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India Befriends Afghanistan, Irking Pakistan

August 22, 2009 Leave a comment

With $1.2 Billion in Pledged Aid, New Delhi Hopes to Help Build a Country That Is ‘Stable, Democratic, Multiethnic’

KABUL — After shunning Afghanistan during the Taliban regime, India has become a major donor and new friend to the country’s democratic government — even if its growing presence here riles archrival Pakistan.

From wells and toilets to power plants and satellite transmitters, India is seeding Afghanistan with a vast array of projects. The $1.2 billion in pledged assistance includes projects both vital to Afghanistan’s economy, such as a completed road link to Iran’s border, and symbolic of its democratic aspirations, such as the construction of a new parliament building in Kabul. The Indian government is also paying to bring scores of bureaucrats to India, as it cultivates a new generation of Afghan officialdom.

India’s aid has elevated it to Afghanistan’s top tier of donors. In terms of pledged donations through 2013, India now ranks fifth behind the U.S., U.K., Japan and Canada, according to the Afghanistan government. Pakistan doesn’t rank in the top 10.

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Afghanistan is now the second-largest recipient of Indian aid after Bhutan. “We are here for the same reason the U.S. and others are here — to see a stable, democratic, multiethnic Afghanistan,” Indian Ambassador to Afghanistan Jayant Prasad said in an interview.

Such a future for Afghanistan is hardly assured, as the run-up to Thursday’s presidential election shows. On Tuesday, a pair of mortar shells hit near the presidential palace in Kabul while Taliban insurgents attacked polling stations across the country, as part of wave of violence aimed at preventing people from casting ballots in the election.

Despite backing the Taliban in the past, Pakistan doesn’t want to see an anarchic Afghanistan, say Pakistani security analysts.

“Pakistan is doing nothing to thwart the elections in Afghanistan and everything to help Afghanistan stabilize and have a truly representative government,” says Gen. Jehangir Karamat, Pakistan’s former ambassador to the U.S. and a retired army chief.

Yet India’s largess has stirred concern in Pakistan, a country situated between Afghanistan and India that has seen its influence in Afghanistan wane following the collapse of the Taliban regime. At the heart of the tensions is the shared fear that Afghanistan could be used by one to destabilize the other.

“We recognize that Afghanistan needs development assistance from every possible source to address the daunting challenges it is facing. We have no issue with that,” says Pakistani foreign-ministry spokesman Abdul Basit. “What Pakistan is looking for is strict adherence to the principle of noninterference.”

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India is seeding Afghanistan with a vast array of projects such as a completed road link to Iran’s border and the construction of a new parliament building in Kabul. A view of the city, above.

The two countries have sparred repeatedly about each other’s activities in Afghanistan. Indian officials say their Pakistani counterparts have claimed that there are more than the official four Indian consulates in Afghanistan, and that they support an extensive Indian spy network. For years, Pakistan refused to allow overland shipment of fortified wheat biscuits from India to feed two million Afghan schoolchildren. India instead had to ship the biscuits through Iran, driving up costs for the program.

The World Food Program, which administers the shipments, said the Pakistan government gave its approval for overland shipment in 2008 — six years after the first delivery from India. “Why did it take six years … is something that WFP cannot answer,” a spokesman for the aid organization said. “However, we are indeed thankful to the government of Pakistan for allowing transit for the fortified biscuits.”

Mr. Basit, the foreign-ministry spokesman, didn’t respond to a question about the Indian food assistance.

India’s aid has extended well beyond physical infrastructure to the training of accountants and economists. For a nation devastated by decades of war, these soft skills fill a hole, says Noorullah Delawari, Afghanistan’s former central-bank governor and now head of Afghanistan Investment Support Agency, an organization that promotes private enterprise. “The country shut down for 20 years,” he said. “We stopped producing educated people to run our businesses and government offices.”

Some believe there is room for cooperation between India and Pakistan in Afghanistan since both countries share an abiding interest in its stability. “The opportunity is there,” says Gen. Karamat, “if we can get out of the straitjacket of the past.”

-Matthew Rosenberg contributed to this article.

Write to Peter Wonacott at peter.wonacott@wsj.com

Dr. Aafia Siddiqui back in spotlight

August 22, 2009 Leave a comment
by Maria

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She went to MIT and Brandeis, married a Brigham and Women’s physician, made her home in Boston, cared for her children, and raised money for charities. Aafia Siddiqui was a normal woman living a normal American life. Until the FBI called her a terror (Rules Undefined)

Earlier in June, I had posted an article, Rules Undefined, featuring Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, a 38-year-old, Al-Qaeda suspect currently detained in the US. News came yesterday that the government of Pakistan is now seeking lawyers to represent Siddiqui who could face a possible life imprisonment, according to Reuters.

