Government Corruption |
Biden Names Obama Crony Penny Pritzker to Lead Ukraine's Economic Recovery |
2023-09-23 |
[Breitbart] Wonder if he even knows... National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan announced Thursday that President Joe Biden would name Penny Pritzker, a billionaire heiress and former commerce secretary, to manage Ukraine’s economic recovery from the ongoing war. Sullivan, a major proponent of the “Russia collusion” hoax against President Donald Trump, told reporters that Biden, meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky at the White House for the sixth time on Thursday, would “introduce a special representative for Ukraine’s economic recovery, Penny Pritzker, who will focus on engaging the private sector, partner countries, and Ukrainian counterparts to generate international investment in Ukraine and work with Ukraine to make the reforms necessary to improve Ukraine’s business climate.” Pritzker, a close Chicago associate of former President Barack Obama and heiress to the Hyatt hotel fortune, was passed up for a cabinet post after the 2008 election due to her involvement in a subprime mortgage collapse at Superior Bank, which failed in 2001. That was considered a political liability in an administration that promised voters it would fix the mess on Wall Street that had led to a massive recession and ushered Obama into office. Four years later, when memories of the Wall Street financial collapse had faded somewhat, Pritzker was nominated to be Secretary of Commerce. In that role, her signature achievement was giving away American control of Internet domain names. Pritzker was also actively involved in Ukraine, where her family is originally from. It was under her department that the infamous billion-dollar loan guarantees were announced — the money that then-Vice President Biden threatened to withdraw unless Ukraine fired a prosecutor investigating Hunter Biden’s company, Burisma. To date, Pritzker has not been asked, at least in public, what she knew about Biden’s conflict of interest in Ukraine. |
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Europe | ||
Two Paris attacks suspects extradited to France from Austria | ||
2016-07-30 | ||
[TELEGRAPH.CO.UK] French authorities filed terror charges on Friday against two suspected members of the same Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... cell that massacred 130 people in Gay Paree last November, a judicial source said. The 29-year-old Algerian Adel Haddadi and the 35-year-old Pak Mohamad Usman were charged with "criminal conspiracy with terrorists", the source said of the men turned over earlier Friday by Austrian authorities. Investigators believe they travelled to the Greek island of Leros on October 3 on the same boat full of refugees as two men who took part in the November 13 attacks. Those two, thought to be Iraqis, blew themselves up outside the Stade de La Belle France stadium, one of a series of brazen assaults by around 10 people around the French capital. But Haddadi and Usman were held up, detained by Greek authorities for 25 days because they had fake Syrian passports. Once let go, they followed the main migrant trail and made it to Salzburg in western Austria at the end of November - after the Gay Paree attacks. Austrian police commandos then placed in durance vile Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try! them in December at a migrant centre a few hours after French authorities informed them the men could be in the country.
Please don't kill me! a week after those who were extradited, remain in jug in Austria. The prosecutors' office said in December that the men were held "because of indications of close contact" with the two suspects transferred to La Belle France. | ||
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India-Pakistan |
Jihadis on the march again |
2012-01-24 |
[Dawn] Whether the rally held here on Sunday for the defence of Pakistain was to revive the Jihadi spirit of the 1980s or to voice genuine concern at the threats that government policies may pose in the long-term would be known later, but the show at the Liaquat Bagh was not much impressive. The 'defence of Pakistain rally' witnessed a gathering of Jihadi groups, radical Islamists, sectarian warriors and even some mashaikh. Apart from various rightwing or pro-rightwing groups belonging to Pakistain Defence Council, comprising 44 politico-religious parties, the rally was also participated by the leadership of two Rawalpindi-based factions of Pakistain Mohammedan League and two former army generals. Almost all the speakers threatened to take over Islamabad by force if the NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all.... supplies were restored and India was granted the MFN (most favoured nation) status. The rally was also attended by Jamaat-e-Islami ... The Islamic Society, founded in 1941 in Lahore by Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, aka The Great Apostosizer. The Jamaat opposed the independence of Bangladesh but has operated an independentbranch there since 1975. It close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. The Jamaat's objectives are the establishment of a pure Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It is distinguished by its xenophobia, and its opposition to Westernization, capitalism, socialism, secularism, and liberalist social mores... chief ![]() ... The funny-looking Amir of the Pak Jamaat-e-Islami. He joined the National Students Federation (NSF), a lefty student body, and was elected its President in 1959. He came into contact with the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba (IJT) Pakistan and studied the writings of Mawlana Syed Abul Ala Maududi, The Great Apostasizer.As a result, he joined IJT in 1960 and soon he was elected as President of its University of Karachi Unit and member of the Central Executive Council. He was Assistant Secretary General of Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistain in 1992-93, and became Secretary General in 1993. After years of holding Qazi's camel he was named Amir when the old man stepped down in 2009... , Sardar Atiq Ahmed Khan, the president of Mohammedan Conference and former president of AJK, and ex-COAS Gen (retired) Aslam Beg. About 10,000 to 15,000 people, including those from many districts of Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa ... