Khadija Hassan July 13, 2007
#484 Posted by hamidm2 on July 19, 2007 10:05:16 am
echoboom,
"Laanut on the pups that the bitches form the Cantonments & colonies littored"
are you talking about these people?
http://dailytimes.com.pk/sunday/default.aspx?c=eye_spy_a.html
.......paki stan would be an awfully dull place if all of them left, or were killed by your jihadi friends who feel jilted by their boyfriends and quadruped lovers ........ as gifted as the girls of jamia hafsa might be, i think there is something to be said about deodrant and blow dryers .... no?
#483 Posted by cliftonbridge on July 19, 2007 7:24:22 am
#463
i will have to defer ofcourse to your superior knowledge of the tie me down fetishes of women in every corner of the globe.
Dont tell me you used to shag behind the waldorf too at the turn of the last century :)
i will have to defer ofcourse to your superior knowledge of the tie me down fetishes of women in every corner of the globe.
Dont tell me you used to shag behind the waldorf too at the turn of the last century :)
#482 Posted by zeemax on July 19, 2007 6:09:18 am

"The fact is, we were harassing them in Afghanistan, we're harassing them in Iraq, we're harassing them in other ways, non-militarily, around the world. And the answer is, every time you poke the hornet's nest, they are bound to come back and push back on you. That doesn't suggest to me that we shouldn't be doing it."
- Frances Fragos Townsend, President George W Bush's
homeland security adviser
#480 Posted by tahmed32 on July 19, 2007 5:25:53 am
I see from the posts below that pandit-hates come in three's now: Jay Thakeray the complete lunatic, and his two trainees arjun and chennai.
#479 Posted by tahmed32 on July 19, 2007 5:23:12 am
#478 Good. The US will pay to perform police functions that Musharraf has failed to do.
And when it is all over - Pakistan will still be there, and alive and well and prospering!!
And you will still be rotting in your measly little world of the Indian pandit-hate!!
And when it is all over - Pakistan will still be there, and alive and well and prospering!!
And you will still be rotting in your measly little world of the Indian pandit-hate!!
#478 Posted by jayp on July 19, 2007 5:10:50 am
VISIT PAKISTAN YEAR
Zeemax, you better change the picture and put pakistan instead to dissuade people coming to pakistan. But then again, being a true muslim why should you prevent a few thousand jihadis attaining heaven.
from dawn of today
Ms Townsend, who launched the intelligence report, was asked about the possibility of sending troops to the tribal belt at three different occasions.
Soon after she launched the report, she was asked, “Why should the Americans citizens not say, why don’t we go into Pakistan and deal with it that way?”
“There’s no question the president has made perfectly clear if we had actionable targets anywhere in the world, putting aside whether it was Pakistan or any place else, we would pursue those targets,” she replied.
In an interview to Fox News on Wednesday morning, she was asked if the US thought President Pervez Musharraf was capable of taking care of Al Qaeda and Taliban activities in the tribal areas. Washington believed he was, she said.
“But make no mistake – the president has been clear – job number one is protecting the American people. And we will do what’s necessary, taking no options off the table to do that,” she added.
Responding to yet another question on the same issue, she said if sending troops was what was required, the US would do so.
Zeemax, you better change the picture and put pakistan instead to dissuade people coming to pakistan. But then again, being a true muslim why should you prevent a few thousand jihadis attaining heaven.
from dawn of today
Ms Townsend, who launched the intelligence report, was asked about the possibility of sending troops to the tribal belt at three different occasions.
Soon after she launched the report, she was asked, “Why should the Americans citizens not say, why don’t we go into Pakistan and deal with it that way?”
“There’s no question the president has made perfectly clear if we had actionable targets anywhere in the world, putting aside whether it was Pakistan or any place else, we would pursue those targets,” she replied.
In an interview to Fox News on Wednesday morning, she was asked if the US thought President Pervez Musharraf was capable of taking care of Al Qaeda and Taliban activities in the tribal areas. Washington believed he was, she said.
“But make no mistake – the president has been clear – job number one is protecting the American people. And we will do what’s necessary, taking no options off the table to do that,” she added.
Responding to yet another question on the same issue, she said if sending troops was what was required, the US would do so.