Siddiqui was detained in Afghanistan for plotting casualty attacks at various locations in New York and prosecutors claim that she fired on a team of FBI agents, without any luck, while held in questioning.

Here’s a short excerpt on Dr. Aafia Siddiqui:

Born in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 2, 1972, Aafia Siddiqui moved to Texas in 1990 and after spending a year at the University of Houston, she transferred to MIT, where she was granted a $5,000 grant in her sophomore year to study the effects of Islam on women in Pakistan. Later on after her graduation from MIT, Aafia got married to Mohammed Amjad Khan; a medical student based in Boston. She continued to pursue further education at Brandeis University, where she completed her Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience. The couple returned to Pakistan in 2002 and decided to part ways, as tensions grew between the two. Aafia returned to the United States during the same year in hopes of securing a job in Baltimore, where her sister was working, but returned back to Pakistan, as her three children were still staying with her mother in Karachi.

Aafia, along with her three children (seven, five and six months old) vanished in the Spring of 2003, when she had left for the train station to travel to Islamabad.

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In 2008, mental health professionals concluded,

Ms. Siddiqui is not currently competent to proceed as a result of her mental disease, which renders her unable to understand the nature and consequences of the proceedings against her or to assist properly in her defense

However, Siddiqui was recently deemed fit to stand trial, as prosecution witnesses criticized her for inflating her mental disorder, despite defense lawyers arguing on her delusional disorder. A hearing will take place within a few weeks to determine Siddiqui’s representation in court, as ordered by U.S. District Judge Richard Berman.

In her response, Siddiqui wrote a two-page letter to the judge:

I really am innocent of the charges stated against me and I was in prison before that too and tortured badly to make me state what they wanted me to — and my children

It is uncertain what will come out of the trial and it’s equally uncertain whether Dr. Aafia is in fact an Al-Qaeda suspect. However, it is worth noting how similar Al-Qaeda suspects end up like Siddiqui,

“It is worth noting that upon their entrance to Afghanistan, the U.S. did not even arrest Al Qaeda suspects themselves. Instead, they offered ransoms for these suspects, leading factional leaders such as Abdul Rashid Dostum to round up political enemies and hand them over to the US. The US had no means of determining the guilt of these suspects, as there were almost no speakers of Pashto, Dari, or Uzbek” (Thomas Murphy, Gender Across Borders).

While the Al-Qaeda leaders are free, others like Siddiqui are paying their ransom, bringing to light a very interesting angle within the Al-Qaeda operations. These fundamentalists continuously target young children and adults, brainwash them in becoming suicide bombers, however it is unheard of an Al-Qaeda leader to be a frontrunner. The leaders are always the underdogs.

Al-Qaeda’s power rests with adolescents who are forcefully deprived of education and thus lured into warfare.

Education, should be the weapon to be used against the Talibans.

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Jinnah & Patel fireworks as BJP self-destructs

August 22, 2009 Leave a comment

by: RupeeNews

Jaswanth Singh eulogized Mohammad Ali Jinnah in his current book. The Bharati media weaned on the milk of "Jinnnah hatred" don't have a clue about one of the greatest political leaders of South AsiaJaswanth Singh eulogized Mohammad Ali Jinnah in his current book. The Bharati media weaned on the milk of “Jinnnah hatred” don’t have a clue about one of the greatest political leaders of South Asia

The electoral loss in the last elections has had a serious impact on the the functioning of the Hinduist party run by Mahasaba extremists of the Rai, Sarawak, Haldi Ram variety who have not lost any opportunity to malign and murder Muslims, Christians and Dalits. The spiritual fountainhead of the BJP was the RSS. It was an RSS Hindu extremist who killed Mohandas Gandhi. The BJP hates Mohandas Gandhi and hate the Indian National Congress leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru. Sardar Patel was a hawk in the Congress and was supported by the Hindu Mahasabah who supported his policy action in Hyderabad and his bullying of the other smaller states like Junagarh and Manvadar hat had joined Paksitan.

Ironically is was Sardar Patel who actually banned the RSS for its terror activities against the Congress and its spiritual leader Mohandas Gandhi. It the RSS banning that may have encouraged Mr. Jaswanth Singh to speak up against the leader of the Congress.

