid.  He blamed the massive flooding in Pakistan on global warming.

An influential former Pakistani chief of staff, Gen. Mirza Aslam Beg, just demanded Pakistan’s air force shoot down US drones and helicopters violating his nation’s sovereignty.  His sentiments are widely shared in Pakistan’s increasingly angry military.

Pakistan’s senior generals are being blasted as “American stooges” by some of the media and are losing respect among Pakistanis.  A video this week of the execution of six civilians by army troops has further damaged the army’s good name.

However, Washington’s view is very different.  Pakistan is increasingly branded insubordinate, ungrateful for billions in aid, and a potential enemy of US regional interests.   Many Americans consider Pakistan more of a foe than ally.  The limited US financial response to Pakistan’s flood was a sign of that nation’s poor repute in North America.

Fears are growing in Washington and in Europe that the nine-year Afghan War may be lost.  American popular opinion has turned against the war.  The Pentagon fears a failure in Afghanistan will humiliate the US military and undermine America’s international power. In short, just what happened to the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

America’s foreign policy establishment is venting its anger and frustration over the failing Afghan War by lashing out at Pakistan and, as well,  the US-installed Karzai regime in Kabul.

Pakistan’s President, Asif Ali Zardari, is seen in Washington as hopeless and incompetent.  Full US attention is now on Pakistan’s military, the de facto government, and its respected but embattled commander, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, whose tenure was just extended under US pressure.  Kayani is still regarded as an “asset” by Washington. But like Zardari, he is caught between American demands and outraged Pakistanis – plus concerns about the threat from India and Delhi’s machinations in Afghanistan.   The recent upsurge of violence in Indian-ruled Kashmir has intensified these dangerous tensions between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan.

The neoconservatives in Washington and their media allies again claim Pakistan is a grave threat to US interests and to Israel. Pakistan must be declawed and dismembered, insist the neocons. Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal is reportedly being targeted for seizure or elimination by US Special Forces.

There is also talk in Washington of dividing Afghanistan into Pashtun, Tajik and Uzbek mini-states, as the US has done in Iraq, Could Pakistan be next for this divide and conquer treatment?  Little states are easier to rule or intimidate than big ones.  Many Pakistanis believe the United States is bent on dismembering their nation. Some polls show Pakistanis now regard the United States as a greater enemy than India.

Now that America is in full mid-term election frenzy, expect more calls for tougher US military action in “AfPak.”   Already unpopular politicians are terrified of being branded “soft on terrorism” and failing to maximally support US military campaigns.   Flag waving replaces sober thought.

If polls are right and Republicans achieve a major win, it’s likely there will be more and deeper US air and land attacks into Pakistan.  The Pentagon is convinced it can still defeat resistance by Taliban and its allies “if only we can go after their sanctuaries in Pakistan,” as one general told me.

Where have we heard this before?  Why in Cambodia and Laos, that’s where, during the Vietnam War.  Frustrated US commanders expanded the war into Cambodia and Laos to go after Communist base camps.  The war spread; these two small nations were largely destroyed, but the war was ultimately lost.

Victory in war is achieved by concentration of forces, not spreading them ever thinner and wider.

But our imperial generals seem determined to blunder into a nation of 175 million hostile people without any clear strategy.     Unable to subdue the Pashtun tribes of Afghanistan, they are now attacking the Pashtun tribes of Pakistan.  America does not need more enemies.

(Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning, internationally syndicated columnist. His articles appear in the New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, Times of London, the Gulf Times, the Khaleej Times and other news sites in Asia.He is a regular contributor to The Huffington Post, Lew Rockwell and Big Eye. He appears as an expert on foreign affairs on CNN, BBC, France 2, France 24, Fox News, CTV and CBC).

NOTE:This is a cross post.

