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India-Pakistan
Pro-Saudi clerics say they will go protect Harmain Sharifain if army won't
2015-04-14
[DAWN] Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat
...which is the false nose and plastic mustache of the murderous banned extremist group Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain, whatcha might call the political wing of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi...
(ASWJ) chief Maulana Muhammad Ahmad Ludhianvi has decried the resolution passed by the parliament on Yemen
...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of. Except for a tiny handfull of Jews everthing there is very Islamic...
as "against the will of the people" and "a waste of time".

"We have to give unconditional support to Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
to save the honour of Ummul Momineen Hazrat Ayesha Siddiqa. We will not allow anyone to disrespect the Haramain Sharifain," he declared at a rally staged by ASWJ outside the National Press Club on Sunday.

Maulana Ludhianvi, who had been leading the pro-Saudi rallies in the federal capital over the last week, announced that more such public meetings would be held in Islamabad, Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
and Lahore before an all-party conference is called to finalise plans "save the Harmain Sharifain".

"If our government does not take the decision, we will go to Saudi Arabia, just like Ameer Ansar Ul Ummah Fazal-ur-Rehman Khalil went to Afghanistan," he said.

Maulana Ludhianvi said some elements were stirring up the Shia-Sunni schism to divert the attention of the Paks away from Saudi Arabia.

However,
a person who gets all wrapped up in himself makes a mighty small package...
when the participants of the ASWJ rally started chanting slogans against the parliamentarians, he stopped them. He said he will soon be rejoining the parliament so they should not criticise the politicians.

In his address to the rally, Maulana Fazal ur Rehman Khalil said Saudi Arabia has always supported Pakistain and now it is time Pakistain supported Saudi Arabia.

There is no difference between protecting "the Haramain or the Sheikhain" but there is a clash between ideologies, he said.

"Moreover, the war is not between two countries but it is a war against rebels," he said.

"Those who want ceasefire in Yemen favour operations against Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain," he added.

Leader of Jamaat Ulema-e-Islam
...the political wing of the Pak Taliban...
(JUI) Maulana Abdul Rauf Farooqi said the whole nation is willing to defend Haramain Sharifain and that the defence line extended from the Saudi border to Haramain.

"We reject the resolution of Parliament as it cannot decide whether troops should be sent to Saudi Arabia. It is now the army's decision to make," he said.

Maulana Farooqi asked the army to dispatch troops "unconditionally and without further delay". He also demanded for the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to be activated.

Another religious leader, Maulana Ashraf Ali, felt disappointed at the statements of political parties regarding Baitullah (holy Kaaba). "Our army and all our resources should be devoted to the Haramain Sharifain," he said.

Pir Saifullah Khalid observed that although Allah has taken the responsibility to protect the Baitullah, "we have to prove how devoted we are to His house".

Participants of the ASWJ rally gathered at Lal Masjid
...literally the Red Mosque, located in Islamabad and frequented by all sorts of high govt officials. The proprietors, Ghazi Abdul Rasheed and Maulana Abdul Aziz Ghazi, unleashed their Islamic storm troopers on the city, shutting down whorehouses and beating people up who weren't devout enough. The Musharraf govt put an end to the nonsense by besieging the place. Abdul Aziz Ghazi was nabbed while he was trying to escape dressed up like a girl. BBC reported that the corpse count at 173, but other claims, usually hysterical, say there were up to 1000 titzup. Among their number was Abdul Rashid Ghazi. Everyone then said tut-tut and what a nice guy he had been...
and marched to the National Press Club chanting slogans. Strict security measures were taken by the police and roads leading to the Press Club were closed to traffic.
Link


India-Pakistan
Javed Hashmi's allegations: What is the 'Bangladesh model'?
2014-09-02
[DAWN] Pakistain Tehrik-e-Insaf
...a political party in Pakistan. PTI was founded by former Pakistani cricket captain and philanthropist Imran Khan. The party's slogan is Justice, Humanity and Self Esteem, each of which is open to widely divergent interpretations....
(PTI) President Javed Hashmi's startling claims of a scripted political crisis being engineered in Pakistain has led to widespread speculation among analysts that a version of the 'Bangladesh Model' may be in the works.

"Imran had told the PTI core committee it won't be called a martial law," Hashmi alleged at a presser, hinting at a covert form of takeover by the military establishment, using PTI Chairman Imran Khan
... aka Taliban Khan, who who convinced himself that playing cricket qualified him to lead a nuclear-armed nation with severe personality problems...
and Chief of the Pakistain Awami Tehrik Tahirul-Qadri as their instruments.

The 'Bangladesh Model', a soft coup, is based on the idea that the political system must be cleansed of corrupt elements for the welfare of the public, which perhaps has been left incapacitated to elect honest leaders.

The model works on the premise that the military and judiciary must intervene to help differentiate the 'right' from the 'wrong' before it is too late. The model stipulates that the democracy that follows such a 'cleansing' is therefore a truer form since the people have been rightly 'guided' and are now able to make informed decisions.

Technocrats, current and former officials aligned with the military and judiciary play a vital role in the implementation of the 'Bangladesh Model' of which the strings are pulled from the background and through an interim government that remains in power for a lengthy period as happened in Bangladesh in 2007.

"If Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
survives, for the rest of his term, he will be a ceremonial prime minister--the world will not take him seriously," said Ayesha Siddiqa, an Islamabad-based analyst told the Wall Street Journal on Saturday.

"A soft coup has already taken place. The question is whether it will harden."
Link


India-Pakistan
Nawaz close to reaching deal with Army: WSJ
2014-08-29
[DAWN] Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
is close to making a deal with the Pakistain Army, in the backdrop of the political events that are unfolding in the federal capital, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The report suggests that as per the proposed agreement, the armed forces would control strategic policy areas, such as relations with the United States, Afghanistan and India.

The military has extracted a promise of freedom for former president (retd) General Pervez Perv Musharraf
... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ...
and that Sharif's government had secretly agreed to let Musharraf go abroad after a symbolic indictment over treason, which took place in March.

The Wall Street Journal says the government went back on the deal as a result of which trust had eroded between the military and Sharif.