Mr. Singh may have miscalculated. Sardar Patel is still the spiritual Godfather of the RSS and an icon of one of the stalwarts of the BJP–Mr. Narendar Modi.

NEW DELHI: Expelled BJP leader Jaswant Singh targetted L K Advani on his return to Delhi on Thursday, accusing the latter of not returning the

favour done by him when the former deputy PM had been embroiled in the “Jinnah-was-secular” controversy.

Jaswant denied he had accepted the BJP resolution setting out its position on the Muslim League leader. Asked about his role when the Advani controversy broke out, he said, “I never subscribed to the June 10, 2005, resolution of the party. Even then I had stood by Advani and against the treatment meted out to Lalji. I stood up for Advani’s right to say what he did.”

Asked whether he felt Advani had “failed to return the favour” and defend him at the meeting of the parliamentary board in Shimla, Jaswant told reporters, “My grandfather had told me never remember a favour you have done and never forget a favour done to you.” The leader sounded somewhat downcast as perhaps the event began to sink in.

But Jaswant also attacked RSS, while replying to questions and retorted to BJP’s allegation that he had gone against the core belief of the party. “I don’t know which part of the core belief I have demolished. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel was a tall Congress leader who banned the RSS. What is the belief which I have disturbed,” he said. He added that the party had not clarified which of the eight references to Sardar Patel in his book it had objections to.

The mood in BJP seems to be set against the leader with party members saying that the Jinnah episode had gone on far too long. They said the book and his remarks, along with a rash of dissidence, needed to be tackled firmly and a message was required.

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Some did feel that he should have been first suspended and others also argued that sacking Jaswant over the phone was distasteful. Perhaps the leader could have been called to meet senior party leaders. But from the manner in which he was asked to go, there did not seem to be many sympathisers. It was also felt that if he pressed on with his martyr act, it might prove counter-productive.

Jaswant said he had written about Jinnah’s intractability and constant changing of positions that contributed to Partition. “Certainly Congress leaders were responsible as were the British,” he said. But his explanations seem to have come too late as the BJP’s door are firmly shut.

On its part, BJP on Thursday fielded senior party leader Arun Jaitley in Shimla to justify the party’s decision to sack Jaswant. Jaitley said the party would ordinarily have no objections to any intellectual exercise by a party functionary as long as it did not violate the core beliefs of the party.

“The issue is not your right to author a book but the issue is what you say and what you write. The basic issue that remains is content of the book. No political party can allow any member, a frontline leader, to express views that go against the core ideology of the party,” he said.

Jaswant, however, failed to see enough reason in that argument and said, “I am not going to argue with a lawyer’s contention.”

In Shimla, Jaitley sought to make a distinction between Jaswant’s views on Jinnah and what was said by Advani in 2005 during his visit to Pakistan. “There is a basic difference between what the two leaders have said. What Advani said was a tactical reference to Jinnah’s speech in Pakistan’s constituent assembly to tell the people of Pakistan what situation they have come to. But to say that Jinnah was demonised in India, that Indian Muslims feel like aliens and to denigrate Sardar Patel goes against the national consensus and party’s core beliefs,” Jaitley said. Advani failed to return favour: Jaswant TNN 21 August 2009, 07:26am IST

Mr. Jaswant Singh is disappointed with Mr. L.K. Adhvani for dumping him for similar violation of the BJP code of conduct–eulogy of the Quaid e Azam. However the reason why Jawant got the axe seems to his criticism of Sardar Patel.

Some greatest mass murderers

August 21, 2009 Leave a comment

by Daily.Pk

Sever Plocker in his December 21, 2006 column in Israeli daily, titled Stalin’s Jews, wrote: “We mustn’t forget that some of the greatest murderers of modern times were Jewish”.

I think he was being modest in his statement. Though he mentioned Lenin, Stalin, Genrikh Yagoda, Yezhov, Leonid Reichman, Trotsky, etc. – but he missed many others on the world scene. According to 1934 statistics, 38.5% of all top homicidal staff and beautiful women looking after Stalin’s sexual needs – were Jewish. Some historians estmate that close to 100 million Christians were slaughtered by the Jewish dominated communist regime in Russia and Ukraine – excluding two million Muslims murdered.

Anthony Sutton in his book ‘Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler’ claims that Adolf Hitler was a Jewish operative. Hitler also had 150,000 Jewish soldiers in the Nazi Army. Both of Hitler’s girlfriends (Stefanie Isak and Eva Braun) were Jewish.