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central... , attended the rally. Those who came from distant places expressed the confidence that the rally would pave the way towards ideological and political illusory sovereignty of the country which they believed was lacking. "This will show the Americans that we are united like Taliban of Afghanistan for our independence," said Umar Gul, of Tehrik Irshad-i-Tauheed wa Sunnah, who came from Swabi. He said such show of strength would stop drone attacks. Meanwhile, ...back at the scene of the crime, Lieutenant Queeg had an idea: there was a simple way to tell whether Manetti had been the triggerman -- just look at his shoes!... one worker of Ahle Sunnah Wal Jamaat (former Sipah-i-Sahaba), who came from Narang Mandi of Mandi Bahauddin, said they wanted the restriction on their party lifted. "This is unfair and all done at the behest of Americans as the US is afraid of Islamic revolution in Pakistain," he said. Addressing the gathering, Sheikh Rashid Ahmed and Ijazul Haq criticised the religious leadership for not being united and having strong discord in their ranks. "There are active conspiracies against the country but they are all successful only because of disagreement among the Islamists. It will all end the day Maulana Samiul Haq votes for ![]() Deobandi holy man, known as Mullah Dieselduring the war against the Soviets, his sympathies for the Taliban have never been tempered by honesty ... and vice versa," said Sheikh Rashid, the president of Awami Mohammedan League. Spearheaded by Hafiz Saeed, leader of Jamaatud Dawa (JuD), the umbrella organization of the banned Lashkar-i-Taiba, the gathering also showcased the organizational strength of JuD as its workers managed all the arrangements, including security of the stage and the venue as a whole. However, nothing needs reforming like other people's bad habits... none of the parties or the participants displayed weapons while armed police personnel were seen around Liaquat Bagh and at the stage. It may be noted that the Defence of Pakistain Council was created in the wake of the NATO attack on Salala checkpost in ![]() ... Named for the Mohmand clan of the Sarban Pahstuns, a truculent, quarrelsome lot. In Pakistain, the Mohmands infest their eponymous Agency, metastasizing as far as the plains of Beautiful Downtown Peshawar, Charsadda, and Mardan. Mohmands are also scattered throughout Pakistan in urban areas including Karachi, Lahore, and Quetta. In Afghanistan they are mainly found in Nangarhar and Kunar... Agency under the patronage of chief of his own faction of Jamaat Ulema-i-Islam, Maulana Samiul Haq. Addressing the gathering, Maulana Samiul Haq took oath from the participants that the Islamists would surround the parliament if the government reopened the NATO supply routes. "Jehad against the US aggressors will continue in Afghanistan till the American forces are forced to retreat back," said the Maulana. Meanwhile, ...back at the scene of the crime, Lieutenant Queeg had an idea: there was a simple way to tell whether Manetti had been the triggerman -- just look at his shoes!... JuD leader Hafiz Saeed dispelled the impression created by other speakers that the rally could provide a platform to Islamist rightwing groups or his entry into national politics. "We are neither a political alliance nor having any aim to overthrow the government but only want an end to American interference in Pakistain. America cannot be Pakistain's friend." He added that the Taliban in Afghanistan and the people of Pakistain were one entity, adding: "We are all in Jehad against the US aggressors." He also warned the government against granting MFN status to India. "I tell you that an aggressive movement will be launched if any interest of sacred land (Pakistain) is compromised for India." The rally also provided a chance to the banned beturbanned goon groups to show their presence in the public -- one reception stall was established by Ahle Sunnah wal Jamaat showcasing its old name Sipah Sahaba Pakistain (SSP) which has been banned, and the workers were openly distributing party flags to the participants. Some even paid tributes to the banned groups, saying they had suffered at the hands of policy makers and were now ready to render sacrifices for defence of the country. "The leaders of the country should see that those who had been banned and persecuted for 10 years are now at the forefront to defend the country," Gen (retired) ![]() The nutty former head of Pakistain's ISI, now Godfather to Mullah Omar's Talibs and good buddy and consultant to al-Qaeda's high command... said. "The decision taken by our leaders to please the Americans has only caused sufferings for Mohammedan nation in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistain and elsewhere." The former head of ISI said people were being called to defend the country because successive governments and politicians did not do their job well during the last 10 years. "We have strong presence of 2.5 million ex-servicemen who will come out and along with the courageous Islamists free Islamabad of the US agents," he added. The speakers said the public meeting was aimed to give a message of solidarity with the Paks and make a call for independent foreign and internal policies. While being a strong opponent of taking pictures of living beings on religious grounds, Hafiz Saeed was seen talking on camera with the foreign media. Though strong speeches and powerful rhetoric were witnessed against the government and politicians for their proposals to reopen NATO supply routes and grant MFN status to India, the leaders of the Islamic groups refrained from criticising the armed forces. |
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India-Pakistan | |
Rally in Lahore sends alarm bells ringing | |
2011-12-22 | |
[Dawn] IT was an extraordinary spectacle in Minto Park at the foot of the Minar-i-Pakistain on Sunday: jihadists, sectarian warriors, orthodox mullahs, Islamic revivalists, all banding together under the banner of the Difaa-i-Pakistain Council (Pakistain Defence Council) and vowing to 'defend' Pakistain against external aggression.
Was the PDC rally, then, meant to signify the entry of Hafiz Saeed into national politics, though perhaps not of the electoral variety? | |
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India-Pakistan |
Lahore rally |
2011-12-21 |
[Dawn] A LARGE gathering of supporters organised by right-wing parties and prominent figures at the Minar-i-Pakistain, Lahore on Sunday has raised some interesting questions. To the extent that Sunday`s rally was an expression of political speech the gathering was within the confines of a democratic set-up, as was a separate rally held by the Jamaat-e-Islami ... The Islamic Society, founded in 1941 in Lahore by Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, aka The Great Apostosizer. The Jamaat opposed the independence of Bangladesh but has operated an independentbranch there since 1975. It close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. The Jamaat's objectives are the establishment of a pure Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It is distinguished by its xenophobia, and its opposition to Westernization, capitalism, socialism, secularism, and liberalist social mores... in Beautiful Downtown Peshawar also on Sunday. And given that other parties have been holding rallies of late, Sunday`s rallies could be seen as a rightful way for right-wing parties to assert their own political credentials. However, a woman is only as old as she admits... it is also necessary to remember that while the right wing in Pakistain may be exercising rights granted by the constitution and democratic principles, the parties of the far right do not have much interest in democracy as it is supposed to be practised in Pakistain. In fact, the Jamaatud Dawa, the `moderate` face of the Lashkar-i-Taiba, which headlined Sunday`s rally in Lahore does not even believe in electoral democracy, arguing that it is against the tenets of Islam. While it isn`t clear yet if the latest right-wing alliance -- an umbrella group of 30-odd conservative and radical entities resurfacing in the wake of the ![]() ... Named for the Mohmand clan of the Sarban Pahstuns, a truculent, quarrelsome lot. In Pakistain, the Mohmands infest their eponymous Agency, metastasizing as far as the plains of Peshawar, Charsadda, and Mardan. Mohmands are also