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Magic of metaphors : Op-Ed Journey of Thomas Friedman
Posted by arjun3 Oct 14, 2007 09:30 am
#4 Posted by malik99 on October 14, 2007 8:59:50 am

I can understand your frustration to...in NYC, you're the cab driver and your rich wall street passenger is probably jewish...what's the matter? he didn't tip you well? maybe if you took a shower once in a while..
Blinkered Vision: Unravelling the Nuclear Debate
Posted by arjun3 Oct 11, 2007 01:17 pm
another commie pinko writer on chowk...color me shocked.

aho patwardhan saheb...jevhdi akkal ahe tumchi ti sarva gaandit ahe..


Even the mighty President Bush could not alone do anything about it unless aided by the congress.


Dubya isn't darth vader and needs congressional approval!! What a fucked up form of government is this?


Suppose tomorrow China were to pass on some information or material or technology that US determines amounts to proliferation. Wouldn't India then be obliged to interdict or permit US to interdict from Indian territory; irrespective of what India wants or believes is in its self interest?


yes...big bad US interdicting missile parts from your commie masters to your islamofascist terrorist supporting bhaulog to the west..how awful..

This is nothing but a rant by a commie-pinko..completely incoherent..what does PNAC have to do with the nuclear deal?

funny how the commie/jholiwalas don't address the energy production and that fact that military facilities are outside the scope of inspections.
Musharraf’s New Ordinance Hoopla
Posted by arjun3 Oct 7, 2007 07:50 pm
corporal clueless: how's mushy's plan to keep "the americans in line" going?

Pakistani militants gain ground in restive areas

By Isambard Wilkinson in Tank
Last Updated: 1:52am BST 08/10/2007

Pakistani militants with links to al-Qa'eda and the Taliban have extended their territory beyond their stronghold in the lawless tribal areas while the political elite are squabbling over governing the country.

Fighters have overrun security outposts, established "parallel" local governments and recruited suicide bombers from secular schools in areas nominally under government control in the North West Frontier Province.

Western diplomats maintain that a six-month-long political crisis, sparked by President Pervez Musharraf's struggle to extend his rule, has diverted the government's attention from dealing with a rising tide of militancy.

Daily attacks on security forces have intensified not only in the tribal belt on the Afghan-Pakistan border where US intelligence officials claim that al-Qa'eda has rebuilt, but also in adjacent "settled areas".

"This is happening in Swat and Dera Ismail Khan and Bannu. Where the police are intimidated the militants have greater freedom to roam," said a Western diplomat in Islamabad. "What are particularly worrisome are the parallel governments in the settled areas."

Tank, a town on the edge of the tribal area of South Waziristan, typifies the creeping "Talibanisation" across the province.

It has fallen under the sway of a pro-Taliban commander from South Waziristan, Baitullah Mehsud, whose men last week killed three soldiers from a group of 248 they had captured last month.

An army division was deployed to the district two months ago to stem Baitullah's influence expanding into the neighbouring town of Dera Ismail Khan.

Even there his men have issued Talibanesque edicts banning women from going to the market, bombed women's schools and warned barbers not to shave beards.

A senior government official said that traditional councils had been undermined by military action and Gen Musharraf's reforms had taken away the power of administrators in the settled areas.

"While Musharraf is in power carrying out Bush's war there will be violence," he said. "Boys aged from 10 to 15 from madrassas [religious schools] were easily persuaded to carry out suicide attacks. Baitullah has a command that the army does not. He is a man of character. He is very pious."

But militants are not just recruiting from madrassas. Battles raged in Tank when militants arrived at the gates of secular Oxford High School several months ago.

The school principal resisted and a gun-fight broke out between militants and policemen. Having lost several men, more than 200 militants returned to raze two banks and kill more than a dozen people.

The government control over the district is tenuous. Last week a teenager, Sohail Zeb, was sentenced to 24 years in jail after being found in Tank with two suicide belts. Now Baitullah has demanded his release as part of negotiations over the fate of the 200 captured soldiers.

In line with its dealings with other militant commanders, the government signed a peace deal with Baitullah in 2005, showering him with million of rupees in return for stopping his cross-border attacks on coalition forces.

However, it collapsed when his men reneged on the deal and army operations resumed in the area at the behest of America in July.

More alarming for Tank's prospects is that militants, who belong to the hardline Sunni Deobandi sect, have reignited vicious sectarianism.

Baitullah's powerful right-hand man, Qari Hussain, belongs to Sipah-i-Sahaba, a sectarian group with links to intelligence agencies that targets Shia Muslims.

A paramilitary soldier who had been captured by Baitullah's men was beheaded after he was singled out as a Shia.

In Tank, the militants' sectarian zeal has led to attacks even on fellow Sunni Muslims. Brig Mehmood Shah, a retired official formerly responsible for security on the frontier, said: "The militants have declared war and so the government should react by drawing up a plan for war."

Pakistani soldiers backed by helicopter gunships killed 48 pro-Taliban militants but lost 20 of their men during fierce fighting near Mir Ali, North Waziristan, on Saturday.

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