Former US President Eisenhower, son of a Swedish Jewish parents, was responsible for the death of 1.7 million Germans Christians after the end of WW II. Peter Worthington, a reputed Canadian reporter – wrote in his column for the Ottawa Sun (September 12, 1989): “It’s hard to escape the conclusion that Dwight Eisenhower was a war criminal of epic proportion. His DEF policy killed more Germans in peace than killed in the European Theatre..”

All prime ministers of Israel could be classified as mass murderers – but Ariel Sharon would come out with flying colors. He is known as ‘Butcher of Sabra and Shatila’ refugee camps in Beirut on September 16, 1982 – for the murder of 3,000-3,500 innocent people.

The founder of the secularist-regime in Turkey’, Gen. Mustafa Kemal Pasha, also had Jewish roots. He was responsible for the death of hundreds of thousands of Turks especially the religious ones. He outlawed Islam in Turkey, which has 99.7% Muslim population.

David Swanson has compiled a list of 50 Top US War Criminals. He has listed only those Americans who have committed war crimes after September 11, 2001. The names read like, Henry Kissinger, Jack Landman Goldsmith, Nicholas E. Calio, Michael Mukasey. Karen Hughes, Paul Bremmer, David Addington, George Tenet aka David Cohen, Paul Wolfowitz, Doug Feith, Elliot Abram, Lewis Libby, John Bolton, Michael Chertoff, Jonathan Fredman, Gen. Tommy Franks – and of course Jewish Lobby’s favourites, such as Bush, Cheney, Condoleeza Rice, Rumsfeld, and Gen. Colin Powell.

Bloggers to Start GO America Go Campaign

August 21, 2009 Leave a comment

A newly formed blogger network of Pakistani Bloggers namely Union of Patriotic Bloggers for Sovereign Pakistan (UPBSP) has startedGo America Go campaign which aims at confining US to its diplomatic role guaranteed under the international law. The other aim of the campaign is to compel Pakistani rulers to act as sovereign Pakistan dreamed by Alama Muhammad Iqbal and hundreds of thousands of Muslims who had given sacrifices with the hope that their next generation will live in a sovereign and independent Muslim State.

It is impetrative to mention some of the criminal activities of world Terrorist No-1 and rogue state, United State of America.

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The top most and recent of which  is the notorious act of recognizing Balochistan as an independent state by assigning a separate checklist to Balochistan against the “Country of citizenship” column of Immigration Form for non US national. This is the infamous effort of changing the dream of Free Baluchistan explained in Blood Border into reality as also pointed out by Awab Alvi.

Ahmed Qureshi’s website provides much stuff about the Blackwater’s activities in Peshawar. The construction of US Castle in Islamabad and suspicious activities of US marines near the brigade headquarters of Pakistan’s Special Operation Task Force (SOTF) in Turbilla are well exposed by Saleem Shehzad in Asia times online.

We have no objection if US embassy in Islamabad and its consulates in Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar work in the frame work of International Law. However, unlawful activities in the name of the so-called war on terror and expanding relationships are unacceptable and will be resisted through peaceful struggle which may also culminate in the end of the present regime.

We also urge the present government to act as the real government and not as agent of US. We

assure that the patriotic youth will stand by our government and army if they resisted to the US expansionistic designs.

The schedule for rallies and demonstrations will be announced shortly.

Any Pakistani Blogger can join the network by simply showing his consent through email at upbspakistan@gmail.com

Please send your resentments under subject “Go America Go” at the following address.

Richard Snelsire

Press Attaché and Country Information Officer

E-mail Inquiries

infoisb@state.gov

PAF starts drone production

August 21, 2009 Leave a comment

Pak Air Force has formally started the production of pilotless drone planes in collaboration with an Italian company, a news channel reported Thursday.

PAKISTAN AIR FORCE F-16According to details issued by the PAF, the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex Kamra has commenced producing the pilotless planes Falco UAV in collaboration with Selex Galileo of Italy. Aeronautical Complex chief Air Marshal Farhat Hussain said pilotless Falco UAV highly important for the country’s defence, adding the production of the planes will greatly add to the professional capabilities of PAF.

Farhat said Pakistan is now a member of the club of countries manufacturing drone planes. The system will be used mainly for aerial reconnaissance and information gathering, although the PAF will later also induct UAVs equipped with weapon systems to carry out offensive operations.

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Air force has started commencement of Falco UAV Co-Production Project.