Government aides said the military has seized on Sharif's weakened status during the political crisis and are now seeking guarantees from the prime minister that he will follow through on the agreement, the report suggests.

It also says that for the rest of his term, Sharif will be a ceremonial prime minister.

"If Nawaz Sharif survives, for the rest of his term, he will be a ceremonial prime minister--the world will not take him seriously," said Ayesha Siddiqa, an analyst based in Islamabad. "A soft coup has already taken place. The question is whether it will harden," the report says.

Government aides said in the report that the administration was also willing to let the prime minister's brother, Shahbaz Sharif
...Pak dynastic politician, brother of PM Nawaz Sharif, chief minister of Punjab...
, step down as chief minister of Punjab.

Thousands of protesters led by holy man Tahirul-Qadri and Pakistain Tehrik-e-Insaf
...a political party in Pakistan. PTI was founded by former Pakistani cricket captain and philanthropist Imran Khan. The party's slogan is Justice, Humanity and Self Esteem, each of which is open to widely divergent interpretations....
Chairman Imran Khan
... aka Taliban Khan, who is the lightweight's lightweight...
have camped outside the parliament building in Islamabad to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The two-week showdown at the heart of the capital has rattled the country and shaken Sharif's government just 15 months into a five-year mandate.

Imran Khan has remained defiant and refused to end his sit-in protest, saying he was seeking "independence or death" and would not rest until both Sharif brothers quit.

Khan has alleged massive cheating in the May 2013 poll, though international observers said the vote was largely free and fair.
Link


Afghanistan
Abdullah best bet for Afghan peace: Hamid Gul
2014-06-13
[OMANTRIBUNE] Pakistain's former spymaster Hamid Gul
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...
says the Islamist group's long-time foe Abdullah Abdullah
... the former foreign minister of the Northern Alliance government, advisor to Masood, and candidate for president against Karzai. Dr. Abdullah was born in Kabul and is half Tadjik and half Pashtun...
has the best chance of securing peace.

Widely viewed as a "Godfather" figure for Pakistain's strategy of using jihadist proxies to exert influence in neighbouring countries, the 77-year-old retired general is still seen by some observers as offering a window into the mindset of the country's powerful military establishment.

As Afghanistan prepares for a run-off poll on Saturday between Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani, Pakistain has maintained a neutral stance. But Gul, who headed Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency between 1987 and 1989 during the late stages of the Soviet occupation, said it would take a fighter, not an academic to secure peace for Afghanistan -- as long as he refused to sign a bilateral security agreement with the US.

Gul said Abdullah's past as a resistance fighter together with his shrewd choices of running mates made him uniquely placed to negotiate with those he called the "Afghan opposition" -- the Taliban.

Abdullah draws his main support from ethnic Tajiks in the north, while Ghani is a Pashtun like the majority of the country and the Taliban. But, said Gul: "Abdullah has a distinct advantage for future peace in Afghanistan -- if that is the objective and it should be -- that he is a jihadi.

"And the other people with him are also jihadis," he continued, referring to running mates Mohammad Khan, an ally of powerful Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
... who used to be known in intelligence circles as The Most Evil Man in the World but who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil...
who has traditional ties to Pakistain, and Mohammad Mohaqeq -- a Hazara seen as closer to Iran.

"Ashraf Ghani is not a jihadi," he said about the ex-World Bank economist who spent the 1980s living in the US. "And for a jihadi to open a dialogue with a non-jihadi would be very difficult."

Following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, the country slid into anarchy, and Taliban fighters trained in Pakistain gradually prised control from the Northern Alliance of commander Ahmad Shah Massoud -- a revered national hero who was also Abdullah's mentor.

During this period, Gul maintained contacts with both sides in an unofficial role as a mediator. "At that time I used to live in Ahmad Shah Massoud's guesthouse and Abdullah was deputed to look after me so I met him almost every day" during trips from 1992-1995, prior to the Taliban's ascent to power.

He added his last trip to Afghanistan came in 2001. "And that was to attend the last parade of Taliban government on 19th of August 2001, just three weeks before 9/11. I was a chief guest there."

He warned that war would continue if the next Afghan president signs a security pact allowing some 10,000 US troops to remain in the country until 2016.

Some observers have accused Gul of aggrandising his role in regional affairs post-retirement, but security analyst Ayesha Siddiqa said he remained "strongly connected" with the prevalent line of thinking in the military's high command.
Link


India-Pakistan
Pakistani counter-terror funds spent on luxury gifts
2014-01-24
[DAWN] Pak officials used a secret counter-terrorism fund to buy wedding gifts, luxury carpets and gold jewellery for relatives of ministers and visiting dignitaries, according to documents seen by AFP.

The revelations cast a spotlight on high-level corruption in Pakistain as the impoverished but nuclear-armed country battles a surge in Taliban violence.

They concern the National Crisis Management Cell (NCMC) of Pakistain's interior ministry, formed in 2000 to coordinate between the country's intelligence agencies and federal and provincial governments on national security matters.

The US and other Western countries have poured billions of dollars into Pakistain since the 9/11 attacks of 2001 to help in its fight against Taliban and al Qaeda linked Death Eaters.

The NCMC received some 425 million rupees ($4.3 million) from Pak government coffers from 2009-2013, according to files obtained by Umar Cheema, an investigative journalist for Pak daily The News, and seen by AFP.

During that time the interior ministry was headed by Rehman Malik
Pak politician, Interior Minister under the Gilani government. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Nawaz Sharif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men. He had to give up the interior ministry job because he held dual Brit citizenship.
, a flamboyant loyalist of former president Asif Ali Zardari's Pakistain People's Party (PPP).

Watches, carpets, gold, goats
Goats? Oh dear.
Many of the documents deal with payments to intelligence sources, routine maintenance of vehicles and overtime for employees.

But the files also include receipts for gifts for US and British embassy officials, as well as flowers and sweets for journalists.

One receipt for 70,000 rupees ($700) is itemised as a "Pair of wrist watches for marriage of nephew of minister for interior".

The documents show that on a trip to Rome for an Interpol conference in November 2012, Malik took a necklace, wooden tables and a TouchMate tablet computer as gifts.