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Comments

  • shahbaz  On October 5, 2010 at 2:33 pm

    Very good analysis;but as usual US est never listens;any way this is good for
    pakistan in the long run

  • Mian Saleem  On October 5, 2010 at 3:05 pm

    Eric’s observations are true to a very great extend, but I am of the view that American military will think twice before opening another war theatre. Presently US is going through economic crises, it would be disastrous to go for another venture. This will lead to an all out war in South East Asia, evolving Iran, India, China & Russia (All being nuclear states) and the situation would be beyond control. It is not in the interest of West to lose India with a market of over 1 Billion people, as this will further harm their economies.

    • Varris  On October 5, 2010 at 3:42 pm

      Truly frightening scenario. Unfortunately imperial America has blundered in the past in exactly the same fashion in Vietnam. They did not learn their lesson. America is driven by military-industrial complex and its politicians who have delusions of grandeur and election priorities.
      One had hoped that with Bush out and Obama in , sobre elements in the administraion will take over decision making.
      I am beggining to think that the American Military is still pulling the strings and are dictating strategic policy.
      On the other hand we have dumbos to counter the American offensive. Since these opportunists have nothing at stake in Pakistan and will fly away to their foreign sanctuaries at the first sign of trouble. They are not interrested in taking a patriotic stand. What is worse they are burdening each citizen and all the future generations with back breaking loans. They keep taking more and more money for personal siphoning and once they have milked the countrry dry , will take off in the middle of the night.

      Our nation will never learn and if it gets screwed this time around too , let it suffer. They can then elect Nawaz league so that he can give us more of the same.

  • Maidhc Ó Cathail  On October 5, 2010 at 3:25 pm

    Excellent analysis, apart from the uncritical acceptance that the tape that “surfaced” last week really was the voice of bin Laden. I have an article coming out soon which probes al-Qaeda’s apparent concern for the flood victims.

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 3:32 pm

    “We’ve seen it all before in Vietnam. ”

    same tactics……………….obviously not gonna work against Pakistan.

    we are not Vietnam. neither we are Iraq, nor Afganistan. they will know this once they decide to land here.

    • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 4:03 pm

      land here not covertly………..but show open hostility just as they have shown by the past week attacks.

      they have yet to learn many great things about the country called pakistan. the goliaths of the world, against the david.

      same fate. different names.

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 3:36 pm

    “This grim development was as predictable as it was inevitable.”

    true. Obama did indicate this in his campaign for presidential elections. and it was/is bound to happen.

    “Last week, Pakistan temporarily closed the main US/NATO supply route from Karachi to the Afghan border at Torkham”

    into the sixth day. let’s see how “temporary” its gonna be. read NATO’s secretary general Fogh Rasmussen has offered his “sorry” to shah mahmood qureshi in brussels.

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 3:41 pm

    “number of strikes by CIA drones that are inflicting heavy casualties on civilians and tribal militants alike”

    sorry to differ, but NOT alike.

    the damage done to civilians is much much more than the militants.

    “US Special Forces and CIA-run Afghan mercenaries are also increasingly active along Pakistan’s northwest frontier.”

    shape of things to come……………BLACKwater and its affiliates “banned” in Afganistan as of today, i think. where are they gonna go? (with the new contract to the shadow fronts by the US administration) is anyone’s guess.

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 3:47 pm

    “Even Interior Minister Rehman Malik, the government’s strongman, protested last week’s US attacks.”

    nah, they just do it to save their face in general public. they don’t care whatever happens to the civilians, as long as they are not part of the destruction.

    “As Osama bin Laden just pointed out in a new audio tape,”

    have to agree with maidhc. its amazing how the US administration still uses the same old tactics used by Bush (supposedly a stupid person) to gain advantage at critical times he faced in his country.

    i mean com’on. who does that anymore.

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 3:59 pm

    “A video this week of the execution of six civilians by army troops has further damaged the army’s good name.”

    as fake as fake can be. we haven’t forgotten the fake video made by an NGO headed by Samar min’Allah.

    a video surfacing at the very right timing eh?? just to discredit pak army among the people of pakistan.

