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listing 208-224   9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Surviving Musharraf\'s Exit?
Posted by arjun_5 Apr 1, 2008 06:26 am
#168 Posted by zeemax on April 1, 2008 6:15:27 am

aww...the inbred retard impotent wannabe jihadi warrior is pissed...

what happened? did one of your brothers/sisters/nephews/nieces get whacked?

bring that up the next time a grim faced centcom chief comes visiting pakiland..you know..to make you all grease up and bend over...
Surviving Musharraf\'s Exit?
Posted by arjun_5 Apr 1, 2008 06:11 am
#166 Posted by zeemax on April 1, 2008 6:07:23 am

couldn't care less...one less inbred retard paki, one less terrorist...
Surviving Musharraf\'s Exit?
Posted by arjun_5 Apr 1, 2008 06:01 am
#145 Posted by zeemax on April 1, 2008 5:30:32 am

speaking for myself, I don't want pakiland to fall apart..just for pakis to whack each other for a long long time to come...then we want sharia enforced in pakiland...putting the pure back in the land of the pure...

and trust me.,.whether indians want that or not has no bearing on reality...you're doing a great job just by yourself..

besides, I want pakiland to be around at least till jan 2011. you know..you told us kashmir would become pakiland by 2010..can't mock you if pakiland doesn't exist, can I?
Surviving Musharraf\'s Exit?
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 31, 2008 10:42 am
#67 Posted by Look on March 31, 2008 10:33:10 am


Pakistan's 8% growth


You only had one year of 8.4% growth..every year since has been less than that...even with made up wheat production numbers..

your growth was a credit bubble that has burst...it's not like you produced any real companies or industries..

reality is the female of the canine species..
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 31, 2008 02:57 am
#254 Posted by zeemax on March 30, 2008 10:26:28 pm


In fact I don't know how come a predator didn't appear?


hellfires don't pay for themselves...US forces don't waste them on a gathering of chickenshits such as yourself..they were used to blow up another taliban "militants"..didn't you read?
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 04:48 pm
#245 Posted by mohar11 on March 30, 2008 4:04:32 pm


Yep, while hanoods are "taking over" the world of automobile with their Tatas


hamidm's brothers have a lock on the auto parts business..i.e. making automobile parts from automobiles i.e. car bombers market...

War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 12:48 pm
speaking of wars..this is how the paki army's chaddi was removed...note the impotent rage...

'Niazi was forced to surrender in public in Dhaka'
Saturday, 29 March , 2008, 13:30

Dhaka: The Pakistani general whose surrender signalled the liberation of Bangladesh, did so, much against his wishes, "before the people of Dhaka", says the Indian officer who organised in 1971 modern history's only public surrender by a vanquished force.

Pakistan's Lt Gen. A A K Niazi was reluctant and wanted to discuss "only a ceasefire under the UN". Later, he agreed to surrender, but in his office.

Niazi later claimed that he had been "blackmailed" into surrendering at a public ceremony, watched by thousands, at Dhaka's Race Course (now Suhrawardy Udyan).

"But I did not blackmail him," insists Lt Gen. (retd) J F R Jacob of the Indian Army to whom instructions from New Delhi were merely: "Go and get surrender".

Jacob narrated the events of December 16, 1971, over 36 years after they happened, during his current visit at the invitation of Bangladesh Army Chief Gen. Moin U Ahmed.

Niazi, unwilling to surrender and that too in public, relented after prolonged talks when told that there could be retaliation from angry people of Dhaka, The Daily Star said on Saturday.

Giving Niazi 30 minutes to make up his mind, Jacob walked out. "Going back, I put the paper on his table and asked him, 'Do you accept this document?' For three times he didn't answer and I picked it up and said (it's) taken as accepted," he went on.

During the negotiations, he also asked the Pakistani general to surrender his revolver. "He put a dirty little revolver. The lanyard was dirty and frayed in parts."

In his book Surrender at Dacca: Birth of a Nation, Jacob said he realised only later that the pistol was not Niazi's. It was a normal army issue .38 revolver.


"The barrel was choked with muck and apparently had not been cleaned for some considerable time... More likely, Niazi had taken it from one of his military policemen and surrendered it as his personal weapon. I could not help feeling that in his own way, Niazi had got a little of his own back," he wrote.

The surrender was before joint India-Bangladesh forces, to which Major General Rao Farman Ali of the Pakistan Army objected. Pakistanis, 93,000 officers and men, would surrender only to Indians, he said.

Jacob said the Pakistani officers were livid at the "humiliation" and swore that they would take badla (revenge).


In holding a public ceremony, the Indians were taking a risk too, with not many troops mobilised yet.

"I knew we had hardly any troops outside Dhaka and it was problematic for public surrender... But had it been better to be in safety and make him surrender in his office? No. I wanted him to face the people."

Recollecting those historic moments, the architect of surrender ceremony said, "Niazi retorted, 'Dhaka would fall over my dead body'. But I did it the way I thought it should be. I didn't have any directives or instructions for it. Was it wrong, I ask you?"

Gen. M A G Osmani, chief of Bangladeshi forces, could not be present at the surrender ceremony, a point that has rankled the Bangladeshis.