The counter-terror fund was also used to buy three rugs as wedding gifts for the son of former prime minister Raja Pervez Ashraf early last year.

A set of 21-carat gold jewellery worth $3,000 was bought for one unnamed individual, while another was the recipient of a $1,500 set.

A handicrafts store in Islamabad was paid some $23,000 in December 2012 for carpets and crafts given to local officials and delegations from the EU, Iran and India.

Among the more bizarre items paid for from the fund was the $800 cost of four sacrificial goats, plus butchery costs, listed as "stabbing charges", for the festival of Eid-ul-Azha.

Alms to the poor and donations of sweets, flowers, and cash to a local Sufi saint were also made from the fund in 2012, the documents show.

'You know how Pakistain works'

Pakistain's present government, led by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
, has ordered an audit of the interior ministry accounts from 2010-2013.

Ministry front man Danyal Gilani confirmed the audit was ongoing but declined to indicate a timeframe for its completion.

The director general of the NCMC, Tariq Lodhi, did not respond to repeated attempts to seek comment. Upon coming to power in June last year, Sharif's government abolished secret funds in 16 ministries in an effort to curb corruption and rein in spending.

Malik, who as minister was famed for his expensive ties and purple hair-dye, mounted a firm defence of his conduct on Twitter, denying he had used the fund and saying it was "never under the control of the minister".

Asked why some receipts contained hand-written instructions saying they were the minister's directives, Malik told AFP: "You know how Pakistain works.

Just because it mentions me does not mean I personally authorised the payments."In a tweet, he said using funds to entertain dignitaries and offer gifts was "routine for 15 yrs".

But Moinuddin Haider, who served as interior minister from 1999 to 2002, said the NCMC fund was not set up to pay for "gifts abroad".

"The purpose of these funds was to establish offices in the provinces, primarily to be spent on communications equipment and data analysis," he told AFP.

Cheema, who won the Daniel Pearl journalism fellowship in 2008, said the affair was indicative of how officials had turned the national terror crisis, which has killed thousands of people across the country since 2007, to their own benefit.

"This abuse clearly explains how our leaders convert a tragedy into an opportunity for personal gains," he said.

"If history is any guide it's not going to be resolved nor will the abolition of secret funds lead to any corrective measures." Ayesha Siddiqa, a security analyst, termed the use of the funds "sad", but said a lack of clear counter-terrorism policy direction by successive governments was also to blame, as well as the way Pakistain's bureaucracy works.

"There is also this problem with the government where if a department gets funds you're in a hurry to spend them, because if the funds lapse they will be deducted the next year and the department will be reprimanded," she said.
Link


India-Pakistan
Karachi's sectarian backyard
2014-01-15
[DAWN] IN a city drawn into a spiral of violence where crime, politics and extremism are interlinked, law-enforcement agencies are poorly resourced and conviction rates low, where religious institutions with political agendas teach lessons of hate and sectarian fault lines are ripped apart, it is difficult to clearly identify the causes of sectarian violence.

Since 2007, increasing violence in Pakistain -- with forces of Evil targeting politicians, the military and police, holy mans, tribal leaders, Shias, and schools -- has found an urban epicentre in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
. In its latest security report, the Pakistain Institute for Peace Studies (PIPS) reported a 53pc increase in sectarian violence for 2013. More than 85pc of such attacks and 68pc of the people killed were concentrated in Karachi, Quetta, Gilgit and Kurram Agency
...home of an intricately interconnected web of poverty, ignorance, and religious fanaticism, where the laws of cause and effect are assumed to be suspended, conveniently located adjacent to Tora Bora...

Last year, 212 were killed in 132 sectarian-related attacks mostly in Karachi. However,
there's more than one way to skin a cat...
a cycle of tit-for-tat sectarian killings on Karachi's streets since 2011 has sparked ethno-political violence with various sectarian outfits contributing to the growing body count.

The banned sectarian group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
... a 'more violent' offshoot of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain. LeJ's purpose in life is to murder anyone who's not of utmost religious purity, starting with Shiites but including Brelvis, Ahmadis, Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Rosicrucians, and just about anyone else you can think of. They are currently a wholly-owned subsidiary of al-Qaeda ...
(LJ), sharing operational and ideological ties with Al Qaeda and the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain (TTP), demonstrates how militancy elsewhere in the country affects the city through a lethal nexus.

In the case of the LJ-TTP link, Chaudhry Aslam Khan, the head of the Sindh police's CID anti-extremism cell, who was recently assassinated in Karachi, confirmed in an interview shortly before his killing that both conduct joint terrorist activities in the city. The leader of LJ's Balochistan
...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it...
wing, Usman Saifullah Kurd, is also connected with Karachi's sectarian hard boys, he had said.

Aslam had said in a January 7 interview that "after the crackdown against LJ in Karachi and Punjab, their cadres had found sanctuaries in the tribal areas." He said that in a raid last November, the police had killed LJ's Karachi chief Gul Hasan, involved in suicide kabooms on the Haideri mosque and Imambargah
...since the country's so religiously correct™, Shia Moslems in Pakistain can't call their houses of worship 'mosques,' which are reserved for Sunnis. It's not clear if imambargahs are used for explosives storage like mosques are...
Ali Raza (2004) and an attack on the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court, Justice Maqbool Baqar in August 2013.

Ideological and pie fights between the Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat
...which is the false nose and plastic mustache of the murderous banned extremist group Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain, whatcha might call the political wing of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi...
/Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistain
...a Sunni Deobandi organization, a formerly registered Pak political party, established in the early 1980s in Jhang by Maulana Haq Nawaz Jhangvi. Its stated goal is to oppose Shia influence in Pakistain. They're not too big on Brelvis, either. Or Christians. Or anybody else who's not them. The organization was banned in 2002 as a terrorist organization, but somehow it keeps ticking along, piling up the corpse counts...
, following the Sunni Deobandi school and the Barelvi Sunnis, represented mainly by the Sunni Tehrik
...formed in Karachi in 1992 under by Muhammad Saleem Qadri. It quickly fell to trading fisticuffs and assassinations with the MQM and the Sipah-e-Sahaba, with at least a half dozen of its major leaders rubbed out. Sunni Tehreek arose to become the primary opposition to the Deobandi Binori Mosque, headed by Nizamuddin Shamzai, who was eventually bumped off by person or persons unknown. ST's current leadership has heavily criticized the Deobandi Jihadi leaders, accusing them of being sponsored by Indian Intelligence agencies as well as involvement in terrorist activities...
, adds to this volatile cauldron. It is incorrect to differentiate between terrorist groups and sectarian outfits because they share similar agendas and religious ideologies, says political analyst Dr Ayesha Siddiqa.