The commencement of Falco UAV Co-Production Project was inaugurated at Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) Kamra on Thursday at a simple ceremony.

Air Marshal Farhat Hussain Khan, Chairman PAC Board was the chief guest at the occasion.

Falco is an advanced tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) designed by Selex Galileo, Italy and will be co-produced by Pakistan Aeronautical Complex, Kamra. Falco UAV would address the present and future surveillance and reconnaissance needs of Pakistan Air Force.

Speaking on the occasion, Air Marshal Farhat Hussain said that the addition of UAV co-production facility would be a major step towards the long-term goal of self reliance in military aviation industry.

He lauded the efforts of engineers and technicians of Pakistan Aeronautical Complex, Kamra who had worked unrelentingly for the last two years to establish the facility. Highlighting the enormity of the task, he said that establishing a UAV facility at Pakistan Aeronautical Complex Kamra was a challenging task requiring dedication beyond expectations. He further said that Falco UAV will be utilized, keeping in view the current regional and global challenges and will greatly enhance the PAF operational capability. Air Marshal Farhat lauded the cooperation of the Italian company involved in the project due to which Pakistan would now become part of an exclusive club of countries who have indigenous capability to manufacture a modern tactical drone.

Earlier, Managing Director Aircraft Manufacturing Factory, Air Vice Marshal Aminullah Khan and Managing Director F6 RF, Air Commodore Nadeem Aslam, presented an appraisal of the project activities. Managing Director AMF also appreciated Air Headquarters and Government Ministries for their unwavering support to the project.

He specifically mentioned the state-of-the-art machines and equipment inducted for the project and said that these technologies are unique in country and represent a quantum leap in the capability of Pakistan Aeronautical Complex in the field of Composites. He also said that induction of this technology has opened anew dimension in the field of aviation manufacturing at PAC and would be utilized for other futuristic requirements of aviation industry. The roll-out of first co produced Falco UAV from Pakistan Aeronautical Complex is scheduled in the near future.

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Report: AF-PAK War And The Battle For Oil

August 20, 2009 Leave a comment

By Brother Nathanael Kapner

PakAlertPress.com Report

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WHEN ANNOUNCING HIS NEW AFGHANISTAN AND PAKISTAN POLICY on March 27, 2009, Obama vowed “to disrupt and dismantle” the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan and to “prevent their return to either country in the future.” But who are the Taliban? Any Afghan or Pakistani who resists the US-led occupation.

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Obama takes a huge leap beyond Bush’s Afghanistan policy in naming the issue “Af-Pak” — that is, widening the carnage in Afghanistan into Pakistan by moving US troops and launching deadly drones across the Pashtun-populated border.

Although Zionist Jews and imperialist war hawks applaud Obama for his new “Af-Pak” approach to his unwinnable war, others contend that he should have renamed the imperialist war, “Pak-Af,” to emphasize that from the perspective of US interests, the heart of the problem lies in Pakistan. Why?

Harvard professor of International Affairs, Graham Allison, argues: “We must insure that developments in Afghanistan would not undermine Pakistan’s assistance in eliminating al Qaeda — and that Pakistan’s arsenal of nuclear weapons would not fall into the hands of terrorists such as Osama bin Laden.” (Sorry, Graham – al Qaeda does not exist and Osama bin Laden is dead for over four years.)

The question must be asked: What vital national interest does the US have in the region? Bush stated that America’s goal was “to defend the freedom of the Afghans to raise their children free from fear.”

But after subjecting Afghan children to the mortal “fear” of US bombs being rained on them daily, Bush changed America’s goal in his February 2003 speech to the neocon Jews of the American Enterprise Institute to: “building a nation that could stand as a model of democracy in the Muslim world.” And thus, the Zionist-inspired Bush Doctrine was born.

IRAN & PAKISTAN SIGN PIPE LINE DEAL

IN A SECRET MEETING SEQUESTERED from the Jewish-controlled press, Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad and Pakistani President Ali Zardari signed a pipeline deal on May 24, 2009 during a summit in Tehran in which Afghan President Hamid Karzai participated. The two countries plan to connect their economies via exported Iranian gas flowing to Pakistan daily. Construction of the pipeline is due to start in September 2009.

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Discussions began in 1993 between Pakistan and Iran for the pipeline which Iran later proposed extending into India. Dubbed the “peace pipeline,” the Iran–Pakistan–India pipeline (IPI) would traverse from Iran’s gas fields through the Pakistani city of Khuzdar. By expanding into India, Pakistan would amass huge transit fees.