scattered throughout Pakistan in urban areas including Karachi, Lahore, and Quetta. In Afghanistan they are mainly found in Nangarhar and Kunar... killings as the `Pakistain Defence Council` -- has been encouraged by the security establishment or is a self-initiative, the climate in which it has arisen is a dangerous one. With the more mainstream and secular parties fighting among themselves and the state continuing its ambivalent policy towards the West, the ultra-conservative elements in society can cash in on the growing anti-US sentiment in the country. While recalibrating Pakistain`s national security and foreign policies is necessary, if the PDC`s ideas were to be followed Pakistain would find itself more isolated than ever in the international community, and perhaps even on the warpath with neighbours and international powers. The anti-US, anti-India vitriol that marked the PDC rally was not just hyperbole or bombast; given the cast of characters involved, there can be little doubt that if they were in charge of Pakistain, some catastrophic decisions would be made. In truth, however, the PDC may be less a cause than a symptom of what ails Pakistain. For two decades, from the 1980s, the Pak state explicitly supported a certain kind of worldview. Then, in the wake of 9/11, it may have cut many of its ties to jihadi groups and ended its explicit support for jihad but it did nothing to provide a counter-narrative. So the narrative of Pakistain as the bastion of Islam fighting against an unjust and unfair world has continued, and it has grown into an ever greater threat to the country itself. |
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India-Pakistan |
Hafiz Saeed vows jihad against India will continue |
2011-12-20 |
Jamaatud Dawa (JD) chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed vowed on Sunday that the jihad to oust Indian forces from Kashmir would continue, the first time he has made a reference to jihad since his group was declared a terrorist outfit by the United Nations in 2009. Saeed was speaking at the Difa-i-Pakistan Conference, a gathering of thousands of supporters of Wahhabi and Deobandi parties at Minar-i-Pakistan on Sunday to protest against US and Nato terrorism. All the speakers at the rally called for jihad and told their supporters to prepare for war. During his speech, Difa-i-Pakistan Council Chairman Maulana Samiul Haq read out an oath to the audience that they would participate in jihad when the Council gave the call. We will attack Indian, US, Russian and Nato forces if they try to violate Pakistans sovereignty, they said, repeating after Haq. Haq said the various parties at the conference had united and would work together until their goals were achieved. The organisers had invited the parents of men killed fighting in Kashmir and Afghanistan to the conference. A man who had lost three sons and two nephews was called to the dais to speak briefly. From the stage, men on loudspeakers led the crowd in chants of Sabilina sabilina, al jihad al jihad, India ka aik ilaaj, al jihad al jihad. Difa-i-Pakistan jihad-i-fi sabilillah se hoga (Pakistans defence is only possible through jihad) proclaimed a huge banner, decorated with images of missiles, tanks and fighter jets, that formed the backdrop to the stage. Speakers walked to the stage accompanied by gunmen. The crowd was dominated by JD activists waving the groups black and white striped flag, which is also the flag of Lashkar-i-Taiba, proscribed as a terrorist outfit by Pakistan. In December 2009, the UN declared JD an alias of LT, which is believed responsible for the Mumbai terror attacks. In his address, Hafiz Saeed said jihad was obligatory for Muslims. He said if the Americans tried to invade Pakistan, they would be resisted and killed. He said America had been trying to get Israel to take out Pakistans nuclear weapons, but was now planning the task itself. He said that Pakistan and Afghanistan were like twin brothers; whoever tried to harm one, would have to face the people of the other country. He demanded that the Pakistani government end all contacts with the US. He said that a similar rally would be held in Rawalpindi. We will no longer fight Americas war, we will fight Pakistans war, he said. Saeed said that his support for Kashmir remained firm. We were with Kashmiris and are with Kashmiris, he said. |
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Home Front: WoT | ||
"The Perfect Terrorist" airs 11/22 on PBS | ||
2011-11-22 | ||
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India-Pakistan |
Pak govt's lifting of JuD ban slammed as giving 'license to jihad' |
2011-11-09 |
[One Pakistan] A member of the Council of Islamic Ideology in Pakistain has slammed the government for allowing the Jamaat-ud-Dawa ...the front organization of Lashkar-e-Taiba... to collect Eid donations, saying it is clearly evident that 'such thug organizations follow the government's agenda and function with its support'. Golly. You don't think they're just pretend-banned, do you? On Eid, the government had placed no restrictions on Jamaatud Dawa from collecting animal hides after the Eidul Azha sacrifice. The group says it has set up a hundred camps for hide collection in Lahore alone. Allama Zubair Ahmed Zaheer, a member of the Council of Islamic Ideology and a Jamiat Ahle Hadith Pakistain leader, however, said the government was giving "undue favour" to "some thug organizations". "It is clear discrimination. It shows that such thug organizations follow the government's agenda and function with its support. No religious party should have the right to make lashkars or wage so-called jihad. How will the government stop thug groups from functioning when it is giving them a free hand to collect funds?" The Express Tribune reports. The Pakistain interior ministry had earlier released a list of 31 banned ...the word bannedseems to have a different meaning in Pakistain than it does in most other places. Or maybe it simply lacks any meaning at all... organizations, excluding Jamaatud Dawa. Most of the organizations were already in the banned list, but People"s Aman Committee of Bloody Karachi, Shia Tulaba Action Committee, Markaz Sabeel Organisation and Tanzeem-i-Naujawanan-i-Sunnat of Gilgit-Baltistan have been added to it now. The list has counted several thug outfits operating under new names as different organizations. Jaish-i-Muhammad and Khuddam-ul-Islam are two names of the same organization. Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistain and Tehreek-i-Jafaria Pakistain have changed their names to Millat-i-Islamia Pakistain and Islami Tehreek, respectively. They have been mentioned as separate entities. Lashkar-i-Taiba is on the list but its changed name, Jamaatud Dawa, is missing. A member of the JD information department, said that the group was operating roughly a hundred camps in Lahore under the name JD or the Falah-i-Insaniat Foundation (FIF). |
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Afghanistan |
The changing face of the Taliban |
2011-11-07 |