Nobody knows what exactly drives sectarian violence, whether it is the consequence of state policies of Islamisation of laws and education, parallel legal and judicial systems, politicisation of the police force, failure of the state and the military, and the marginalisation of secular forces.

French researcher Marium Abou Zahab believes that links with the Middle East could be part of the explanation (proxy war between Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
and Iran) but views sectarian violence as an indigenous phenomenon. With sporadic administrative and legal efforts to dismantle well-entrenched groups, leaders of supposedly banned groups such as the SSP operate with virtual immunity, using new avenues (social media) to propagate their hard boy ideas and enter electoral politics aligned to mainstream political parties.

Aurangzeb Farooqi, the Karachi head of the ASWJ, terms Shias 'infidels', attributing an increase in sectarianism to similar trends observed in the wider Mohammedan world. Condemning violence, he denies links with the LJ, calling for dialogue with 'rival groups.' He blames the police for failing to protect Sunnis as hundreds have been killed in reprisal attacks.

For their part, Shia political party Majlis-e-Wahdatul Mohammedaneen (MWM) claims they do not indulge in violent killing. They might have organised the largely peaceful demonstrations in Karachi and other towns to protest against the Quetta bombings last year, but the police suspect that some have adopted a violent retaliatory path, with a Karachi-based Shia militia responsible for attacks on Deobandi holy mans.

MWM spokesperson Ali Ahmar accuses LJ of fuelling sectarian violence, claiming that 500 Shias, including professors, students, lawyers and doctors, were targeted in 2013 with perpetrators tossed in the calaboose
Drop the rod and step away witcher hands up!
only in four to five cases. If young Shias are aligning themselves with MWM, then interviews with moderate Deobandi holy mans suggest that the killing of students and teachers is pushing men with no sectarian links towards Deobandi groups.

The cost of militancy includes damage to the economy, national security, citizen morale and political stability. Shrinking space for an alternative liberal discourse is evident as political patronage for the religious right goes unchecked with banned bully boy organizations and madressahs raising their public profile, providing endless recruits and sectarian-oriented curricula and publications to further fuel intolerance and bigotry.

As Karachi's sectarian forces of Evil conduct 'business' on home turf with their political utility intact, the consequences are uncertain but definitely deadly as Pakistain's security establishment nurtures some Taliban groups in the border regions as proxies for the post-2014 period.
Link


India-Pakistan
Pakistan divided over how to deal with terrorist threat
2012-10-20
[Pak Daily Times] Despite the outrage over the Taliban's shooting of teenage activist Malala Yousafzai, Pakistain's government has failed to gather enough support for a military operation against the hard boyz believed to be behind the attack, Voice of America reports.
Voice of America evinces no surprise at this.
The political divisions in the country over what to do with Death Eaters living within its borders remain as strong as ever despite the national shock over the attack, the report notes, adding that politicians continue to squabble over what to do about the Talibs behind the attack.

The VoA referred to the ruling Pakistain People's Party's attempt this week to table a resolution in parliament that referred to a military operation in Wazoo. Opposition party leaders and the head of Jamaat Ulema-e-Islam
...Assembly of Islamic Clergy, or JUI, is a Pak Deobandi (Hanafi) political party. There are two main branches, one led by Maulana Fazlur Rahman, and one led by Maulana Samiul Haq. Fazl is active in Pak politix and Sami spends more time running his madrassah. Both branches sponsor branches of the Taliban, though with plausible deniability...
-Fazl chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman
Deobandi holy man, known as Mullah Diesel during the war against the Soviets, his sympathies for the Taliban have never been tempered by honesty ...
shot the idea down. PML-N representative Saddiqul Farooq said his party refused to back the move because such an operation now would displace millions and push the hard boyz to more violence.

"We have to deal with this issue with reason, not with military might, military might will be part of that reasonable formula -- that if by presenting them very acceptable positive and constructive conditions, if they don't come to terms, then we can use force," VoA quotes Farooq. He says the presence of international forces in Afghanistan and the Pak government's position as an official ally of the US is inciting attacks on Pak soil. Once the US and coalition troops leave Afghanistan, the Pakistain Taliban will no longer have a reason to attack, he asserts.

The report quotes analyst Ayesha Siddiqa as saying that despite the shock of the attack on Malala there is no agreement between the government and the opposition on a consensus to fight the turbans. What resulted, she says, is not much more than political melodrama. "What is not happening here, is people coming together and saying, whatever the source of violence, we have to put an end to it. We have to put an end to sacrificing our soldiers, our children, our men and women. That is not happening," Siddiqa is reported as saying. So far, Interior Minister Rehman Malik
Pak politician, Interior Minister under the Gilani government. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Nawaz Sharif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men. He had to give up the interior ministry job because he held dual Brit citizenship.
has announced a $1 million bounty for the Taliban front man Ehsanullah Ehsan, who announced the Taliban was responsible for the attack on Malala.
Link


India-Pakistan
All unite against religious violence
2012-09-01
[Dawn] ISLAMABAD, Aug 30: In a rare show of unity, religious scholars and liberals here on Thursday jointly called for government action against sectarian violence, warning that, if left unchecked, the menace can imperil the country.

They sounded the warning at two seminars held by the Jinnah Institute and the Organisation of Research and Education in the wake of killings and persecution in the name of religion across the country.