The Zionist-controlled West sees the deal as having adverse implications for their global petropolicy. For Moscow, the Zionist West’s nemesis, is eager to join the Iran-Pakistan project in a dominant role. Gazprom is offering to act both as the construction contractor and as the pipeline operator after its completion.

While for Zionist-controlled America the IPI pipeline is an anathema, for Russia it is an opportunity. Moscow has been concerned that Iranian gas might compete with Russian exports on the European market. A constituency within the European Union that seeks to lessen its dependence on Russia has been advocating the construction of the Nabucco pipeline to pump Caspian Sea gas to Europe which would bypass Russia.

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It is therefore in Russia’s interest to derail the Nabucco Project by diverting Iran’s gas away from Europe and locking it through IPI to the Asian market which for Russia is secondary (80% of Gazprom’s export profits come from the Western European market). To this end, Gazprom is keen to participate in the Iran-Pakistan pipeline project. View Entire Story Here, Here & Here.

AMERICA DUPED BY PUTIN

COINING THE TERM “PIPELINEISTAN” to describe the vast network of pipelines in oil-rich Central Asia, the Asia Times sees the Af-Pak conflict “at the core of “Pipelineistan.” As the Asia Times points out: it’s no coincidence that the map of terror in Central Asia is practically interchangeable with the map of oil.

How could Russia, the chief energy-player in Eurasia, not interpret the invasions of Afghanistan and Pakistan as a straightforward war for “Pipelineistan?” For plans to destroy the Taliban for opposing the American pipeline Unocal, was decided long before 9/11.

Obama and his war handlers, (David Rockefeller, Brzezinski, Gates, Jones), are scrambling to find “pipeline” alternatives besides the stalled Nabucco Project. Here are the options:

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Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India Pipeline – TAPI would carry natural gas from Turkmenistan via Kandahar in Afghanistan to central Pakistan and on to India. Purpose – to usurp Russia’s energy hold on Europe by diverting Iran’s energy for European consumption. Still in its planning stages, Af-Pak instability and Russia’s bagging of Turkmenistan energy undermine the pipeline’s viability.

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Albanian Macedonian Bulgarian Oil Corporation Pipeline – AMBO would bring oil from the Caspian basin (mainly Azerbaijan) through Georgia, Bulgaria, then through so-named ‘Macedonia’ and finally to Albania. Purpose – to usurp Russia’s energy hold on Europe. The US-funded AMBO has been held up since 1994 as high financial losses and regional conflicts undermine the pipeline’s viability.

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Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline – BTCP would bring oil from the Caspian coast of Baku in Azerbaijan to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, through Georgia and then Turkey. Purpose – to usurp Russia’s energy hold on Europe. Sabotage by Turkish militants and the Georgian debacle undermine the pipeline’s viability.

WHEN NATO RESUMED HIGH LEVEL CONTACTS with Russia in early March this year, US Secretary of State Clinton stated before NATO officials that the US intends “to cooperate with Russia” on Afghanistan. During the same ceremony, however, Dmitri Rogozin, Russia’s envoy to NATO, stated confidently how Russia after the crisis in Georgia “negotiates from a position of strength.”

While applauding the re-opening of the Kyrgyzstan Manas Airbase for US transits into Afghanistan, little did the Zionist West know that it was Putin who convinced the Kyrgyz Republic to expel the US from the base in February of 2009 and then bring them back again. At the same time, Putin offered transit rights to the US through Russian airspace. What’s the upshot? Putin makes the continuation of the Afghan mission dependent on his good will.

Beginning in 2007, and crystallizing after Obama took office, Putin has cancelled Afghanistan’s Soviet-era debt and has pursued diplomatic exchanges with Kabul. Recently, an Afghan delegation was invited to Russia to develop a “strategic dialogue between Moscow and Kabul.” In other words, Putin is posturing Russia to have a strong influence over Afghanistan’s domestic politics in the post-election scenario. View Entire Story Here.

Thus, the Zionist West will soon be moaning over the terms of Russia’s “cooperation” which suggest nothing less than that the US is being duped…

Zionist Neocon Plans for Pakistan and rest of the World

Codename: Operation Enduring Turmoil – Pakistan

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Click to enlarge

Overall PNAC plan – The New World Order

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India Destabilizing Pakistan

August 20, 2009 Leave a comment

By: Daily.Pk

In the summit of Non Aligned Movement (NAM) in Sharm el-Sheikh Pakistan has mentioned the issue of Baluchistan, where India is encouraging militancy and separatism. Neither it is the first case of Indian interference nor the first time that Pakistani government showed its displeasure. India has a long history of interfere in the neighbouring countries to destabilize them. It is continuing its malicious activities in Pakistan for the last sixty years.