[Dawn] In June 2001, a couple of months before the infamous attack on New York which changed the world, I had traveled with a couple of colleagues from Kandahar to Kabul to do a series of reports on life under the Taliban for a foreign television channel. It was there that, for the first time, I truly understood the tragedy that was Afghanistan and the circumstances that gave rise to the group whose name has now become shorthand for all that is myopic, literalist and bad boy for most on the one hand, and for a brave indigenous resistance to a foreign occupation to some on the other. No amount of prior reading had the same revelatory effect on my understanding of the nuances of the Taliban movement as that trip. When NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the cut of the American pants... attacked Afghanistan in October that year as a response to '9/11', one of the things that completely bewildered them was how the supposedly fierce and resilient Taliban seemed to have disappeared into thin air. For most outsiders it seemed to prove the dictum -- parroted by the Northern Alliance and 'security' pundits in India -- that the Taliban were some sort of foreigner force propped up entirely by Pakistain's ISI which had returned en masse to the foreign land it had come from. The ISI certainly provided support and military know-how to the Taliban after Benazir Bhutto's government in 1994 saw them as a solution to internecine warfare and warlordism among the former anti-Soviet 'mujahideen'. But having interacted with most levels of the Taliban bureaucracy -- except for the reclusive 'Emir' Mullah Omar ... a minor Pashtun commander in the war against the Soviets who made good as leader of the Taliban. As ruler of Afghanistan, he took the title Leader of the Faithful. The imposition of Pashtunkhwa on the nation institutionalized ignorance and brutality already notable for its own fair share of ignorance and brutality... -- it was clear to me even then that they were very much an Afghan force. While the leadership might have decamped to Pakistain or elsewhere or while some commanders had opportunistically switched sides in the age-old tradition of the land, most Taliban fighters -- which included the former 'mujahideen' -- had simply melted away to their homes, indistinguishable from ordinary rural Pakhtun Afghans. Bizarrely, it seems it took NATO almost a further decade to understand this. One of the people I got to know well on that trip was a senior member of the Taliban information ministry. He was only 24 then -- youthful like most Taliban I met (even Mullah Omar's right-hand man, Mullah Hasan Rehmani, the governor of Kandahar, was only in his early forties). A former law student at Kabul University, he had chosen to join the Taliban out of the necessity of choosing sides and in the naïve belief that they were actually a force for good compared to the warlordism he had seen growing up. Now mortified by some of the Taliban's extremes, he chose to confide his secret dissent to me, and his own remarkable story as the unsung protector of Afghanistan's film heritage still remains to be told. When he decamped Afghanistan after the fall of Kabul (more out of notions of honour than necessity since two of his brothers who were also Taliban capos had simply switched sides), he landed up in Pakistain for a few months and I had the chance to interview him in a less guarded environment for the BBC Urdu Service. One of the questions I asked him was how it was that I had never seen any of the Arabs linked to Al Qaeda -- who the West considered the real string pullers of the Taliban -- in any government ministry during my time in Kandahar or Kabul. In fact, I don't think I saw a single Arab the entire time I was there. He replied that, while there were some Arabs in Afghanistan and they may have had access to Mullah Omar (he himself had met the late Osama bin Laden ... who has left the building... once on the Kabul frontlines), they never interfered in the day to day running of government nor exerted any direct influence on the Taliban rank and file. Most analysts with a far greater knowledge of Afghanistan than mine corroborated his words which pointed to the essential difference between the Al Qaeda Arabs and the Afghan Taliban: one had a global vision and "an agenda that stretches beyond borders", the other mainly localised interests. It's pertinent to remember that despite the fact that Al Qaeda had found refuge in Afghanistan, no act of international terrorism has ever involved an Afghan. In the heady days after driving the Taliban from power, NATO and its allies chose to ignore this distinction. Syed Saleem Shahzad's book, at its most persuasive, is essentially an explanation of how that crucial mistake and its resultant hubris allowed Al Qaeda to make "blood brothers" of those lumped with them and weave itself into the fabric of the Taliban far more than it ever had before 9/11. Shahzad's contention is that the West's initial myopia in Afghanistan has become a self-fulfilling prophecy which has made it now impossible to separate Al Qaeda from the Taliban insurgency and which will thus lead to the West's eventual defeat in that arena. THIS review has been the most difficult one, by far, that I have ever had to write. And it is only very partially because of the denseness of the book under consideration. The author frequently uses the metaphor of the Arabic mythological epic, Alf Laila Wa Laila (A Thousand and One Nights), to give a sense of the multifarious interconnected stories of Al Qaeda, but the metaphor could as easily be used for this book itself. It is a series of stories about people who fought and died and were replaced, obscure histories and recent events that have ostensibly shaped the beast that is Al Qaeda. In fact, the book would have benefited tremendously from some charts and diagrams to help readers keep track of the numerous jihadist characters and their often complicated and fluid relationships with various organizations without having to continuously flip backwards and retrace their steps. But there are two far more primary reasons this has been a difficult book to review. The first has to do with the content. Most of the book is written without source citations and more often than not, assertions are made that are impossible to verify. Obviously, one must take the author at his word if he asserts that Militant X or Al Qaeda Planner Y told him something in an exclusive interview; there is no way for a reader to corroborate or refute such information, especially if X and Y are now dead. But as often, startling claims are made without reference to any information in the public domain that would substantiate them. To give just a few examples of numerous such assertions, the book claims that after the 2003 military operation in South ![]() ... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI... was unconcerned about inflicting collateral damage" and was also unconcerned by the plight of millions of civilians made refugees in 2008 and 2009 in North and South Waziristan, Bajaur, ![]() ... Named for the Mohmand clan of the Sarban Pahstuns, a truculent, quarrelsome lot. In Pakistain, the Mohmands infest their eponymous Agency, metastasizing as far as the plains of Beautiful Downtown Peshawar, Charsadda, and Mardan. Mohmands are also scattered throughout Pakistan in urban areas including Karachi, Lahore, and Quetta. In Afghanistan they are mainly found in Nangarhar and Kunar... and Swat. These are not small assertions for a journalist to make as throwaway "factoids". Yet the book is littered with such claims. What makes such assertions particularly problematic is that they are presented along with other verifiable facts about well known events, quite possibly lulling the ordinary reader, with little independent knowledge of the region's politics, into accepting them as the truth rather than highly contested 'facts'. The second reason making this a difficult review are the circumstances in which the book was published. It was launched in London only a few days before the author, Syed Saleem Shahzad, a fellow journalist who worked with the same media house as myself at one time, was kidnapped and found brutally murdered with the finger of blame pointing squarely towards the state's intelligence outfits. The immediate assumption was that his senseless murder was connected in some way to his writings on the murky world of jihadist outfits and possibly to this very book. This obviously attached a halo to his investigative pieces that he possibly never enjoyed in his lifetime. It is never easy to write critically of the work of a colleague (albeit a colleague I never met), but especially when that colleague has met such a horrific and thoroughly undeserved fate. The Commission of Inquiry into Shahzad's murder has yet to make its findings known. But irrespective of the results of that inquiry, and indeed it remains a fervent hope that Shahzad's killers are identified and punished, the book must be judged on its content, which I have endeavoured to do with the caveats detailed above. I have already pointed out one of the major issues with the content of the book being a lack of citations for rather startling claims. However, there's no worse danger than telling a mother her baby is ugly... there also numerous assertions in the text which can actually be called out for their own internal contradictions and even misstatement of known facts. As examples of the latter, Shahzad claims at one point that Islamic Emirates of Afghanistan (Afghanistan under the Taliban) "is recognised by a majority of Moslem scholars as an Islamic state", which is just simply wrong. At another point he claims that General Tariq Majeed was General Musharraf's choice to succeed him as chief of army staff in 2007 but that Musharraf was forced to accept General Kayani since the latter was the US choice. This is contradicted by the recent WikiLeaks disclosures of secret US documents that show that General Musharraf played his cards close to his chest and that US diplomats were left to speculate on who Musharraf's successor might be. As an example of the former, Shahzad claims at one point in the book that Al Qaeda's leadership had become quite upset with its man in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, for his brutality and his policy of targeting Shias in Iraq since it felt this was alienating even moderate Sunnis from Al Qaeda. In fact, the author claims Al Qaeda was getting ready to quickly distance itself from Zarqawi before he was killed by US forces. Yet, at another point the author notes that Dr Ayman al-Zwahiri, who he calls the real founder of Al Qaeda, "awarded" Zarqawi the "Al Qaeda franchise for Iraq to stir up sectarian strife so that Iraq's theater of war would be more complicit" and to make Iraq ungovernable. His claims about Al Qaeda's alleged concern about Zarqawi's sectarianism are also belied by his own telling of Al Qaeda's intellectual lineage from the medieval ideologue Ibne Taymiyyah who declared Shias heretics, and how the virulently anti-Shia outfit, Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, was welcomed into Al Qaeda with open arms and allowed to carry on its targeting of the Shia in Pakistain. But perhaps the book's greatest problem lies in Shahzad's interpretation of Al Qaeda itself. Contrary to every other scholarly dissection of Al Qaeda as a loose-knit group of radical jihadis worldwide bound by a common ideology, Shahzad paints an organization that seems not only to micromanage all affairs but which has a Nostradamus-like prophetic far-sightedness. According to Shahzad, Al Qaeda not only "fashioned" the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistain (TTP) in 2007-8 by spotting and nurturing young cut-throats such as Baitullah Mehsud, Qari Ziaur Rehman and Swat's Ibne Ameen (who was later notorious for his throat-slitting brutality) early on, it did so because it had foreseen that Pakistain's tribal areas would become the real battleground against the Americans. Shahzad also claims that the Lal Masjid episode of 2007 was precipitated by Al Qaeda on whose advice Maulana Abdul Aziz, the mosque's infamous khateeb, had in 2004 issued a fatwa forbidding Moslem funerals for army personnel killed in the South Waziristan operation. Before the actual military operation against Lal Masjid, "The Al Qaeda shura (council) met in North Waziristan and, after prolonged discussion and debate, agreed that the high point of their struggle in Pakistain would come when the foreseeable military operation against Lal Masjid began," writes Shahzad. "Open war against the US-Pakistain designs was now unavoidable." Al Qaeda also knew in 2006 (!) that Barrack Obama would be elected president of the US, according to Shahzad, and therefore the liquidation of Benazir Bhutto was timed to unsettle US plans for Pakistain during a transition phase from a Republican to a Democrat administration. And its 9/11 attacks were orchestrated knowing that the US would then attack Afghanistan, thereby "sucking the US into their trap" and leading to a Moslem backlash which would precipitate a confrontation between the West and the Moslem world. This supposedly fulfilled a Hadith about the beginning of "End of Times" battles in ancient Khurasaan comprising the current areas of Central Asia, Iran, Pakistain and India. The belief in this Hadith is explained as the motivator for bin Laden's decision to return to Afghanistan in 1996, even though the actual circumstances of bin Laden's flight of necessity from Sudan are well known. It is one thing to disabuse some silly liberals of their notions of the jihadists as unthinking automatons. It is quite another to do what Shahzad seems to have done: delineate Al Qaeda as some sort of all-seeing, all-knowing entity that is able to plan far ahead of mere mortals. In fact, his far more credible focus on Al Qaeda's "uncanny ability to exploit unfolding events" is undercut by this constant awe at the 'prophetic' nature of the group's leadership. In all probability, many of these stories were probably revisionist takes on past events by jihadists Shahzad had access to, such as the notorious Ilyas Kashmiri (killed in a drone strike a few days after Shahzad's own murder). But for the author to take these at face value betrays a strange gullibility for a seasoned journalist. The book is at its best where Shahzad clearly cites his sources of information, usually mid-tier and lesser known figures of this shadowy world that he personally met, and which then provide a fresh insight into the workings of terror outfits. Characters like the former army commandos turned jihadis, Captain Khurram Ashiq, Major Abdul Rehman and Khurram's brother, Major Haroon Ashiq are among the most fascinating to emerge from these stories. Major Haroon, who the author claims personally killed the former SSG commander Major General (retired) Faisal Alavi in Islamabad in retaliation for the 2003 special forces operations in Angoor Adda, in particular, is singled out as one of the real architects of Al Qaeda's new military strategy. This included, among other things, the November 26, 2008 attack on Mumbai (Shahzad claims it was planned