Pakistan grapples with rising tide of extremist violence

cancel2 2022

Canceled
I spoke about this a few weeks ago, Pakistan is facing its most serious crisis since partition in 1947.


The faithful line up to pray in a small Shia mosque hidden away down the dusty side-streets of Peshawar. But the central arch where the imam stands in front of his congregation is covered in blast marks and dark smears. The ornate blue tiles have been smashed.This is where a militant blew himself up just two weeks before. "When I came inside, I saw severed legs, human organs and heads… all over the mosque," says Syed Hussain Hussaini, whose nephew was among the 21 people killed.


Continue reading the main story


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-23319254
 
What is the British going to do about this?

Ok, well don't say you weren't warned. Facetious comments won't get you very far when the Taliban controls the nuclear weapons in Pakistan. Oh and by the way, 444 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan. If you want to be facetious fuckwit, I wonder what side your German forbears were on in WW2?
 
Last edited:
Ok, well don't say you weren't warned. Facetious comments won't get you very far when the Taliban controls the nuclear weapons in Pakistan. Oh and by the way, 444 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan. If you want to be facetious fuckwit, I wonder what side your German forbears were on in WW2?

My father fought in WW2....in Germany.... For the United States....still have his silver star and purple heart.....now who's the fuckwit?

As far as the Taliban in Pakistan? Is Pakistan asking for aid? Or are we just supposed to conquer the whole country?

99% of the issues between Pakistan and India are over clean water.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2111601,00.html
 
I say if a country wants our military aid, then they cease to be a country. They can submit to us as a territory. Otherwise, fend for yourself.
 
Yeah, not so much. I doubt any nation would accept our terms, which is the ultimate point.

Oh...I knew where you were going. But how about this? Any soveriegn country that requests our aid will be presented a bill for the costs of said endeavor...those that can't afford to pay? We'll resell their "mortgages" on the open market as payment on our own international debt....but once again...who would.be dumb enough to takenit?
 
Oh...I knew where you were going. But how about this? Any soveriegn country that requests our aid will be presented a bill for the costs of said endeavor...those that can't afford to pay? We'll resell their "mortgages" on the open market as payment on our own international debt....but once again...who would.be dumb enough to takenit?

No. Our military is to protect U.S. citizens and U.S. property. If they want to become either of those, then sure. Otherwise, they're outta luck. Part of being a nation state is the ability to enforce your sovereignty.
 
No. Our military is to protect U.S. citizens and U.S. property. If they want to become either of those, then sure. Otherwise, they're outta luck. Part of being a nation state is the ability to enforce your sovereignty.

Ahhh...you were taking me seriously....well, perhaps my facetious switch is turned off....or at least quite dimmed right now. Just got home from a long night. Dang third shift is so quiet and the group of folks I was responsible for tonight are pretty much independent in things like toileting. When there's not much to do....the night drags....so I'm a little tired now. Drinking a beer or two before I head to bed...helps me.sleep past noon. Weird to drink at 7AM...but I figure it's more like five PM if one would work normal hours.
 
My father fought in WW2....in Germany.... For the United States....still have his silver star and purple heart.....now who's the fuckwit?

As far as the Taliban in Pakistan? Is Pakistan asking for aid? Or are we just supposed to conquer the whole country?

99% of the issues between Pakistan and India are over clean water.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2111601,00.html

I am not talking about India, the Pakistani Taliban is mostly holed up in the badlands between Pakistan and Afghanistan. IF you are scared about what might happen in Iran, Syria or Egypt it is as nothing compared to the shit that will rain down if those bastards ever take over. I took the piss out of you because you thought it funny to make light of the British soldiers that died in Afghanistan.
 
I am not talking about India, the Pakistani Taliban is mostly holed up in the badlands between Pakistan and Afghanistan. IF you are scared about what might happen in Iran, Syria or Egypt it is as nothing compared to the shit that will rain down if those bastards ever take over. I took the piss out of you because you thought it funny to make light of the British soldiers that died in Afghanistan.

You don't think that it has anything to do with the Taliban weaseling it's way into power?

And you made it personal when you attacked my father....so I guess I.still.owe you a few shots...but because.I am a decent fellow....I'll call it, even.
 
You don't think that it has anything to do with the Taliban weaseling it's way into power?

And you made it personal when you attacked my father....so I guess I.still.owe you a few shots...but because.I am a decent fellow....I'll call it, even.

The Pakistani Taliban are not the same as the Afghan variety, they are totally ruthless and will stop at nothing to gain power in Pakistan.
 
This shows exactly what a bunch of weasels the Pakistani Taliban are, they can never be trusted.

Malala-Yousafzai-at-the-U-008.jpg



Malala Yousafzai has received a rambling letter from a Taliban commander, claiming she was targeted for maligning it.
Photograph: Rick Bajornas/UN Photo/PA

A senior member of the Pakistani Taliban has written an open letter to Malala Yousafzai – the teenager shot in the head as she rode home on a school bus – expressing regret that he didn't warn her before the attack, but claiming that she was targeted for maligning the insurgents. Adnan Rasheed, who was convicted for his role in a 2003 assassination attempt on the country's then-president Pervez Musharraf, did not apologise for the attack, which left Malala gravely wounded, but said he found it shocking. "I wished it would never happened [sic] and I had advised you before," he wrote.

Malala was 15 when she and two classmates were targeted by a masked gunman who picked them out on a school bus as they went home from school in Pakistan's northwest Swat valley last October. She was seriously injured in the attack, and was flown to Britain to receive specialist treatment from doctors in Birmingham, where she and her family now live. Last week, she celebrated her 16th birthday by delivering a defiant speech at the United Nations in New York, in which she called on world leaders to provide free schooling for all children. In the letter, Rasheed claimed that Malala was not targeted for her efforts to promote education, but because the Taliban believed she was running a "smearing campaign" against it. "You have said in your speech yesterday that pen is mightier than sword," Rasheed wrote, referring to Malala's UN speech, "so they attacked you for your sword not for your books or school."

The rambling four-page letter, in patchy English, citing Bertrand Russell, Henry Kissinger and historian Thomas Macaulay, was released to media organisations in Pakistan. In it, Rasheed – a former member of Pakistan's air force, who was among 300 prisoners to escape jail in April last year – advises Malala to return to Pakistan, join a female Islamic seminary and advocate the cause of Islam. He admitted that the Taliban are "blowing up" schools, but justified the attacks on the grounds that the Pakistani army and the paramilitary Frontier Corps use schools as hideouts. Hundreds of schools have been targeted in Pakistan's north-west: activists say some had been used by the military, but many attacks were motivated by the Taliban's opposition to girls' education.

The Taliban commander also justified recent attacks in Pakistan on health workers vaccinating children against polio by claiming the west was trying to sterilise Muslims. The letter is clearly intended to influence opinion in Pakistan: although in much of the world Malala has been hailed as a symbol of courage, at home she has been the subject of intense criticism and vilification. Online commentators have described her as a "drama queen" and even accused her of spying for the CIA. Rasheed contrasted international support for Malala with the lack of coverage given to those killed in US drone attacks – a source of intense grievance in Pakistan. "If you were shot [by] Americans in a drone attack, would [the] world have ever heard updates on your medical status? … Would you were called to UN? Would a Malala day be announced?"

Gordon Brown, now a UN special envoy on global education, said: "Nobody will believe a word the Taliban say about the right of girls like Malala to go to school until they stop burning down schools and stop massacring pupils."




http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jul/17/taliban-letter-malala-yousafzai?CMP=EMCNEWEML6619I2
 
Back
Top