#477 Posted by jayp on July 19, 2007 5:04:08 am
Daisy cutters for madrassa graduation.
It has emerged that one of the reasons the madrassa are resisting registration is the plan by the US to give each madrassa daisy cutters during their graduation. The poor jihadis will not have to travel far on their way to heaven.
What is un-islamic in all the hue and cry about the lal majid slaughter is the accusation that military did something wrong. In fact they were only helping the jihadis by delivering shahdat inside the masjid. Some reading of koran says that the number of houris will be doubled if the shehdat happens in a mosque.
May be the local koran specialist tahmed can clarify this.
It has emerged that one of the reasons the madrassa are resisting registration is the plan by the US to give each madrassa daisy cutters during their graduation. The poor jihadis will not have to travel far on their way to heaven.
What is un-islamic in all the hue and cry about the lal majid slaughter is the accusation that military did something wrong. In fact they were only helping the jihadis by delivering shahdat inside the masjid. Some reading of koran says that the number of houris will be doubled if the shehdat happens in a mosque.
May be the local koran specialist tahmed can clarify this.
#476 Posted by jayp on July 19, 2007 4:50:34 am
Thanks zeemax for the picture about india.
It is only you trying to promote visit to india. The whole world media, CNN to the local aussie TV is [romoting visits to the Mosques of pakistan, to see the weapons the jinnah - islamists worship and pray to in pakistan.
The jihadists of the world are coming to terror central, the islamabad, and no wonder the masjid is called lal masjid, teh blood of the jihadis slaughtered by the fellow muslims have made it lal, red.
At least one mosque has got the apt name, but how about islam, which means peace, well it is time for a name change to the religion.
It is only you trying to promote visit to india. The whole world media, CNN to the local aussie TV is [romoting visits to the Mosques of pakistan, to see the weapons the jinnah - islamists worship and pray to in pakistan.
The jihadists of the world are coming to terror central, the islamabad, and no wonder the masjid is called lal masjid, teh blood of the jihadis slaughtered by the fellow muslims have made it lal, red.
At least one mosque has got the apt name, but how about islam, which means peace, well it is time for a name change to the religion.
#547 Posted by MantoLives on July 20, 2007 12:26:47 pm
Re: # 476
Again you mean Gandhi-Islamists my friend... Gandhi was the father of all religious fascism ... lets not forget.
Abusing Jinnah for something that he opposed ... and exonerating the Racist Casteist Hindu fascist Bigot Gandhi who was responsible for religious bigotry in the first place is a cheap trick.
Again you mean Gandhi-Islamists my friend... Gandhi was the father of all religious fascism ... lets not forget.
Abusing Jinnah for something that he opposed ... and exonerating the Racist Casteist Hindu fascist Bigot Gandhi who was responsible for religious bigotry in the first place is a cheap trick.
#475 Posted by arjun2 on July 19, 2007 4:50:24 am
#474 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 4:26:41 am
they give out 72 virgins instead of peanuts on board PIA?
they give out 72 virgins instead of peanuts on board PIA?
#481 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 5:51:17 am
Re: # 475
That is the USP of "Visit Pakistan Year". 72 houris only on offer there.......Since the response has been overwhelming they are considering reducing houris and adding a few Tahmeds......:)
That is the USP of "Visit Pakistan Year". 72 houris only on offer there.......Since the response has been overwhelming they are considering reducing houris and adding a few Tahmeds......:)
#473 Posted by arjun2 on July 19, 2007 4:22:12 am
#472 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 3:42:11 am
of course...after all, it IS visit pakiland year...
of course...after all, it IS visit pakiland year...
#474 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 4:26:41 am
Re: # 473
Visit Pakiland and then a direct connect to 72 houris.......
Visit Pakiland and then a direct connect to 72 houris.......
#472 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 3:42:11 am
More people want to come to Pakistan.........
CNN) -- U.S. forces should go into Pakistan to rout al Qaeda from the safe haven it has found in the mountains on the border with Afghanistan, a co-chairman of the Iraq Study Group said.
Pakistani army soldiers patrol in the tribal area of North Waziristan along the Afghan border Wednesday.
Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, who also served as the vice chairman of the 9/11 commission, says the Iraq war distracted the United States when it had al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden on the run in the tribal region between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
He says it's now time to finish the job.
"This has to be carefully calibrated, worked out with the Pakistanis, but I am very concerned that you have a safe haven in Pakistan today where they (al Qaeda) can regroup, rethink, and get ready for more attacks," Hamilton said on CNN's "Newsroom" on Wednesday.
Declassified portions of the National Intelligence Estimate released Tuesday reported that al Qaeda has "protected or regenerated key elements" of its ability to attack the United States while in this region.
Some intelligence analysts believe bin Laden and his second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are hiding in western Pakistan.
Don't Miss
Report: Al Qaeda may use Iraq operatives to attack U.S.
Pakistan bombings raise fears of al Qaeda resurgence
"If there's anything we should have learned, it's that we must not let al Qaeda have a sanctuary, which they certainly do in Pakistan today," Hamilton said. Watch Hamilton discuss possible U.S. options »
The United States has accused Pakistan of allowing al Qaeda and the Taliban to have free rein in the region after it pulled out some of its forces in a deal with pro-Taliban tribal chiefs last year.
Under that agreement, the tribal leaders agreed not to harbor any Taliban or al Qaeda terrorists.
Fran Townsend, President Bush's homeland security adviser, said Wednesday "that agreement has failed."
After last week's deadly siege at the Red Mosque in Islamabad that pitted radical Islamists against Pakistan's military government forces, Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf vowed to "fight against extremism and terrorism no matter what province."
"We will finish it off in every corner of the country," he said.
The United States will keep "working with our Pakistani allies to make sure the tribal area is denied to al Qaeda as a safe haven," Townsend said on CNN's "American Morning."
Hamilton criticized the Pakistani president for keeping U.S. forces out of the region.
"I know Musharraf is described as a great ally of the United States, he's been helpful in some ways, but the fact that he has kept us away from going after these sanctuaries I find unacceptable," the former congressman from Indiana said.
"I think we have to find ways and means, perhaps it's use of covert actions, perhaps it's use of special operations, perhaps it's the pursuit of the Taliban when they're in Afghanistan, to let us go after them as they move back into Pakistan.
"Whatever it is, I do not find acceptable a sanctuary for al Qaeda in Pakistan. We have to be able to go after them." E-mail to a friend
CNN) -- U.S. forces should go into Pakistan to rout al Qaeda from the safe haven it has found in the mountains on the border with Afghanistan, a co-chairman of the Iraq Study Group said.
Pakistani army soldiers patrol in the tribal area of North Waziristan along the Afghan border Wednesday.
Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, who also served as the vice chairman of the 9/11 commission, says the Iraq war distracted the United States when it had al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden on the run in the tribal region between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
He says it's now time to finish the job.
"This has to be carefully calibrated, worked out with the Pakistanis, but I am very concerned that you have a safe haven in Pakistan today where they (al Qaeda) can regroup, rethink, and get ready for more attacks," Hamilton said on CNN's "Newsroom" on Wednesday.
Declassified portions of the National Intelligence Estimate released Tuesday reported that al Qaeda has "protected or regenerated key elements" of its ability to attack the United States while in this region.
Some intelligence analysts believe bin Laden and his second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are hiding in western Pakistan.
Don't Miss
Report: Al Qaeda may use Iraq operatives to attack U.S.
Pakistan bombings raise fears of al Qaeda resurgence
"If there's anything we should have learned, it's that we must not let al Qaeda have a sanctuary, which they certainly do in Pakistan today," Hamilton said. Watch Hamilton discuss possible U.S. options »
The United States has accused Pakistan of allowing al Qaeda and the Taliban to have free rein in the region after it pulled out some of its forces in a deal with pro-Taliban tribal chiefs last year.
Under that agreement, the tribal leaders agreed not to harbor any Taliban or al Qaeda terrorists.
Fran Townsend, President Bush's homeland security adviser, said Wednesday "that agreement has failed."
After last week's deadly siege at the Red Mosque in Islamabad that pitted radical Islamists against Pakistan's military government forces, Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf vowed to "fight against extremism and terrorism no matter what province."
"We will finish it off in every corner of the country," he said.