by Haroon who "cunningly manipulated" a "forward section" of the ISI and the Lashkar-i-Taiba and was designed to take pressure off gun-hung tough guys on the Afghan border by causing an India-Pakistain conflagration), the focus on cutting off NATO supply lines and the kidnapping-civilians-for-ransom strategy (including of the Bloody Karachi-based filmmaker, Satish Anand) to raise funds. He also claims that the attack on the touring Sri Lankan cricket team in March 2009 was actually aimed to hold the team hostage to negotiate the springing from prison of Haroon, who had been tossed in the calaboose during a bungled kidnapping in Rawalpindi. Incidentally, it should be noted that Carey Schofield in her recently published book Inside the Pakistain Army hints strongly that Alavi's murder may have been motivated by the personal animosity of two senior generals who Alavi felt had reason to hold a grudge against him, who poisoned his longtime supporter General Musharraf against him and against whom he had filed a formal complaint for misrepresenting facts that led to his dismissal from service. She also repeats Alavi's family's claims (which she could not verify) that Major Haroon, who was charged with Alavi's murder, was acquitted and walked out of prison in the summer of 2011. Shahzad is also good where, through recounting his own experiences of navigating the difficult terrain of the Pak-Afghan border, he is able to convey how gun-hung tough guys are able to manoeuvre militarily undetected by both NATO and Pak forces. And because of his wealth of information on mid-level jihadists, he is also able to provide a snapshot of the increasingly fluid membership structure of Death Eater outfits. With the book citing an estimated figure of 600,000 gun-hung tough guys trained between 1980 and 2000, it paints a grim picture for analysts who believe they can turn a blind eye to some groups while targeting others. Most importantly, the book also details the nuances of the extremely murky fight against militancy and terrorism in which nobody has any roadmaps and there is a constant push-and-pull over whether to employ force or divide-and-conquer tactics. Shahzad points out, for example, that NATO initially mis-assessed Sirajuddin Haqqani's loyalty to Mullah Omar, hoping to use him to displace Omar from the leadership of the Taliban (according to the book, the US also attempted, unsuccessfully, to set up the Jaishul Moslem, as a rival outfit to the Taliban). They did not realise, Shahzad says, that unlike his father Jalaluddin Haqqani, Siraj had become very close to Al Qaeda and, in fact, Al Qaeda's man in the Taliban shura, and would never betray Omar because this would jeopardise Al Qaeda's own interests. In fact, he had also assisted the TTP against the Pakistain army, which might explain recent rumours that the Paks were willing to help the US track him down in exchange for the Americans not touching the elder Haqqani. Similarly, he also puts down the failed treaties between the Pakistain army and Death Eaters, such as those of Shakai (April 2004), Srarogha (February 2005) and with the Utmanzai Wazirs (September 2006, which also resulted in money being transferred to gun-hung tough guys as 'compensation' and other tossed in the calaboose gun-hung tough guys being freed) not so much as Pakistain playing double games with the US, as desperate tactical strategies to contain militarily untenable situations. In 2007, for example, the Pakistain army also supported the TTP South Waziristan commander Mullah Nazir, with success, in order to wipe out the Al Qaeda-related Uzbek fighters, who Shahzad claims were the ones who introduced brutal tactics, such as the cutting of throats, to Pak Death Eaters. The author also mocks those who allege any nexus between the ISI and Al Qaeda in the Mumbai attacks laying the blame unequivocally on Major Haroon, Major Abdul Rehman and their Al Qaeda cohorts. If anything, Shahzad accuses the army of creating more jihadis through the "unnecessary persecution" of gun-hung tough guys and through torture tactics, neither of which seems to fit into the current discourse of US allegations of double-dealing against Pakistain. If indeed state intelligence agents were responsible for Shahzad's murder, the irony is that they have silenced a voice that could have bolstered their arguments against the American accusations. IN early 2000, a few months after General Musharraf took power in a coup, he participated in a question and answer session with a large audience in Bloody Karachi. He was asked a question about the army's concept of "strategic depth" and whether it realised that its support for the Taliban in Afghanistan was encouraging similar literalist interpretations of religion and militancy in Pakistain. At that point, reports had just begun to filter in of bands of Pak gun-hung tough guys imposing Taliban-like strictures, such as banning television, music and girls' education, in parts of the tribal areas. His answer surprised many of those present. Musharraf spoke about how four years earlier, when his army officers used to visit the Taliban, they were forced to eat sitting on the ground, usually from one large communal plate. Now, he said, when they visit, they sit at tables and chairs with the Talibs and have separate plates and even cutlery. Although his answer sounded absurd then, particularly in relation to the question that was asked, I suppose what he meant was that the Taliban were also 'evolving'. If Syed Saleem Shahzad's hypothesis about Al Qaeda is correct, the Taliban have certainly changed, though not in the way General Musharraf envisioned. And the repercussions of their ideological influence can be felt all over Pakistain. While it is questionable whether Al Qaeda actually foresaw and pre-planned the so-called "Af-Pak" theatre of war or not, and the US may have taken too long to decide that a common strategy was called for, Pakistain's establishment it seems has yet to understand this fully. Whatever the merits of tactically supporting the Taliban as a hedge against a potentially hostile Afghanistan after NATO withdraws, the long-term strategic consequences for Pakistain's own social fabric are disastrous. Even more ironically, while the Pakistain military may have officially abandoned their ideas of "strategic depth", Al Qaeda and the Taliban it seems are the ones who have managed truly to achieve "strategic depth." In Pakistain. |
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India-Pakistan |
Clinton wants Mullah Omar in peace talks |
2011-10-29 |