    “The neoconservatives in Washington and their media allies again claim Pakistan is a grave threat to US interests and to Israel”

    Israel does NOT want the US to come back empty handed. they want our nuclear arsenal destroyed. at ANY cost.

    “Now that America is in full mid-term election frenzy, expect more calls for tougher US military action in “AfPak.””

    videos by osama (????), terror threats to EU. all part of the big plan. upcoming mid term congressionals. (and remember the Mumbai incident.

    commonwealth happening at the time there. a hundred plus explosives laden trucks gone a-missing there. where?? no one knows.

    will they be used by the so called “indian mujahideens”? against the european tourists and athletes??? to get the entire world against pakistan militarily???

    an invasion of the unholy alliance against us?? remains yet to be seen.)

  • Faisal Malik  On October 5, 2010 at 4:07 pm

    its a well written article.

    although at some points had to disagree.

    but still, a wonderful write.

    doesn’t even feel like the writer is not based in pakistan. 🙂

  • Adnan  On October 5, 2010 at 5:19 pm

    BREAKING NEWS
    BRUSSELS: NATO forces to pursue militants anywhere if they are attacked.

    • pakpotpourri2  On October 5, 2010 at 6:01 pm

      Indeed. So Eric IS correct!

      • Adnan Khan  On October 5, 2010 at 6:53 pm

        Apparently Yes.

        BTW here is what John Feffer of Foreign Policy in Focus wrote in his latest edition of World Beat

        The other fixative that binds this coalition is opposition to war spending. Virtually all the speakers at Saturday’s rally mentioned the enormous amount of money we’re wasting on the wars we’re waging in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, and elsewhere. Lawmakers are all sharpening their knives to make cuts in federal spending to bring down the deficit. Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants to economize on some military operations, through only to pour the savings into other Pentagon programs. Otherwise the U.S. military has resisted attempts to slash its budget.

        “More Jobs, Less War” seems like a perfect rallying cry for progressives. But here’s the problem. Many unions, although perhaps willing to oppose the war in Afghanistan, are hesitant to advocate cutting Pentagon spending. With a base that continues to shrink, they fear losing dues-paying members who manufacture weapons. Politicians, too, don’t want to appear anti-job by voting for anything that would close down production lines in their district.

        So if they wish to economize on ‘some’ military operations, would it make sense to open another war front? Perhaps they may be thinking, the only way of cutting our expense in Afghanistan is to move it elsewhere and take Europe on-board with scare tactics?

        *****
        Top academics predicted on Thursday that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will land US taxpayers with a whopping $900 billion healthcare bill.
        A study by Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Blimes estimated the cost of providing veterans with lifetime medical care and disability payments at up to $934bn (£805bn) depending on the length and intensity of the ongoing conflicts.

  • Inam Khan  On October 5, 2010 at 5:41 pm

    This is perhaps last show of force before extinction.Insaf has no apetite to fight in Afghanistan.Americans have achieved little during last nine years.Time to exit…….Inam Khan

  • Zafar Akhtar  On October 5, 2010 at 5:48 pm

    The result of extending the war to the territories of Pakistan will be the same as USA experienced in the far east.Defeat for USA is already there but unfortunately it would be at the cost of massive destruction in Pakistan.I hope that the rulers in Pakistan realises this and devise s strategy to minimize potential losses to the country.
    So unfortunate that Pakistan is now in this situation where despite supporting USA and in the process suffered so much casualities and financial losses, they are still treated untrustworthy by USA and the western world.I believe our rulers both current and the previous have failed the nation

    • Qamar  On October 5, 2010 at 5:55 pm

      Our rulers can devise nothing-barring more ways to steal from national exchequer!

  • Salman Abbasy  On October 5, 2010 at 6:50 pm

    Mr. Margolis is spot on. Alas, imperial hubris blinds the Americans. Has anyone noticed that Islamabad’s wealthy homeowners are adding basements to venerable old houses? Could air-raid shelters be their minds?

