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Will Pakistanis Listen and Act?

Sushil Bhatnagar July 22, 2005

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listing 96-112   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

#130 Posted by amit on July 24, 2005 3:40:10 pm
Re:southasian#129

Very interesting views. I have Pakistani friends and colleagues for many years in the US and I can say that most Pakistanis are very nice people. The question is why does a country with so much potential get involved with all these incidents around the world? How can that be changed?

My suggestion is that the Pakistani establishment, the intelligentsia, the media and moderate religious leaders must come together to provide a message of hope to the millions of Pakistanis. They must tell the people that - ok, we have grievances like Kashmir or Iraq or whatever. But these grievances can be solved by dialogue and negotiations. There is no need to go around blowing up yourselves and others because that will never solve ay grievances. Case in point is Kashmir. 15 years of fighting has yielded nothing. 1 year of peace has yielded bus service and softer borders. 15 years of peace will lead to much, much more where Kashmiris can lead a happy life. That sort of positive message must come from the top to the masses, so that it becomes part of their psyche. A top to bottom positive propaganda blitz can start healing the religious hatred.

In addition a complete cessation of support to any kind of violent activities as well as incitement to religious hatred in mosques etc is a must. This can really turn around Pakistan as a country, earn the goodwill of the rest of the world and enable it to reach its true potential.
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#129 Posted by southasian on July 24, 2005 2:53:40 pm
Re: # 128 I think we can arrive at a bit more clarity. There is OBL and cohorts who constitue the epicenter of terrorism. They have a certain political agenda based on a certain distorted worldview. They function in utmost secrecy yet there are agents among general populace who recruit and spread the gospel. They are able to do it because

i) They use a religious idiom preaching hate and superiority of Islam. While everyone can privately think that his religion is superior when mixed with a hateful and violent message it is very inciteful and lethal. It holds true even for Hindu fanatics. I need not elaborate.

ii) Then there is public at large. A large number of them actually celebrate every time there is an act of terror in Western capitals. They hold these suicide bombers as their heroes and martyrs. These guys are actually venting out their impotent anger at circumstances they are generally in. Democracy is said to act like a valve to release such pent up emotions in an institutionalised way. If they think there government is colluding with the West against their wishes people would recall such government. It is always better than emotional immature young men doing what they did. As I earlier said Pakistani Britons and Pakistanis diaspora in general stay Pakistanis and never (almost) identify with their adopted country fully. They are also not in sufficient numbers or do not hold sufficient financial muscle in these countries to actually change governments or influence policy significantly. Hence I said a feeling of alienation and powerlessness prevails. Situation at home is no better at home. The youth of this population irrespective of whether they are in Pakistan or outside are susceptible due to all these factors coupled with emotional immaturity.

iii) Therefore I propose that a line of action should be such that the catchment population is weaned away from the `epicenter` while engaging the actual combatant by force. The strategy can be manifold but empowerment of the man in the street is most important. Only way of doing that , I know of, is democracy across the Muslim world.

iv) Take the case of Hasba bill. The other day I opposed it but on this test I now think its better these guys do these things and feel powerful than shooting around.

I admit that at best the above is at best an amateur attempt. None of this in anyway means that I understand or support the ideology of hatred.
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#128 Posted by tahmed32 on July 24, 2005 2:24:05 pm
southasian #85 You write ``The powerless I talked about was not on an individual scale. I was talking about a certain perceived powerlessness as a group like not being able to do something about injustices suffered by the group. (Palestine, Iraq and so on...)``

If everyone who ``perceived powerlessness as a group`` were to start targetting innocent people, the world would soon run out of innocent people. In any case, the bombers in London were neither palestinian nor iraqis. They were Pakistanis - and ones who clearly were far more in control of their lives (i.e. empowered economically as well as politically) in UK than their cousins and uncles and aunts in Pakistan. So, while you may be right in terms of their ``perceived powerlessness``, it seems clear to me that this perception was based on nothing more than the misplaced passions of immature minds.
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#127 Posted by Urstruly on July 24, 2005 1:53:17 pm

CHRISTIANIZATION & SPAINIZATION OF MUSLIMS







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#126 Posted by bbabu on July 24, 2005 1:37:58 pm
Urstruly #119

`` Sometimes, I find the arrogance of Anglo-American terrorists mind boggling or mind numbing even. In the past two years, since they destroyed two countries and killed hundereds and thousands of inncocent human beings there, there have been several instances where intelligence officers entered into Queen`s chambers pretending to be perverts and ona couple of times even entered into pareliament pretending to be citizens only to give their poplation false impression that all was well, and the attrocities they are committed elsewhere in the world is mere Islamists propaganda. Anyone with an Iq of ten knew that there was a disaster waiting to happen. And now when the inevitable has happened, they are shooting innocent human beings just because theyhave a certain skin color. ``

There was nothing to destroy in Afghanistan except Taliban and Al Qaeda camps.