[Dawn] US Secretary of State ![]() ... sometimes described as The Liberatress of Libyaand at other times as Mrs. Bill, never as Another Al Haig... told a congressional panel on Thursday that any Afghan-led grinding of the peace processor would have to include the Quetta Shura and its leader Mullah Omar. ... a minor Pashtun commander in the war against the Soviets who made good as leader of the Taliban. As ruler of Afghanistan, he took the title Leader of the Faithful. The imposition of Pashtunkhwa on the nation institutionalized ignorance and brutality already notable for its own fair share of ignorance and brutality... Her statement before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs also emphasised several other key points reflecting a major change in US approach towards seeking a peaceful end to the Afghan conflict. "There is no solution in the region without Pakistain and no stable future in the region without a partnership." The US needs to negotiate with the Haqqani network while continuing to work with Pakistain to destroy the safe havens it has inside Fata. The US aid to Pakistain should not be conditioned to disbanding Lashkar-i-Taiba. And the "real game-changer in the region" would be a stronger relationship between Pakistain and India. Her statement indicated that the new US approach had evolved further after Secretary Clinton's visit to Afghanistan and Pakistain last week where she discussed this strategy with the leaders of those two countries as well. After the visit, she told the US media that the United States and Pakistain had reached 90-95 per cent agreement on the issues that at one stage appeared close to breaking up their relationship. The politicians, who still seem upset with Pakistain over its alleged links to the jihad boys, created several opportunities for the secretary to browbeat Pakistain but she refrained from doing so. Congressman Steve Chabot, a Republican, asked Secretary Clinton if the US was prepared to negotiate with Mulla Omar. "And if so, under what circumstances and what would our conditions be?" he asked. "Well, Congressman, the negotiations that would be part of any Afghan-led grinding of the peace processor would have to include the Quetta Shura and would have to include some recognition by the Quetta Shura which, based on everything we know, is still led by Mulla Omar, that they wish to participate in such a process," she responded. "We are pursuing every thread of any kind of interest expressed." Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the panel's chairperson, questioned the wisdom of engaging the Haqqani network while it continued to attack US soldiers in Afghanistan. "What's the US strategy, crackdown or negotiate with the Haqqani network or a little bit of both," she asked. "It's both," said Secretary Clinton. Later, while responding to Congressman Chabot, she said the US agreed to meet the Haqqani network because that the ISI had asked them to do so. "This was done in part because I think the Paks hope to be able to move the Haqqani network towards some kind of peace negotiation and the answer was an attack on our embassy" in Kabul. The US still wanted to stay engaged with the Haqqani network to test whether these organizations had any willingness to negotiate in good faith, she told Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen. "There is evidence going both ways, to be clear. Sometimes we hear that they will, that there are elements within each that wish to pursue that, and then other times that it's off the table." she added. Secretary Clinton noted that only last week the US had launched a major military operation in Afghanistan that rounded up and eliminated more than 100 Haqqani network operatives. "And we are taking action to target the Haqqani leadership on both sides of the border," she said. "We are already working with the Paks to target those who are behind a lot of the attacks against Afghans and Americans." Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen asked Secretary Clinton to comment on a recent statement by Afghanistan's Caped President Hamid Maybe I'll join the TalibanKarzai ... A former Baltimore restaurateur, now 12th and current President of Afghanistan, displacing the legitimate president Rabbani in December 2004. He was installed as the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001 in a vain attempt to put a Pashtunface on the successor state to the Taliban. After the 2004 presidential election, he was declared president regardless of what the actual vote count was. He won a second, even more dubious, five-year-term after the 2009 presidential election. His grip on reality has been slipping steadily since around 2007, probably from heavy drug use... that if there was war between Pakistain and America, he would side with Pakistain. Secretary Clinton said that as soon as she heard this statement, she asked the US ambassador in Kabul to figure out what the hell Mr Karzai meant and the ambassador reported back that Mr Karzai was "This was not at all about a war that anybody was predicting," she said. Responding to a question about recent remarks by US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta ...current SecDef, previously Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Panetta served as President Bill Clinton's White House Chief of Staff from 1994 to 1997 and was a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1977 to 1993.... and former military chief Admiral Mike Mullen, who blamed Pakistain for continuing to support the jihad boys, Secretary Clinton said that neither Mr Panetta nor Admiral Mullen ever questioned the need to stay engaged with Pakistain. She said that everyone in the US administration believed that the Haqqanis had safe havens inside Pakistain and used these hideouts for attacking US and Afghan soldiers. "And we also agree, however, ... that there is no solution in the region without Pakistain and no stable future in the region without a partnership." Congressman Ed Royce, another Republican, reminded her that another congressional panel had asked the B.O. regime to condition US assistance to Pakistain to shutting down the LeT and asked her if she was willing to do so. "We have had intensive discussions with our Indian counterparts" on the LeT and on the attacks it allegedly carried out in India. But "I do not want to commit at this time to taking such a path because I think it's important that there be further consideration of all of the implications," Secretary Clinton said. "Certainly, every time we meet with the Paks, we press them on the LeT about the continuing failure, in our view, to fulfil all of the requirements necessary for prosecution related to the Mumbai attacks and we will continue to do so," she said. Secretary Clinton said that like the congressman, she too worried about the possibility that LeT attacks inside India could trigger yet another war between India and Pakistain. "And we discuss it in great depth with our Indian counterparts, because it is, first and foremost, a concern of theirs. It is obviously also concerning to us." Congressman Joe Wilson, also a Republican, noted that Pakistain was developing a most-favoured nation trade status with India and asked what the US could do to promote a level of trade and positive contact between India and Pakistain. "Well, Congressman, I agree with you that the real game-changer in the region is not so much our bilateral relationship as the relationship between Pakistain and India. And the more that there can be progress, the more likely there can be even more progress," the secretary said. "So we have in Pakistain today a leadership, both civilian and military, that wants to see progress with India, and we have the same on the Indian side." |
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India-Pakistan |
Verdict reserved on transfer of Lakhvi trial |
2011-10-19 |