    • Faisal Malik  On October 6, 2010 at 12:34 pm

      they might be preparing for the “end of the world” as declared by mayans…. 🙂

      and might have joined the “survivalists”.

  • Shahzad Nawaz  On October 6, 2010 at 1:51 am

    For those of us who read The News in Pakistan – today 4 out of 5 editorial pieces features flagged the same scenarios, give or take a few –

  • jameelzaidi  On October 6, 2010 at 2:23 am

    Iagree that we musn’t follow US into the deep ditch whcich it had been following fo decades inLaos,Vietnam, and Cambodia etc.Americans are short-sighted & are like a monkey trying to shave itself with a sharp-edged blade;while it is lacking in skill.It has already made considerable damage to Pakistaani lives, violated its land 7 AIR-SPACE thaks to our illiterate,and greedy leadership. We have already surrendered Sovereigny without any rhyme or reason & are squanderint our precious national resources like human live, finances, and armament. It’s time to say NO to us in orderto protect our geographical boundaries, our land, and Soverreignty before it is too late.

    jameel Zaidi

  • anwer sultan kadri  On October 6, 2010 at 3:02 am

    Well Eric……excellent analysis very near to reality. As Chuchill once said ,”Yes, its a free country and everybody is allowed to make a fool of himself.” If the Americans do not want to learn their lessons from history, the results are automatically thrust on to them and its a matter of choice. As for us Pakistanis we have been put into this predicament by by our corrupt rulers time and again but then like always we recovered and this time too we shall but we would owe nobody nothing and would have paid the price of liberty in full.We have to discount 10% of those who will run for their sacred lives at the first sight of war and again we have to account for another 10% as ‘collateral damages” as the price of freedom and liberty and the 80% left would have learnt enough lessons to rebuild our country to the level it always deserved. Pakistanis remember, “They live who dare”

  • KHAN ZIA  On October 6, 2010 at 3:43 am

    Eric Margolis is no ordinary columnist. He was interviewed by the Clinton administration for the job of Assistant Secretary of State in 1992 but dropped because of his views on Palestine. He knows how the Washington mind works and needs to be taken seriously.

    There has been a naïve belief, bordering on the puerile that if Pakistan did what the Americans asked somehow their policy towards her would change. This is not how the real world works. Nothing that Pakistan can do, short of self-destructing herself, will change the ultimate US objectives. The latter had been put off pending a successful outcome in Afghanistan. There will be serious temptation that if pacification of that country does not succeed the opportunity to do what they have to do in Pakistan should not be missed. For that reason alone what Margolis has to say needs to be taken seriously.

    The incredible week-kneed response to the drone and other attacks has cost the lives of over three thousand innocent Pakistanis. Worse still has been our reaction to the atrocities that has only helped to encourage the Americans. For instance, according to Bob Woodward, Zardari ‘told CIA officials privately in late 2008 that any innocent deaths from the strikes were the cost of doing business against senior al-Qaeda leaders. “Kill the seniors,” Zardari had said. “Collateral damage worries you Americans. It does not worry me.” In the same vein, after the barrages of missile fire from US drones in May last, Shah Mahmood Qureshi told reporters “There is nothing to worry about, our relationship is smooth and it is moving toward a partnership.” This condoning of atrocities is open invitation for more of the same.

    There is urgent need to re-evaluate the situation and accept the reality that has been staring in our faces. Prudence demands that we should assume the worst and plan on that basis. If the worst does not happen we still would have lost nothing. If we did not change course now the future is bound to be bleak.

  • Naeem Hussain  On October 6, 2010 at 4:07 am

    An excellent article – should Pakistan wait till it happens or should something be done to stop it. long live Pakistan Army

  • ADIL  On October 6, 2010 at 4:11 am

    Why does this come as a surprise to anyone now. I do believe this will happen, but not because of the present impasse. There will be stronger justification created.