Allama Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi of the All Pakistain Ulema Council, who addressed at both seminars, accused Interior Minister Rehman Malik
Pak politician, Interior Minister under the Gilani government. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Nawaz Sharif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men. He had to give up the interior ministry job because he held dual Brit citizenship.
of failing to provide protection to 350 Christian families who felt threatened after a little girl of the community was branded a blasphemer, and distributed a compilation of Fatwas by the leading schools of thought that declared killing of unarmed members of any religion or sect un-Islamic.

And security analyst Imtiaz Gul plainly declared that "until the society bury the culture of protecting and patronising the groups spreading
sectarian hatred, we will not be able to end faith-based violence in Pakistain."

Columnist Nadir Hassan noted that sectarian violence has long been treated as a law and order issue while it is one of political identity.

There is a need to address weaknesses in the system of law enforcement, he said.

Defence analyst Ayesha Siddiqa, expanding the point, said "the State's capacity to manage policing and public prosecution in an effective
way was a key issue in Shia killings".

She stressed that civil society in Pakistain needs to engage with Islamic jurisprudence and discourse and find inherent messages of peace
and pluralism in order to change public mindset on the issue of sectarianism, violence, terrorism and militancy.

Although critical of the interior minister, Allama Ashrafi felt that those trying to implicate the Christian girl in blasphemy case were conspiring to strengthen the cause of the anti-blasphemy law campaigners.

"It is strange that in the presence of all political parties and leaders, President Zardari and PM Raja Pervez Ashraf, the uprooted 350 Christian families are living in fear of some vested interests who were eying their properties," he said.

Allama Ashrafi criticised unnamed religious figures "who are threateningly opposing bail to the poor tossed in the clink
Drop the rod and step away witcher hands up!
Christian girl and thereby
trying to deny her fair trial".

"Pakistain is threatened by violence in the name of religion," he said.

Pakistain Tehrik-e-Insaf
...a political party in Pakistan. PTI was founded by former Pakistani cricket captain and philanthropist Imran Khan. The party's slogan is Justice, Humanity and Self Esteem, each of which is open to widely divergent interpretations....
women wing president Fauzia Kasuri said that her party is to hold a seminar next month to discuss inter-faith harmony.

PML-N chairman Raja Zafarul Haq said the minorities in Pakistain enjoyed equal rights with others "but things flare up out of proportion
when western elements indulge in negative statements".

Minorities' representative Akram Masih Gil agreed with him to the extent that the minorities are "living in safety like other citizens" but stressed that peace and interfaith harmony could only be achieved when all segments of society respect each other's religious sentiments.

Leaders of 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 independent branch there since 1975. It maintains close ties with international Mohammedan groups such as the Moslem Brotherhood. the Taliban, and al-Qaeda. 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...
and PML-Q also spoke in same vein.

At the Jinnah Institute, Imtiaz Gul cited examples where state allocated green belts in Islamabad to seminaries and mosques even though no construction was permitted in these areas.

Fawad Chaudhry, Adviser to the Prime Minister on Human Rights, reiterated the government's commitment to fighting extremism and militancy in the country and highlighted "the high risks public officials face in their line of duty".

Human Rights Activist, Tahira Abdullah, noted that it is not just fear but also the lack of unity among civil society that prevents them from coming together as one cohesive unit that is capable of demanding change.

She said that the Rimsha Masih case is a test case for the Pak state and civil society.

Farman Ali, a journalist, said that the judiciary needed to play a more active role in clamping down on and punishing bully boy and sectarian outfits "operating with impunity across the country -- even in the federal capital".

Justice (retired) Ali Nawaz Chohan observed that while judges do operate in an environment of fear, and with minimum resources, it was
their duty to write judgments in accordance with the law of the land, without letting fear dictate their pronouncements.
Link


Terror Networks
Hafiz Saeed Rejects Us Terror Accusations, $10mil Bounty
2012-04-04
Jamaat-ud-Dawa
...the front organization of Lashkar-e-Taiba...
chief blamed for Mumbai attacks tells Al Jizz his opposition to NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
supply lines led to $10m bounty.


Hafiz Saeed
...founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba and its false-mustache offshoot Jamaat-ud-Dawa. The United Nations declared the JuD a terrorist organization in 2008 and Hafiz Saeed a terrorist as its leader. Hafiz, JuD and LeT are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Pak intel apparatus, so that amounted to squat...
, the leader of a Pakistain-based group blamed for the 2008 attacks on Mumbai, has demanded proof after the US announced a $10m bounty on his head.

In an exclusive interview with Al Jizz, Saeed said the US move was prompted by the fact that he had been organising rallies against the re-opening of supply lines through Pakistain to NATO forces in Afghanistan.

"We are not hiding in caves for bounties to be set on finding us," Saeed said. "I think the US is frustrated because we are taking out countrywide protests against the resumption of NATO supplies and drone strikes. 

"I believe either the US has very little knowledge and is basing its decisions on wrong information being provided by India, or they are just frustrated".

US Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, on a visit to India, said a $2m bounty had also been announced for Abdul Rahman Makki, Saeed's brother-in-law and the group's second-in-command.

Rewards for Justice, a programme sponsored by the US State Department, announced the cash reward for the 62-year-old Saeed on its website.

"Saeed is suspected of criminal masterminding numerous terrorist attacks, including the 2008 Mumbai attacks, which resulted in the deaths of 166 people, including six American citizens," the page said.

Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
(LeT), designated as a terrorist organization by the US in December 2001, is accused by India of carrying out several attacks besides the one on Mumbai.

LeT is the military wing of Saeed's larger organization, Jamaat-ud-Dawa, which is also blacklisted by the US.

Ajmal Kasab, the only surviving gunman involved in the three-day rampage in November 2008, has been sentenced to death by an Indian court.

Kasab accused Saeed of organising the attack, which involved 10 gunnies, nine of whom were killed during the shootout.

'Popular man'

India welcomed the move as a reflection of the commitment by India and the US "to bring perpetrators of the Mumbai terrorist attacks" to justice.

"[The bounty] sends a strong signal to Lashkar-e-Taiba as also its members and patrons that the international community remains united in combating terrorism," Syed Akbaruddin, front man for India's ministry of external affairs said on Twitter.