![]() The counsel for the federal government argued on Monday that the case against Lakhvi (petitioner) was registered at Islamabad, therefore, the Islamabad High Court had the jurisdiction to hear the transfer application. Advocate Khwaja Sultan, on behalf of the petitioner, opposed the government's plea and argued that the IHC could only pass an order to the extent of Islamabad. He said the Lahore High Court had a vast territorial jurisdiction and could transfer the case to anywhere in Punjab. After hearing both sides, the chief justice reserved the verdict. Lakhvi, an activist of banned outfit Lashkar-i-Taiba, alleged the trial was not being conducted fairly and the trial court (anti-terrorism court) was also being influenced by the government. He also made security reasons as one of the grounds taken for the transfer of trial proceedings from Rawalpindi to Lahore. |
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India-Pakistan |
Advantage Al Qaeda |
2011-10-04 |
[Dawn] HIGH-PROFILE terrorist attacks in South Asia over the last few years demonstrate that Death Eaters are either quick learners or are part of the same nexus. Similarities in a few terrorist attacks across different countries and regions can be shrugged off as copycat acts, but when the likeness almost becomes a trademark it merits a closer look. In recent years, Death Eaters have gone after new targets and evolved new tactics in a near-simultaneous manner that point to an increasing exchange of notes, so to speak. Shared ideological, political and, sometimes, operational objectives bring Death Eaters closer. In that context, similarities between the Sept 13 attacks on US and NATO ...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A cautionary tale of cost-benefit analysis.... targets in Afghanistan, the assault on Pakistain's Mehran naval air force base in May this year and the November 2008 Mumbai attacks may not be surprising. The operational and tactical likeness of these attacks reflects that Death Eaters have enhanced their operational capabilities and demands counterterrorism measures that are commensurate with the new challenges. A broader conceptual framework and effective coordination among states facing the shared threat of terrorism can build an effective pre-emptive mechanism. But such a synchronised effort to take on terrorism has not been achieved even a decade after 9/11. Interstate cooperation against terrorism remains a pipe dream in South Asia in particular, even as Death Eaters grow ever-savvy and constantly find sophisticated techniques of striking their targets. The security crisis and the insurgency that erupted in Iraq after the US invasion of that country in 2003 was a watershed moment in the history of terrorism. Iraq proved a virtual laboratory for Death Eaters where Al Qaeda tried and perfected new and sophisticated techniques of wreaking havoc, which were later exported to other regions, including Afghanistan and Pakistain. Al Qaeda's edge in terrorism expertise influenced the Taliban and other turban movements in the region, which had been under immense pressure from the state after 9/11. Al Qaeda's support in the form of improved capabilities and techniques for striking their targets was a virtual lifeline for them. The February 2008 suicide kaboom in Kandahar that targeted a dog-fight festival was the first in Afghanistan where the tactics could be compared to those involving attacks targeting pilgrims in Iraq starting 2003. The objective was similar: to kill as many members of opponent tribes, sects and political adversaries as possible, even if they were civilians. More destructive suicide jackets were developed to maximise the impact. Also in 2008, Pakistain saw progression in techniques in three major terrorist attacks which targeted the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) building in Lahore and the Danish embassy and Marriott hotel in Islamabad. In the FIA attack, Death Eaters used a pickup truck loaded with over 50kg of C4 plastic explosives, in a tactic that was strikingly similar to the April 2005 botched attack on Iraq's infamous Abu Ghraib prison by Al Qaeda, with the aim of freeing detainees and targeting US forces in a series of car boomings. The method adopted in the devastating Marriott suicide kaboom showed their enhanced capabilities and the ability to strike at will the most protected parts of the country. The Mumbai attacks were another defining moment, when a new technique of urban guerrilla warfare proved brutally effective in the hands of terrorists, who have since developed such tactics further, adding elements of suicide kaboom to it and striking in Pakistain and Afghanistan more than a dozen times. Terrorists imitated the Mumbai attacks in four major assaults in Pakistain in 2009: an attack on GHQ in Rawalpindi, an assault on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore and two attacks on a police training school in the same city. Afghanistan suffered a similar attack in Kabul in February 2010 when Death Eaters targeted a shopping centre, a guesthouse and a hotel. One tactic has been to target a particular city through repeated strikes with a view to terrorising the population and enhancing the impact of attacks beyond just physical damage. In 2009, Death Eaters repeatedly targeted Beautiful Downtown Peshawar in that manner and in 2010 they focused on Lahore. In 2011, Bloody Karachi seems to be high on the terrorists' list. In Afghanistan, initially Kandahar was a magnet for such sustained attacks and now it is Kabul. At the level of nexus, things have been much clearer. Terrorist groups that shared similar ideological and political ambitions not only borrowed tactics and techniques ascribed to each other, but also mirrored other terrorist outfits' approaches by merging or otherwise converging, transforming or altering their organizational composition. This happened in the case of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistain, Lashkar-i-Jhangvi and a few Kashmire-based turban groups, mainly Brigade 313 headed by Ilyas Kashmiri.Under Al Qaeda's influence these outfits have transformed and have been imitating each other on the tactical, operational and organizational levels. Typically, the influence has impacted smaller groups who had been struggling to survive or had material deficiencies and required external help to survive. Al Qaeda has been more than willing to help out, through both ideological and operational support. There is little doubt that quid pro quo has been involved. That was the conclusion that slain Pak journalist and expert on terrorism reporting, Syed Saleem Shahzad, had reached in his book Inside Al Qaeda and the Taliban, pointing out that Al Qaeda was in the driving seat and that the Taliban and other turban groups were essentially acting like its foot soldiers. He had argued that the Mumbai attacks were planned by Al Qaeda, which used Lashkar-i-Taiba to execute the plan. He believed that Al Qaeda wanted to destabilise the region to break the alliance of the ruling Mohammedan elites and the masses with the West and make the region the base for a global caliphate. The challenges that terrorism poses in the 21st century are complex, and in many cases insurmountable in the absence of interstate cooperation. Effective collaborations are impossible without trust, to state the obvious. When partners in the war on terror talk to each other through the media or consider arm-twisting and threats of use of force to be the preferred modes for winning cooperation, prospects for teamwork are doomed. By acting in this manner, states fall into the trap of terrorists. No prizes for guessing which party to this new kind of war ends up the winner then and which ends up shooting itself in the foot. |
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