  • zubair  On October 6, 2010 at 4:19 am

    The apparent trend certainly seems to point to an inevitable US direct invasion. I feel they are building up a justification for the invasion by telling the UN and the world that if Pakistan can’t stop small US attacks, how can they defend their nuclear assets from getting into the hands of undesirables. Are we watching he sane Iraqi story of the US mustering up western support to get to our weapons of Mass destruction. I have no comments on the performance or preferences or our US appointed Govt except that I am sure they all have planned an exit strategy and safe fortresses in the west leaving us Pakistanis to fend for ourselves.

  • Zia  On October 6, 2010 at 4:43 am

    Good well written article!

    Regards,

    Zia

  • S U Turkman  On October 6, 2010 at 6:08 am

    USA had won this war. Pakistan Army restarted it by accommodating her defeated Taliban, re-organizing them, start paying them salaries, building new Camps for them, re-arming them and then infiltration them back in to Afghanistan by the end 2003 instead of arresting them, when they we re-entering Pakistan.
    Pak Army got more than $ 8.5 billion worth of US Charity of Military Aid but it never had any intention to co-operate with USA in controlling Taliban. Its intention was to re-infiltrate Taliban back in to Afghanistan to kill as many NATO and US Soldiers that it could so it could start ruling Afghanistan again under disguise of Taliban, like before.
    Pakistan Army only arrested Al Qaeda and Taliban to collect the Bounty that USA was paying and it collected Bounty for even handing over innocent Refugees from China and Central Asia. It never provided any evidence against the Terrorists it had handed over to USA. The Purpose was that was, not to let USA make any case against them in her courts.
    Pakistan Army’s cheating and deceit level was such that after receiving Bounties, it got hundreds of Terrorists released from Guantanomo by telling USA that its investigation has found that they were innocent. Famous Terrorist Baitullah Mehsud and his people were included in those people.
    Back Stabbing Pakistan Army had wanted to make Afghanistan USA’s new Vietnam and has almost succeeded in doing this using USA’s own money just like it had built Atomic Bombs on USA’s money. JehaaDi Pakistan Army has proven to be so Back Stabbing that its own so called ‘only Fast Friend’ China does not trust it. The Poof is, China has found it guilty of training, financing and arming Moslim Chinese of Western China in a Terrorist Training Camp near her border. China did not care, what Pakistan would say and has occupied Gilgit to stop Pakistan Army’s that Back Stabbing of her. Do we hear any talk of Sovereignty being in jeopardy because of that action of China?
    Has China ever given so much Charity of Aid and Loans to Pakistan to cause this?
    No.
    Has Pakistan been saved by China 4 times in the past as had USA (1965, 1971, 1999, 2002) … ?
    No.
    But still Pakistan has to cry ‘Sovereignty’ if USA kills any Terrorists inside Pakistan’s Border and keep her mouth shut on China occupying a part of her country.
    Had China built Pakistan Army from scratch for free, when it used to have only 14 Tanks or USA?
    Had China built Pakistan’s Military Bases and Airforce Bases for free or USA?

  • Wajid M. Pirzada  On October 6, 2010 at 9:06 am

    Turkman, you check the records from WWII till todate, everything goes against what you have written as US’s patriot citizen, please speak the TRUTH AND ONLY TRUTH and see in the mirror of worldwide mess created by American politics who got Zionists mindset to disturb the world order, indeed. Don’t waste your tax payers money in hell fire, it will only lead to 52 countries in USA such as the disintegration of Soviet Empire. Depend on your own resources & don’t try to invade other peoples resources and then talk about Human Rights. I lived & visited USA from East to West Coast and witnessed much more Human Rights Violations, I like American people as rest of other peoples in the world but Hate the American system which is creating Troubles, Wars, Invasion and so on with Hegemonistic plans, is no good bud…take care & tell your leadership to be realistic not Hypocratic. If someone has done good deeds then have no fear or to get killed by others and move freely but if you kill innocent humanity then get ready for backlash as well and get scared ; As it goes with the rules of nature and one have to pay back for the bad deeds, indeed.