Al Jizz's Kamal Hyder, reporting from Lahore, where Saeed is believed to be based, said Pakistain was pressured to ban Saeed's organizations after the US invasion of Afghanistan. .

"He started a foundation, and his men played a key role in aid efforts after earthquake in Kashmire, and the floods in Pakistain. They still are the main frontline in any calamity. He has denied that he has any links to militancy," our correspondent said.

"A man who is popular across the country - it's not going to go down very well. It is also symbolic that the annoucment came in India, by a high-ranking US diplomat. That will be an irritant."

Sreeram Chaulia, a professor at India's Jindal School of International Affairs, said Saeed was "intrinsically linked" to Pakistain's spy agency.

"The Pakistain establishment will not hand him over for the bounty, and any private citizen who tries to make cash through tipping off the Americans will be targeted," Chaulia told the AFP news agency.

"I don't think extradition is any possibility," Ayesha Siddiqa, an Islamabad-based defence analyst, told Al Jizz. "Basically, the watch list doesn't mean anything. [Saeed] is just one of many people being watched."

The announcement comes as Asif Ali President Ten Percent Zardari
... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ...
, Pakistain's president, is due to visit India for the first time since the attacks in Mumbai.

The bounty on Saeed, equivalent to that on Afghan Taliban 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...
, is second only to the $25m bounty on Ayman al Zawahiri
... Formerly second in command of al-Qaeda, now the head cheese, occasionally described as the real brains of the outfit. Formerly the Mister Big of Egyptian Islamic Jihad. Bumped off Abdullah Azzam with a car boom in the course of one of their little disputes. Is thought to have composed bin Laden's fatwa entitled World Islamic Front Against Jews and Crusaders. Currently residing in the North Wazoo area. That is not a horn growing from the middle of his forehead, but a prayer bump, attesting to how devout he is...
, who succeeded the late Osama bin Laden
... who was laid out deader than a mackerel...
as the al-Qaeda chief.

Saeed is the fifth Pak national on the list.
Link


India-Pakistan
Beards, butter & the bomb
2011-12-26
[Dawn] When on December 18 leaders from more than a dozen radical religious parties, certain down-and-out politicians, one very verbose former ISI chief and the son of a bygone and dead dictator graced the 'Defend Pakistain' rally organised by the controversial Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD), I wondered, was the military touched by this gesture? Were the military's top cats elated by the sight of some very loud and angry beings saluting the country's army, all the while spitting venom at the government and, of course, a Hindu India along with the US crusaders? Or was the military embarrassed?

I mean, the cat has certainly not popped out of the bag so openly before. In other words, there has always been talk of how the military -- ever since Yahya Khan's misadventures in the former East Pakistain, and especially ever since the reactionary Ziaul Haq dictatorship -- has been playing footsie with radical Islamist parties to undermine any force supposedly threatening the country's illusory sovereignty. Of course, illusory sovereignty in this specific context usually means safeguarding the political and institutional hegemony and influence of the establishment and of 'Pakistain ideology', manufactured by the establishment (with the help of the once anti-Jinnah Learned Elders of Islam and their urbane ideologues) from the 1970s onwards.

It reached its propagated peak during Zia's time and now is a mindless populist slogan that actually means nothing, really. Ever since Pakistain's entry in the global 'war on terror' (post-9/11), its armed forces have been at pains to explain to the concerned world that the country's military and especially its intelligence agencies have nothing to do with the violent psychos who've been blowing up mosques, shrines and markets and slaughtering civilians in the name of jihad; and nor is the military in league with hate-spouting sectarian organizations.

Yet there they were on December 18, eulogising the military, these political faces and the overt apologists and sympathisers of precisely the kind of barbarity and the barbarians the military says it has no links to and is at war with. Catch-22, indeed. Because if such are the forces that the military has used much of our tax money, US military aid and common frontline soldiers to fight against, then prey tell, why on December 18, were men who glorify Death Eaters seen polishing medals of an army that has fought a prolonged counter-insurgency with those whom these men consider a collective reincarnation of Muhammad Bin Qasim?

In the aftermath of the humiliation that the military had to face in the event of the Raymond Davis issue, the Osama discovery, the Mehran Base attack (by Islamist terrorists) and finally the NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A cautionary tale of cost-benefit analysis....
attack on Pak soldiers, has the establishment finally let go of its pretence about being an institution that (after 9/11) had discarded its baggage of being a much radicalised and reactionary outfit? According to some observers of military politics, such as Najam Sethi, Hasan Askari, Ahmed Rashid and Ayesha Siddiqa, both conventional and clandestine Islamist outfits usually pour out onto the streets with given a tactical wink by the establishment as and when required.

The reasons behind this have usually to do with the establishment wishing to whip up emotions against a democratic regime that it is not happy with or to brew widespread sentiment against either India or the US. If so, then this sudden unity and pouring out of both mainstream as well as shady Islamist groups, pro-establishment politicians, ex-ISI men and even some media personnel praising the military whilst sounding like Islamised Kim Il Sungs, is a cause for concern.

Are these the only kind of men that the military, ever since Yahya's initial patronage of the Jamat-i-Islami in 1970-71, been able to attract as a constituency? Forget about the US concerns (a country which, till the 1980s, was actually an encouraging partner in Pak military's growing infatuation with Islamists), and also forget about Indian pangs as well. The concern should be ours first.

Any rational Pak should be worried. Worried that today a lethal battery of nuclear warheads lies surrounded by an enigmatic military now being carried on the shoulders of men who applaud murderers of men accused of 'blasphemy', spit obscenities at actresses visiting India but refuse to condemn those who have mercilessly slaughtered over 36,000 soldiers, civilians and women and kiddies.
Link


India-Pakistan
Why I Khan't - just yet
2011-11-17
[Dawn] There is nothing like success or even the prospects of it, which are now all too visible via the wide grin that Imran Khan
... aka Taliban Khan, who ain't the sharpest bulb on the national tree...
has been sporting of late. He's speaking less of the drone attacks and of engaging the Taliban, his pet plank on which he re-launched his political career after the recovery and killing of the late Osama bin Laden
Osama bin Laden is dead.
He took two shots to the head.
That made him frown
and he had to lie down.
Osama bin Laden is dead.

in May by the US navy SEALS in Abbotabad;
... A pleasant city located only 30 convenient miles from Islamabad. The city is noted for its pleasant weather and good schools. It is the site of Pakistain's military academy, which was within comfortable walking distance of the residence of the late Osama bin Laden....
there's less anti-America rhetoric and general bitterness in his speech, and more optimism writ on his face. Optimism to be the third, emerging and growing political force that will challenge corrupt politicians and bring them to justice.