Jacob said Osmani was far away in Sylhet. A helicopter was sent, but he could not reach on time as the helicopter was shot at.
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 12:31 pm
rockets red glare, the bombs busting in air



Missile hits Taliban leader’s office

Our staff reporter
WANA — A missile hit office of a local Taliban commander, Mulla Nazir Wazir, in Dok area of Wana, South Wazirsiatn, on Sunday after noon. The administration said it was a remote controlled bomb.
Because of the off day, no causality occurred, however the office was razed to ground, the local reports said. The local Talibans claim that the office of Mulla Nazir was hit with a missile fired from somewhere. Two weeks back, in the same area another missile hit a local Taliban hideout wherein number of people were killed.
However, the administration, said that building was destroyed because of remote controlled bomb installed near Mulla Nazir’s office. An official of political administration said that they were investigating the matter and at present could not form any opinion, adding that after investigation, administration would make public the findings of the reports.
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 12:26 pm
#228 Posted by hamidm2 on March 30, 2008 10:40:57 am

OHMYGOD...they must be planning terrorist attacks!!...

oh wait...no..that would be something DHS would look for if paki soldiers went missing...
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 06:01 am
#177 Posted by laddu on March 30, 2008 4:37:44 am

paki jizba-e-jihad isn't matched by their fortitude-e-intestine...
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 03:00 am

he cut their hands and feet and their eyes were branded with heated pieces of iron.


So mo killed them for killing the camel because a dead camel means no more camel urine...

peeweemax..now i know why cabs driven by pakis stink..it's the drivers drinking pbuh cola...
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 02:22 am
#90 Posted by ahmedmadani on March 29, 2008 7:37:29 pm


Any comments ? Thanks , no response expected , but mute silence


IF wishes were horses, zeemax would ride...
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 02:18 am
#98 Posted by ahmedmadani on March 29, 2008 8:27:30 pm


Inside story is American govt wooed Mr. Aziz ( Expm of P.Stan) to take over bank and help but he was just tired after having experience of ungrateful politicians - they did not offered him election ticket)


inside story? inside your head perhaps?
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 30, 2008 02:08 am
peeweemax..a little camel cola?
War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 29, 2008 06:47 pm
Pakiland is like a drug addict who was forced to go into rehab after 9/11. the drug was jihad...pakiland was a jihad junkie if you will...

the weekly suicide bombings are withdrawal symptoms..

War of Another Kind
Posted by arjun_5 Mar 29, 2008 05:33 am
New leash, old dog...


US offers Pakistan assistance, warns on militants

Augustine Anthony
Reuters North American News Service

Mar 28, 2008 12:19 EST

ISLAMABAD, March 28 (Reuters) - A senior U.S. official visiting Pakistan held out the prospect of increased assistance for the new government on Friday, while stressing the need to work together to fight al Qaeda and Islamist militancy.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher said there were militants in Pakistani tribal areas planning attacks on Pakistan, Afghanistan, Europe, the United States and elsewhere.

"We want to move together to help Pakistan be safe and have economic opportunities and we want to move together to make Pakistan a success as a democratic society," Boucher said.

He made his comments at a joint news conference with Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of assassinated former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, whose party leads the new coalition government.

"So, as the government lays out its plan, in that regard, we will look for the proper ways to support," he said. A body of opinion was forming in the United States that Pakistan should get more assistance, he said.

Boucher and Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte arrived on Tuesday, a few hours before Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani was sworn in to lead a coalition government that aims to change the way counter-terrorism cooperation with the United States is conducted.

Their visit angered many Pakistanis who saw it as an attempt to influence the new government and shore up President Pervez Musharraf, who came to power as a general after a coup in 1999.

U.S. ally Musharraf has become increasingly isolated since his allies lost a February election and there is speculation that he could be forced to quit within weeks or months.

"OUR WAR TOO"

Until he gave up his dual role as army chief last November, Musharraf had represented a one-stop shop for the United States regarding operations ranging from renditions of al Qaeda suspects to missile strikes by CIA-operated drone aircraft.

A source close to the new government said the U.S. military has problems adjusting to dealing with institutional mechanisms that Pakistan's new leaders want to put in place governing the scope of cooperation.

Pakistan needs as much financial as it can get. A World Bank report released on Thursday said rapid adjustments and reforms were needed to avert an economic crisis as it suffers from the impact of high international oil and food prices.

U.S. assistance to Pakistan since it joined Washington's war on terrorism in 2001 totalled over $10 billion, most of it for the military. Another $750 million has been earmarked for security and social sector projects in the tribal areas.

Boucher said the United States understood and was ready to support a broad-based, multi-faceted programme to counter the problem of terrorism and extremism in Pakistan.

Helping the United States hunt al Qaeda has brought Pakistan's army into conflict with its own people, and tribes living in the semi-autonomous lands along the Afghan border have been alienated by Musharraf's policies.

The militants intensified a campaign of violence to destabilise Musharraf after troops stormed a Islamabad's Red Mosque last July to crush an armed student movement.

Suicide attacks have multiplied, and almost 600 people have been killed in militant related violence so far this year.'

Speaking three months after his wife's murder in a suicide bomb and gun attack, Zardari said it was "Pakistan's war as much as anybody's else's". (Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Jon Boyle)
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