Regarding the shooting in the London subway what do expect the police to do ? In some countries the police exists to protect the public.
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#125 Posted by cayenne on July 24, 2005 1:08:25 pm
This board is giving me a headache like the other boards.Pak see Pak do.All the wrong things.
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#124 Posted by Kane on July 24, 2005 11:58:34 am
Khanchutiye...there was another saying > `1 Paki = 10 Indians`...but then Indian soldiers broke Pakistan into 2 equal parts. Pakistan Army surrendered and 100,000 Pakistani soldiers were taken as POWs.

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#123 Posted by Khansaab on July 24, 2005 11:43:17 am
Morarji Desai was a wonderful Indian PM, who like many pacifist co-religionists of the ilk we have on our hands here, used to drink urine daily. I don’t say that there is anything wrong with the partaking of that beverage if your heart so desires, but it seems from their gloating, and Paki/Muslim bashings, that maybe some of our Indi friends here have let the inebriating toxics from drinking those bodily fluid discharges go to their heads a little too much. Maybe they use stuff laced a little too heavily with brain numbing venom. Either that or maybe they are drunk with jobs like the destruction of Babri Mosque or the Gujrat blood letting. Be that as it may, it would behoove everyone if we stop spewing poisonous vitriol against one another. There already is enough hatred in the world as it is. As we know, Pakistan is not a perfect nation, but than neither is India such a wonderful bastion of angels. Remember, every time you point a finger at someone, three of your own fingers are pointing at you. After all, it was not so long ago when the Indians were so hard on the run that if someone would even murmur the word “Chinese!” they would forget putting on even their pants before scampering for dear life. But times change. Usually the bigger and more powerful nations condescend to offer assurance to the less powerful and fortunate, like China recently did in the case of India. As opposed to this, India is vying for a Security Council seat and posturing with the pomposity of a nation on the threshold of becoming some sort of a power, yet no Indi just can seem to get out of the rut of bashing Pakistan anywhere he can. A recent example being Jagmohan’s dig against Pakistan, while on trip to the US, and people like Arjun etc here. The US is being all hunky dory with the Hindis these days because they wish to use them against the Chinese, but probably they have not heard the saying we know since ages here, that a hundred crackers are worth a single blow from a truncheon.

(Its laughable to suggest that with your Indian looks you could escape racial profiling!).
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#122 Posted by southasian on July 24, 2005 9:45:16 am
Re: # 117 Kaalchakra: Interesting views especially no. 2). Could you please elaborate that one?

There are terrorists and there are their sympathisers/supporters. We need to fight terrorists and wean away (give lollipops if u like) their sympathisers. One way is to counter the terrorist/jehadi propaganda with propaganda of your own. English language and cyberspace is a poor medium for that. I am afraid gagging the liberal opinion is not one of the good options. Don`t try to understand terrorism for it is calculated madness. Their public support is what we need to cut off. Democracy does help. As you pointed out in point 1) there is introspection going on and we should wait for the results. Difficult road this one.
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#121 Posted by ZahraJ on July 24, 2005 9:01:57 am
Re: # 118

Who and what is Modi?
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#120 Posted by arjun_m on July 24, 2005 8:41:41 am
Capt Clueless: If you`re lurking, Der Spiegel has Ahmed Rashid interview

``Pakistan Remains the Global Center for Terrorism and al-Qaida``

The investigation into the July 7 London bombings quickly revealed ties to Pakistan. But just what role did the country run by Gen. Pervez Musharraf play in the terror attacks? SPIEGEL ONLINE spoke with Ahmed Rashid about the country`s reliance on extremist groups, radical religious schools and the reason Osama bin Laden remains at large, very likely in Pakistan.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Mr. Rashid, after the London bombings, police quickly revealed that most of the bombers were British citizens of Pakistani origin and that they might have traveled to Pakistan to receive instructions and training prior to the July 7 attacks. Was this a surprise to you?

Rashid: People in Pakistan were very apprehensive after the bombing, but the connection with Pakistan did not come as a surprise. It was clear there was a great danger that the Pakistani community in London would carry out such an attack. It is well known that the Muslim community there is very radical -- at least some of them. People also knew many of them had connections in Pakistan.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: There have been a number of arrests in Pakistan in recent days. Were the roots of the London attacks in Britain or were they in Pakistan?