For this purpose RAW is its basic instrument. RAW was established with the purpose of creating internal disturbances in other countries. Pakistan remains RAW’s primary concern. It runs thousands of agents and spends millions of rupees in its operations against Pakistan. Propaganda, espionage, and subversion are the three-pronged attack against Pakistan by RAW in an attempt to destabilize it.

The US attack over Afghanistan in 2001 provided a big opportunity to RAW to accomplish its goal of destabilizing Pakistan. Since 9/11, Indian influence has increased tremendously. Raw has established consulates and trade missions along the Pak-Afghan border to destabilize Baluchistan and North West Frontier Province (NWFP). Several agents of RAW captured in FATA, Waziristan and other southern eastern areas provided that Indians had managed to penetrate deeply in collaboration with Indian allies in the region. An Indian senior official named as Malkit Chand supposedly working as third secretary of education & director of Indian cultural centre is found engaged in human trafficking of Pakistani Baloch students from Afghanistan to India for their special training. Balochi students particularly the children of Baloch nomads are being offered a sum of about us$200-300 per month when they are inducted to proceed to India. Chandra Mohan Mishra a third secretary at Indian embassy in Kabul and a person named J. Baby working as an attaché (technical) had held several meetings with Baloch militants during mid-2008.  These Indian intelligence officials are also engaged in financing Pakistani youths and sending them from tribal areas to several other central Asian states.

India had invested over a billion dollars in Afghanistan so that it could build a base of operations against Pakistan. More than 10,000 Indian troops were stationed in Afghanistan under the garb of supervising the construction of Jalalabad- Chahbahar road project which was completed. Many mercantile shops run by Indians have an intelligence officer in the rear. RAW is providing them money, training, sophisticated weapons and satellite communication system. According to sources Indian intelligence officials working in the disguise of diplomats in embassy and consulates in Afghanistan have set up a vast covert operation network to destabilize FATA, northern areas and Baluchistan engaging dozens of Afghan, Indians, the drug dealers and the Afghan warlords.

In case of Baluchistan Indian role is not new. It is as old as the revolt itself. India is repeating the history and trying to separate Baluchistan just like East Pakistan. The Indian government claimed that India has its hands clean on the issue of Baluchistan and that it is practicing the principle of non-interference in other’s internal matters.  Then how can India justify proofs of Indian involvement in Swat and Waziristan and Baluchistan?

Pakistan has stockpiles of evidence against Indian consulates in Afghanistan that are being used to fund terrorism in Pakistan through Baitullah Mehsud’s TTP as well as Brahamdagh Bugti and his Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA). According to Pakistan’s leading newspaper Dawn a dossier containing proof of Indian involvement in “subversive activities” in Pakistan was handed over by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh during their meeting at Sharm-el-Sheikh. The broad outlines of the dossier available with Dawn reveal details of Indian contacts with those involved in attacks on the Sri Lankan cricket team and the Manawan police station. According to the paper “Operatives of RAW who remained in touch with the perpetrators of the attacks have been identified and proof of their interaction have been attached”. A description of the Indian arms and explosives used in the attack on the Sri Lankan team has been made part of the dossier, besides which the name and particulars of the perpetrators, who illegally entered Pakistan from India and joined their accomplices who had reached Lahore from Waziristan, have been mentioned in the dossier. It also said to list the safe houses being run by RAW in Afghanistan where terrorists are trained and launched for missions in Pakistan.

A substantial part of the shared material deals with the Baluchistan insurgency and Indian linkages with the insurgents, particularly Brahamdagh Bugti, Burhan and Sher Khan. Photographs of their meetings with Indian operatives are part of the evidence, which also describes Bugti’s visit to India and the meetings he had with Indian secret service personnel. The dossier mentions an India-funded training camp at Kandahar where Baloch insurgents particularly from Bugti clan were being trained and provided arms and ammunition for sabotage activities in the Pakistani province. Similarly, Talal Bugti said that 300 Baloch nationalists are getting training at RAW’s training center in Afghanistan. The Baluchistan Chief Minister said that RAW was running terrorist training camps in Iran and Afghanistan. It has now set up 30 to 40 such camps in Baluchistan, each with training facility for 30 people who are paid 10,000 monthly.