The United States will keep "working with our Pakistani allies to make sure the tribal area is denied to al Qaeda as a safe haven," Townsend said on CNN's "American Morning."
Hamilton criticized the Pakistani president for keeping U.S. forces out of the region.
"I know Musharraf is described as a great ally of the United States, he's been helpful in some ways, but the fact that he has kept us away from going after these sanctuaries I find unacceptable," the former congressman from Indiana said.
"I think we have to find ways and means, perhaps it's use of covert actions, perhaps it's use of special operations, perhaps it's the pursuit of the Taliban when they're in Afghanistan, to let us go after them as they move back into Pakistan.
"Whatever it is, I do not find acceptable a sanctuary for al Qaeda in Pakistan. We have to be able to go after them." E-mail to a friend
#471 Posted by Chennai on July 19, 2007 3:31:07 am
A Bomb a day keeps Pakis at bay.....
Two Pakistan bomb attacks kill 33
Two bombs exploded in Pakistan today, one in the south and the other in the northwest, killing at least 32 people, most of them police.
A wave of bomb attacks since a siege and assault on a militant mosque stronghold in Islamabad this month has swept northwestern Pakistan, killing close to 150 people.
But today, a bomb blast killed at least 25 in a market place in the southern town of Hub, on the border between Sindh and Baluchistan provinces, near the city of Karachi. Seven of the dead were policemen. More than 20 people were wounded, some of them seriously. Police were still investigating whether it was a remote-controlled bomb or a suicide attack.
It was the first such attack in southern Pakistan during this recent wave. It was unclear whether it was related to the Islamist militant backlash against the storming of Islamabad's Red Mosque, or was linked to a long-running separatist movement in Baluchistan.
The government said 102 people had been killed in the storming of the mosque. Many of the victims came from the volatile northwest, most of them followers of cleric brothers advocating a militant brand of Islam reminiscent of the Taliban in Afghanistan.
In the far northwest, a car bomber blew himself up at a police training centre in the city of Hangu early today, killing at least seven people. The bomber tried to enter the police training centre just as young recruits were going in for training.
Hangu, which itself has a history of sectarian violence, is close to Pakistan's lawless tribal regions on the Afghan border, known as hotbeds of support for al Qaeda and Taliban militants.
A large number of al-Qaeda fighters and their allies fled to Pakistan's tribal areas after US-led forces toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001.
President Pervez Musharraf said yesterday he had no intention of declaring a state of emergency to counter the growing insecurity, and gave assurances that elections due later this year would go ahead as planned.
Two Pakistan bomb attacks kill 33
Two bombs exploded in Pakistan today, one in the south and the other in the northwest, killing at least 32 people, most of them police.
A wave of bomb attacks since a siege and assault on a militant mosque stronghold in Islamabad this month has swept northwestern Pakistan, killing close to 150 people.
But today, a bomb blast killed at least 25 in a market place in the southern town of Hub, on the border between Sindh and Baluchistan provinces, near the city of Karachi. Seven of the dead were policemen. More than 20 people were wounded, some of them seriously. Police were still investigating whether it was a remote-controlled bomb or a suicide attack.
It was the first such attack in southern Pakistan during this recent wave. It was unclear whether it was related to the Islamist militant backlash against the storming of Islamabad's Red Mosque, or was linked to a long-running separatist movement in Baluchistan.
The government said 102 people had been killed in the storming of the mosque. Many of the victims came from the volatile northwest, most of them followers of cleric brothers advocating a militant brand of Islam reminiscent of the Taliban in Afghanistan.
In the far northwest, a car bomber blew himself up at a police training centre in the city of Hangu early today, killing at least seven people. The bomber tried to enter the police training centre just as young recruits were going in for training.
Hangu, which itself has a history of sectarian violence, is close to Pakistan's lawless tribal regions on the Afghan border, known as hotbeds of support for al Qaeda and Taliban militants.
A large number of al-Qaeda fighters and their allies fled to Pakistan's tribal areas after US-led forces toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001.
President Pervez Musharraf said yesterday he had no intention of declaring a state of emergency to counter the growing insecurity, and gave assurances that elections due later this year would go ahead as planned.
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