    Don’t get brain washed/immuned by your Zionists controlled media who try to show Real WOLVES in the dress of a innocent Sheep… They are the one who is using different countries at different levels & ways in order to Hide their Tremendous Crimes… they will betray the Americans ones they achieved their goals by using them as frontliners to fullfill their own controlled controversial plans.

    Wake up guys & be realistic, don’t put fir in other peoples homes as you did in Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Panama, Nicaragua, Kashmir, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Palestine and many more countries…you know the truths but have no courage to admit it & always try to find a scape goat or lime excuses to blaim others, indeed.

  • Zain I. Syed  On October 6, 2010 at 1:16 pm

    “Terrific article by Eric Margolis! Still a shade over done!

    While I was never a fan of the collective psyche of the US Industrial – Military complex, they are certainly not that stupid!

    A country in the midst of a W recession does not need more enemies!”

  • Varris Hasan  On October 6, 2010 at 5:31 pm

    When we are not prepared or unable to clean our own mess ( caused by
    the USA in the first place) then USA will come and clean it up for
    us.

    • Munir Varraich  On October 7, 2010 at 8:40 am

      Varris Ji,

      Why this pessism? USA and the enemy job is to create a mess. 180 million is a force enough to clean it up, even with their bare hands.

      History tells us that machines have never been able to match the “human” machine, even in its worst form, as long as it is breathing.
      Stop these demoralising messages please, Sir.

      MAV

      • Varris Hasan  On October 7, 2010 at 8:41 am

        Brother MAV

        No pessimism . Just reality on the ground. Drone attacks have
        increased four fold in one month. NATO choppers have intruded our
        territory and killed our personnel . Our FM has a sense of the
        macabre . He states that attack by choppers was an accident. Accident
        can happen once or twice , but four times in one week? Even a
        simpleton will label it as deliberate. When the drone attacks first
        started , it was in the same style . There were protests in the
        beginning and now we accept them as routine. No body is pushed. These
        Chopper attacks are the first ; hence being noticed . Give a couple of
        months , we will get used to them. Oyr government is complicit in
        every way. USA has nothing but contemp for our incompetent rulers . If
        a Aalim e Din or a political activist is killed we see days of street
        protests / strikes paralysing the economic life. None when USA follows
        a creeping policy.

        We keep harping about 180 million people as our strength. They suffer
        from apathy and ignorance. If 180 million cannot tell the difference
        between good and bad persons , or are indifferent to elections, I
        cannot expect them to stand up and be counted. They deserve no better
        treatment.

        I , for one will be happy to see the present impasse resolved one way
        or the other. Even with americans intervening in some way . Suffering
        the same miserables for another 3 years is beyond the endurance of an
        average Paksitani.

  • Ayesha Khan  On October 6, 2010 at 9:52 pm

    Yes, an article that seems to reflect the Pakistani sentiment largely accurately. Two things I don’t understand why does the writer refer to bin Laden as if he is alive, secondly, the US forces are not “now” attacking Pushtun tribes in Pakistan; NATO was in fact present in Tirah in one of the tribal areas and even in Kurrum agency as early as 2005; that I personally know of from myy tribal friends and their anecdotal evidence. NATO/US forces or the US mercenaries may have come in when Musharraf was in power mostly likely in 2000.

    We know that 9/11 was staged, we know of the ADL, we know of the Zionist lobby in the US government with who even the American people are frustrated, we know that there is plutonium in the hills of Afghanistan and many valuable minerals in Pakistan’s north, we know the US policy or rather attitude towards Pakistan’s nuclear independence even since Zia’s time, so I would put down the the US govt’s intent to “invade” Pakistan as being inevitable as early as the 70s. This is when Bhutto called for the forming of the OIC and King Faisal of Saudi Arabia and Daoud of Afghanistan were assasinated and Bhutto was hanged. The planning behind these crimes are not local. Historically speaking US has always turned on Pakistan and masy that’s why many Pakistanis are not surprised that the US is blaming its ally for its own failures and weaknesses.