IK's is no more the face of Pakistain's anger against itself and the world but one that's cautiously embracing hope and confidence, as more and more known political figures join the PTI, even if the new entrants are certified turncoats. He can explain it, for he is bothered to step out of the city life and urban myths and take cognisance of Pakistain's rural political culture where the waderas, the sardars, the Khans and the biradari heads are the real vote-getters. Even the MQM is not his bete noire anymore, and he's willing to go half way to neutralise that party's rancour against him.

Exuding new hope and confidence, a darling of the media that he's always been, IK says he believes that the turncoats who may join his party will be on their way to reforming themselves because he, sitting at the top of party leadership, is not corrupt -- as if corruption only trickles down from the top. A lot is being said about IK being the latest blue-eyed boy of the military establishment but much of it is being dismissed by his supporters as propaganda by his opponents who risk losing their votes to the PTI. Such speculation, however, is only half the truth because nothing moves in our politics without a wink from the right quarters.

If IK's rising public support means that for now the military is at the very best neutral in his regard and would not hamper his campaign, that's a lot of achievement there already. But the assertion on IK's part that the military pressures only corrupt politicians is a bit immature, because that institution alone is the biggest stakeholder in a stable Pakistain. The military inc., to borrow from Ayesha Siddiqa, needs political stability more than any other arm of the state to carry out its entrenched non-military -- read business -- transactions with massive stakes in the economy. That is the real strategic depth that the military establishment has built for itself within our own borders.

Whether the political dispensation that safeguards those interests is truly representative is of little concern to the military establishment. Besides, there's nothing that IK says in terms of his policy on key issues that can upset the generals; much of what he says is actually music to their ears. His embrace of the post-71 myths of the manufactured and establishment-propagated Pakistain Ideology of a welfare Moslem state is complete and abiding. That this ideology is and shall remain elusive because it's too utopian an idea, is beyond his grasp. His hawkish line on India, despite the expressed desire to better relations, with conditions attached, just completes the picture.

While IK in his massive Lahore rally for the first time spoke of the alienation of the Baloch people, it's worth noting that he only mentioned the Baloch after telling the crowd that their province had an immense wealth of natural resources which could help steer Pakistain out of troubled economic waters. A more circumspect politician would have been more discreet by at least distancing the two sentences about the wealth of the Baloch and their political alienation and the need to do something about it.

Instead, what he surmised is as follows: the (minority) Baloch should be brought to the mainstream because of their natural resources which are waiting to be exploited. He had no word of sympathy for the increasing plight and alienation of the other (religious) minorities or women of this country, which together form a majority of the population. Ostensibly because they have no such exploitable resources buried under their feet?

Just like the All India Moslem League in 1947, which had no studied blue print to run a state once it was achieved, IK's revolution for building a new Pakistain has only rhetorical ground to stand on. His battle cry is, 'if you want justice, come to Tehrik-i-Insaf; just like the League's was, 'if you are Moslem, come to Moslem League'. And like the League, IK's sense of rights and justice is not all inclusive. When he speaks of justice, he's talking more about bringing the corrupt (politicians alone) to justice rather than upholding justice for all.

This is not the medicine that people like me need to cure, or even manage, their cynicism.

Not just yet.
Link


Home Front: WoT
From an active campaigner to an alleged spy
2011-10-15
[Dawn] When the New York Police caught the powerful Kashmiri lobbyist Dr Ghulam Nabi Fai, 61, in the middle of a partly hazy day on July 19, 2011 with $35,000 cash in his possession, they had actually come across a man whose arrest would subsequently jeopardise diplomatic relations between Pakistain and the United States.

The American authorities tossed in the calaboose Fai, chairman of the Kashmiri American Council (KAC), for allegedly "conspiring to act as an agent of a foreign principal without registering with the Attorney General, and to falsify, conceal, and cover up material facts they had a duty to disclose by tricks, schemes and devices, in matters within the jurisdiction of agencies of the executive branch of the Government of the United States."

According to Sarah Webb, a Special Agent of the FBI who informed the District Court of the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division, Fai had received approximately $500, 000 to 700,000 per year from the government of Pakistain which funded Fai's operations through co-accused [Zahreer] Ahmad.

"To date, neither Fai, Ahmad nor the KAC has registered as an official agent of the Pak or Kashmiri governments with the Attorney General of the United States as required by the Foreign Agents Registration Act 22 U.S.C. 612,"said the Special Agent.

Fai was charged of illegally lobbying without meeting American legal requirement of registering under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

Pak diplomats saw Fai's arrest as a 'political gimmick'.

"Fai is not a secret agent. He has been a Kashmiri activist for decades," said Tanvir Ahmed Khan, a former Foreign Secretary of Pakistain, "The Fai incident was related to Obama's visit to India."

Officials at the Department of Justice, on the other hand, explain why it took them so long to divulge the details of the case.

"This has been a complex investigation," says Dean Boyd, a front man at the Department of Justice, "As in any investigation of this nature, developing the evidence sufficient to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law takes time and extensive investigation efforts."

Although Fai is a US national, Boyd says, "Foreign governments and foreign political parties may not make political contributions or expenditures in connection with any federal, state, or local election in the United States, either directly or indirectly."

In a letter on March 22, 2010, the Department of Justice (DoJ) had asked Fai to register under FARA if allegations in the Indian press that he worked as a Pak agent were true.

Fai replied that the KAC is not doing lobbying but rather public relations. In an email to the DoJ on April 16, 2010, Fai asserted that he had no obligation to register under FARA because the KAC "has never engaged in activities on behalf of the Islamic Theocratic Republic of Pakistain or any other foreign entity[ies]."