Rashid: The roots of the attack were in England. There has been an enormous radicalization of British Muslims in the last few years and especially since the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States. There are radical preachers, there are radical mosques. There are lots of schools there which have been teaching students the Koran on Friday afternoons and at the same time radicalizing them. There is no dearth of ideological training in England.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: So how great a role does Pakistan play in international terrorism?

Rashid: Pakistan remains the global center for terrorism and for the remnants of al-Qaida, which is still very strong here. The fact is, after Sept. 11, despite the many crackdowns made by the military regime of Gen. Pervez Musharraf, we haven`t effectively shut down the Pakistani militant groups. The reason for that is that these groups are very closely tied into the military`s foreign policy, especially with respect to Kashmir and Afghanistan.
The militant groups here have not been crushed and if the madrassas they control -- they all control a certain number of such religious schools -- are not shut down, we`re not going to see an end to militancy here.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: So in other words, despite Musharraf`s claims to be combating terrorism -- claims that he repeated in his speech to Pakistan on Thursday evening -- he is not doing enough. Is that what you are saying?

Rashid: When crackdowns do occur, they aren`t effective. Three hundred, or even 2,000, people are picked up, they`re held for 90 days and then they are freed as soon as the attention and pressure from the West has stopped.
There has never been an organized campaign to combat it. It has never taken place.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: In his speech, Musharraf spoke quite a bit about the July 7 bombings in London. What was the main message he was trying to communicate to his nation?
Rashid: His main message was a very positive one. He said we must combat extremism and launch a jihad against radicalism. He asked that people mobilize and not vote for extremists and so on. But there has been no shortage of such speeches. The main question is whether they will be followed by any meaningful action.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Musharraf also emphasized that the London bombers were born and raised in England as though he were trying to take the blame off of Pakistan. What was he trying to say?

Rashid: The message was that you don`t need to come to Pakistan to become a fanatic. You can become a fanatic in Yorkshire, in Leeds or anywhere in England because there`s enough extremism there too. That`s what he was alluding to.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: You mentioned before that there is a lot of work to do in Pakistan when it comes to cracking down on extremism. But what can the West do to keep up pressure on the country and on Musharraf to energetically combat fanaticism and terrorism?


Rashid: The biggest mistake the West has made with Pakistan since 9/11 has been the pursuit of private diplomacy. It hasn`t been made public. The West should spell out exactly what is expected of Pakistan and the regime. US President George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, they keep praising Pakistan and saying it is doing a great job hunting down al-Qaida and the Taliban, but behind the scenes they are whistling a completely different tune.(Now you know why the t-shirt thing doesn`t work...) The West needs to have one policy which should be in the public domain. Then the Pakistani public would insist that Musharraf fulfil these demands.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: But Musharraf is already under great pressure as he tries to walk the fine line between being allied with the West in the war on terror while at the same time having powerful factions in his society that are radicalized and extreme.

Rashid: But that has been the argument for the last four years. The fact is, Musharraf is still here, he is still very much in power and absolutely nothing has been done about extremism. It is clear that Musharraf has a very political agenda. He wants to be re-elected in 2007 and he wants to remain in office until 2012. And for that, he needs votes. At the same time, though, he has been trying to be a good partner with the West. But his political agenda takes precedence over any commitments to combating extremism and terrorism. An army general cannot have a political agenda while he is trying to crack down on terror.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: One of the reasons the West is not putting too much pressure on Musharraf is that it is afraid of what would happen if he were no longer there. He has been targeted by assassination attempts twice in his own country. What would happen if his government were toppled or if he were killed?

Rashid: I have no doubt that the army would take over again. People are afraid because the country has nuclear weapons and they think the country would fall apart. I don`t believe any of that would happen. There would be continuity.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Since the July 7 bombings, there has been lots of focus on the madrassas as a breeding ground for terrorism and radicalism. What role do these religious schools play in Pakistan?

Pakistani leader Gen. Pervez Musharraf. Many think he is not doing enough to combat terrorism in his country.
REUTERS
Pakistani leader Gen. Pervez Musharraf. Many think he is not doing enough to combat terrorism in his country.
Rashid: The London bombers came to Pakistan, but don`t think they came to attend a madrassa. I think they came here to make contacts with militant groups and possibly to get training. The majority of madrassas in Pakistan -- I would say around 80 percent -- play a traditional role. That means they teach the Koran and then produce mullahs or religious leaders -- just like religious schools in any religion. But in Pakistan, a number of madrassas have been taken over by militant groups and it has become a sort of badge of honor for the extremists. These madrassas have become recruiting platforms for these extremist groups. But it is difficult to close them down because they are run by the militant groups Musharraf needs for other aspects of his foreign policy.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: It is suspected that Osama bin Laden is on the run or hiding somewhere in Pakistan. What role does he still play in international terrorism?