    America may not need enemies but the American govt certainly seems to thrive on creating enemies and playing war games. Let’s hope that someone in the US corridors of powers pay heed to the saner voices of seasoned journalists.

  • Ayesha Khan  On October 6, 2010 at 10:12 pm

    Turkmen your desire to rant may satisfy your angst but it doesn’t change certain basic truths, whether this is about Pak-US relationship, or India-Pak relationship, or China-Pak relationship.

    One measures the breach in a relationship based on the nature of that particular relationship. Why don’t you clarify yourself on some basic concepts and then jump in the foray.

  • Khalid  On October 8, 2010 at 9:46 pm

    Unfortunately civilization always seems to escape mankind and while a few have always been civilized the majority and particularly people who hanker for power remain controlled by primitive nueronal pathways. The world appears to be civilized compared to the past because our instruments have advanced but not the primeval instincts. When we understand the connectivity of mankind it will be as difficult to kill a stranger remotely or directly as one’s own brother. It will be impossible to sit in plush offices planning wars and ordering deadly attacks as if playing a harmless game.
    We are all 99.9% the same. I hope the day comes before the world goes up in flames when we begin to empathize with each other and cooperate across nations, races and religions for bettering mankind’s common future. We will recognise the immense potential that each and every human being represents for all of us and stop being our own enemies.

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  • A J K Soldier  On November 1, 2010 at 5:33 am

    ” The fact is that we, the Pakistani Soldiers, have to fight out Americans as we had done to Russia, the difference may be that then we used to go to Afghanistan & fight them, now probabally we will be fighting USA in the streets of Pakistan. I as a special forces soldier accept this challenge with a spirit & ethics of a Muslim Soldier. The decision of US commanders to attack Pakistan will be a blessing in disguise and is being awaited with a will to sort out them all. We can not reach America for want of resources, ALLAH has sent america to us. It is now Americas turn to go down in the junkyard of defeated great military powers. Russian attack on Afghanistan helped turn Pakistan into a Nuclear Power, USA attack on Afghanistan will liberate Kashmir. All attacks on Afghanistan are blessings in disguise for Pakistan, thats why Afghans are my brothers in faith & arms. Did’nt American Stooges read the history that there are many routes to enter Afghanistan but only one way out, and on that route some head to toe a Afghan is sitting with his Pakhtun Wali, now it is his sweet will as hoe to bid farewell to his uninvited guest”. WAITING FOR AN OPEN WAR WITH USA,

    –A Proud Soldier of Islam & Watch Dog of Pakistan.

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  • […]   My note: US forces have already infiltrated Pakistan with special forces operations, mercenary (‘security’) groups and drone strikes (as well as the occasional solder excursion across the border from Afghanistan). Pakistan’s sovereignty is being violated and already in shambles (partly because of Pakistan’s own policies, which makes it a de-facto satellite state of the US). What Margolis is signalling here is a full-throttle invasion – ‘boots on the ground’ and everything. Can the US really afford another war front?   By Eric Margolis – This writer has been warning for years that US and NATO efforts to defeat resistance to Western occupation by Afghanistan’s fierce Pashtun tribes would eventually lead to spreading the conflict into neighboring Pakistan, a nation of 175 million.   We’ve seen it all before in Vietnam. It was then called, “mission creep.”   The focus of the Afghan War is clearly shifting south into Pakistan, drawing that nation and the United States forces ever closer to a direct confrontation. This grim development was as predictable as it was inevitable.   This week’s fevered warnings from Washington of supposedly imminent terrorist attacks in Europe may be aimed at justifying intensifying US military operations against Pakistan. If attacks do come in Europe, they will most likely be linked to anti-French militant groups in North Africa and the Sahara – nothing at all to do with Afghanistan or Pakistan.   READ THE FULL STORY […]

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