He further wrote: "KAC or I have never engaged in any activities or provided any services to any foreign entity. And KAC or I have never had written or oral agreements with Pakistain or any other foreign entity. Thereafter, this report categorically denies any connection to any foreign agent including Pakistain."

The DoJ and FBI, however, said "voluminous evidence" independently established that Fai had acted on the direction and with the alleged financial support of the Pak secret service for at least 20 years.

Defence experts remain skeptical if successive civilian governments in Pakistain knew much about contacts between Fai and the secret services.

"I don't think that the ISI would get formal permission from the Ministry of Defence to finance Fai," said Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa, an Islamabad-based expert, "when the Mighty Pak Army or the ISI hire lobbyists, they do not normally share such information with the political government."

While Fai still remains under house arrest in Virginia, the disclosure of his clandestine activities has largely upset some Pak officials and many friends of Pakistain in the United States.

"Had I known that there was the slightest doubt about the legality of the organization's funding arrangements, I would definitely not have accepted their invitation to speak," Husain Haqqani, Pakistain's Ambassador to the United States, said while talking to Dawn.com.

Haqqani was the most prominent Pak official to speak at the Kashmire International Conference in 2009 on Capitol Hill which was organised by Fai's KAC.

"As the ambassador of Pakistain, I would point out and try to stop any infringement of US law by any part of the Pakistain government."

Ironically, the Pak embassy in Washington DC had arranged a dinner inside the embassy building for Fai and all delegates of the conference. Other prominent Paks who attended the dinner included former Pak ambassador to US, Dr. Maleeha Lodhi and former federal information minister Mushahid Hussain Syed, both of whom had also spoken at Fai's conference.

Fai's affidavit alleges that the ISI approved all speakers of the conference.

Dr. Stephen P. Cohen, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute, said Fai's Kashmire conferences were "nothing exceptional as far as lobbying efforts go," but he still admires events for performing a useful public service, which brought diverse perspectives (including many Indians) to Washington DC.

South Asia expert Teresita C. Schaffer, on the contrary, says: "The conferences were a waste of Pak taxpayers' money as they did not convert anyone to the Kashmire cause. The presentations were so blatantly biased that they were simply looked on as a way to hear what Pakistain's "party line" was on Kashmire. Kashmiris are much more effective spokesmen for their own cause than Paks."

According to Dr. Christine Fair, an associate professor at Georgetown University, the Inter-Services Intelligence, which is accused of operating Fai inside the United States, has other assets inserted into US institutions for the purposes of influencing public and governmental views of Pakistain and shape the course of policy decisions on issues about which the ISI cares.

"Unless one is registered as an American working for a foreign intelligence agency, this conduct is illegal. Fai broke the law," she said, adding "The issue is not that he was supporting lobbyists but he was taking money from the ISI and materially working for and with a foreign intelligence agency."

On March 22, 2007, FBI agents investigated Fai at his Washington DC office, he said he had never met anyone who identified himself as being affiliated with the ISI and did not suspect any associates or acquaintances of being ISI operatives. He also said he was not aware of "any ISI presence" within the United States and he believed that the ISI did not operate in the United States at all.

Contrary to Fai's naïve expression of ignorance of ISI's presence in the United States, David Ignatius, an associate editor at the Washington Post whose recent book Blood Money focuses on the ISI's maneuvering tactics, says it is a 'well-known fact' that foreign countries seek to influence US policy. They do so, "through lobbying or political activism, including campaign contributions by members of their expatriate communities."

Ignatius says it is true of Ireland, Britannia, Israel, Armenia, Turkey, Indian and now Pakistain.

"One difference in this case [of Fai] is that the political activity was sponsored by a foreign intelligence service (the ISI)," he said and argued that "I suspect that's not a unique case, either... the most aggressive (and least known) example of such "political covert action" in history was Britannia's attempt through its Secret Intelligence Service to destroy the strong "America First" movement in Congress in 1939 and 1940. The Brits, whose backs were against the wall at the time, used covert money, planted newspaper stories and well-placed agents in the US government to push America toward intervention. So, there's nothing new under the sun."

Dr. Cohen recalled that some years ago India did something like what is alleged of Fai and ISI, and one US Indian-American citizen went to prison and a RAW [Research and Analysis Wing] embassy official departed the US very quickly.

"The Indian lobbying efforts are far more sophisticated now," he said, "in the old days it was Pakistain that was the more effective lobbyist; times change."

Ambassador Schaffer said if Fai had filed the papers for registration as an agent of the government of Pakistain, then he could have held all the conferences he wanted.

"He wasn't stealing secret papers -- the kind of activity one normally associates with 'secret agents'".

Former foreign secretary Tanvir Ahmed Khan says the practices of secret agents were "as old as human civilisation" and points out that India had one of the largest nets of informers in the world as "it invests a lot of money in USA to promote its interests."

Inside the United States, Fai's case has triggered a debate among Americans about the transparency of foreign money that is poured into election campaigns.

Sheila Krumholz, Executive Director of Washington's anti-secrecy watchdog Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), terms secrecy in sources of funding for non- profit organizations and lobbyists as an 'enormously serious concern' because citizens barely have any information where the money is coming from.

"We have ample evidence not to trust big companies with a lot of money," she says, suggesting that the culture of disinformation and hidden agendas should be replaced with more transparency.

Similarly Lisa Curtis, a Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation's Asian Studies Center, suggests that congressional staff should do a better job of scrutinising organizations that seek to use Congressional space for their conferences. They must also enhance their due diligence of organizations that are not transparent about their funding.

"The Paks sought to portray Fai as someone working to protect the human rights
One man's rights are another man's existential threat.
of Kashmiris, when he was really just a secretly paid agent doing the bidding of the Pak government," she said. "The Paks probably believed Fai, a Kashmiri American, would be more credible in spreading anti-India propaganda than a registered Pak lobbyist."

Fai's remains a classic example of trust deficit between the United States and Pakistain which continue to pursue their "national interests" often through known and unknown avenues.
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