Rashid: He is on the run. His main priority at the moment is to stay alive. At the most, he may be able to provide some strategic directives through his support group. But he`s not in a position to run day-to-day operations.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Some say that he is in Pakistan and that the Pakistani secret services know where he is and could catch him, but they are not willing to.

Rashid: He is certainly in Pakistan because Pakistan has traditionally had the best infrastructure for al-Qaida. I don`t think the Pakistani military knows where he is, but they aren`t looking very hard either because they fear the military support they get from the United States would disappear as soon as bin Laden is caught.

Osama bin Laden is likely in the mountains of Pakistan.
AP
Osama bin Laden is likely in the mountains of Pakistan.
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was recently in Washington and Bush promised closer cooperation -- even support for India`s civil nuclear program. What does that mean for Pakistan?

Rashid: The biggest fear of the Pakistani military is the new American relationship with India. The fact that the Americans are even willing to work with India`s nuclear program now -- something they would never do with Pakistan -- makes the military very nervous. They want to keep the Americans on board, but the Pakistanis know that the long term interests of the United States lie with India. The goal of the Pakistani military is to keep the Americans on its side for as long as possible.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Where do you see Pakistan in 10 years?

Rashid: The country has a lot of potential and there is a democratic force here. But the main powers in the country at the moment are without a doubt the military and the fundamentalists.
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#119 Posted by Urstruly on July 24, 2005 8:39:03 am

Sometimes, I find the arrogance of Anglo-American terrorists mind boggling or mind numbing even. In the past two years, since they destroyed two countries and killed hundereds and thousands of inncocent human beings there, there have been several instances where intelligence officers entered into Queen`s chambers pretending to be perverts and ona couple of times even entered into pareliament pretending to be citizens only to give their poplation false impression that all was well, and the attrocities they are committed elsewhere in the world is mere Islamists propaganda. Anyone with an Iq of ten knew that there was a disaster waiting to happen. And now when the inevitable has happened, they are shooting innocent human beings just because theyhave a certain skin color.
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#118 Posted by arjun_m on July 24, 2005 8:32:50 am
#111 by ZahraJ on July 24, 2005 7:31am PT


Now, this in unfair. Obviously, your previous post alluded to the focus on Chowk.


It`s not about chowk or some other website..Pakistanis on the internet and in real life live in this bubble of self-delusion...Pakiworld, if you will...In Pakiworld, a posting with 5 references to Modi exonerates pakis..say modi 5 times and the brit police will stop looking for brit-paki jihadis...
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#117 Posted by KaalChakra on July 24, 2005 8:29:15 am
arjun

For two reasons, it may be more useful to focus on the bare bones of the terrorist ideology, rather than (the whole of) Islam.

(1) Many good people who are Muslims are trying their best to (re)define Islam into a practically peaceful religion. Whatever my often and strongly expressed personal opinions, I just want to recognize their attempts, and wait at least a little more to see if anything will actually come of those efforts. IMHO they have even the smallest chance of success only if they actually took far more unpleasant steps than they have been hitherto willing to, but that may be just my ignorance.

(2) But consider an even more important issue. By focusing merely on `Islam` we will overlook an insidious fact: that the cruel cancer of terrorist ideology afflicts non Muslim liberals even more destructively than, and almost as often as it does many Muslims.

Without buying into the very slippery, basic premises of the terrorist ideology, these liberal cowards and nitwits would never make the offensive claim that they `understand` terrorism, and that the world award terrorists and their supporters with lollipops.

Were one to pick the one greatest `enemy` in mankind`s current war against terrorism, it is without doubt this latter group - a gang without insight, without courage, and without moral compass.

Muslim or non Muslim, a terrorist is a person who buys into the terrorist ideology, not just the young/poor fellow who is trained to believe in, and blow himself up for some cooked-up cause.
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#116 Posted by mohar11 on July 24, 2005 8:10:42 am
Re: # 110 kaal
//...what precisely should the London police do, the next time a similar situation develops in a crowded area?....//

That`s what I am waiting to find out - what precisely are the brits going to do to handle the jihadi menace ..... Because, the british f**kers had been pontificating a lot when India was dealing with these jihadi bastar!ds on a daily basis and on much larger scale. I mean - one jihadi attack and the british are already executing suspects in full public view.

Don`t get me wrong - I am on Brit side on this one. But I will also like to kick their self-rigtehous pompous a$$es :)
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#115 Posted by ZahraJ on July 24, 2005 7:49:59 am
In this case, the eye witnesses were equally stupid. To them, everyone looks like an Asian.


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