Christine Fair of RAND Corporation also unearthed some facts about the Indian consulates in Afghanistan and Iran. She said, “I think it would be a mistake to completely disregard Pakistan’s regional perceptions due to doubts about Indian competence in executing covert operations. That misses the point entirely. And I think it’s unfair to dismiss the notion that Pakistan’s apprehensions about Afghanistan stem in part from its security competition with India. Having visited the Indian mission in Zahedan, Iran, I can assure you that they are not issuing Visas as the main activity! Moreover, India has run operations from its missions in Mazar and is like doing so from the other consulates it has reopened in Jalalabad and Qandahar along the border. Indian officials have told me privately that they are pumping money into Baluchistan”.  Similarly, the leading Newspaper of Sri Lanka, Daily Mirror, in its editorial has criticized the role of Indian intelligence agency RAW. It said, among its (RAW’s) most ambitious operations that are currently underway, is the move to separate Baluchistan province from Pakistan by supporting (the) Baluchistan Liberation Army”.

Afghan officials have also confirmed that India is using Afghanistan to stir trouble in Pakistan. On 2 April 2009 Afghan Government’s Advisor, Ehsanullah Aryanzai told, “India is using Afghan soil to destabilize Pakistan and Afghan security agencies are unable to stop Indian intervention due to absence of centralized government mechanism”. Indian spy outfits are using the Afghan provinces of Helmand and Kandahar to target Baluchistan. As much as eight foreign spy agencies are cramming this Pakistani territory.

The Foreign Policy magazine recently confirmed that India is supporting the TTP in Pakistan. According to the magazine, “The Indians are up to their necks in supporting the Taliban against the Pakistani government in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The same anti-Pakistani forces in Afghanistan also shooting at American soldiers are getting support from India. India should close its diplomatic establishments in Afghanistan and get the Christ out of there”.

India should stop its malicious designs against Pakistan and answer the world about the proofs given by Pakistani government regarding Indian involvement in Swat, Waziristan and Baluchistan. India is playing a double-game; on the one hand it is sponsoring terrorism in Pakistan and on the other blaming the later for all the terrorist activities on Indian soil. Similarly, India’s decision of linking the dialogue process with Mumbai attacks is quite absurd. The process is not only in favour of Pakistan but it is also in Indian interest to resolve its issues with Pakistan, which otherwise have the potential to bring the both nuclear countries at the brink of war. In the circumstances where India is fueling insurgencies, igniting minority issues and stealing Pakistan’s water, Pakistan is showing so much generosity to it by welcoming the dialogue process. As a peace loving country, Pakistan wants political solution to all problems. So, there is a need that India must stop sponsoring terrorism from Afghan soil to Pakistan and resume the peace process if it really wants to show the world that it is against terrorism. Written by: Mamoona Ali Kazmi

Why China will attack India

August 20, 2009 Leave a comment

By: Daily.Pk

China will launch an attack on India before 2012.

There are multiple reasons for a desperate Beijing to teach India the final lesson, thereby ensuring Chinese supremacy in Asia in this century. The recession that shut the Chinese exports shop is creating an unprecedented internal social unrest. In turn, the vice-like grip of the communists over the society stands severely threatened.

Unemployment is on the rise. The unofficial estimate stands at a whopping fourteen percent. Worldwide recession has put thirty million people out of jobs. Economic slowdown is depleting the foreign exchange reserves. Foreign investors are slowly shifting out. To create a domestic market, the massive dole of loans to individuals is turning out to be a nightmare. There appears to be a flight of capital in billions of dollars in the shape of diamond and gold bought in Hong Kong and shipped out towards end 2008.

bharat-vermaThe fear of losing control over the Chinese masses is forcing the communists to compulsorily install filtering software on new computers on sale to crush dissent on the Internet, even though it is impossible to censor in entirety the flow of information as witnessed recently in Tibet, Xinjiang and Iran.

The growing internal unrest is making Beijing jittery.

The external picture appears to be equally dismal. The unfolding Obama strategy seems to be scoring goals for democracy and freedom without firing a single shot. While Bush unwittingly united and arrayed against himself Islamic countries and radical Islam worldwide, Obama has put radical Islam in disarray by lowering the intra-societal temperature vis-à-vis America and the Muslim world. He deftly hints at democracy in his talk without directly threatening any group or country and the youth picks it up from there – as in Iran. With more and more Chinese citizens beginning to demand political freedom, the future of the communists is also becoming uncertain. The technological means available in the 21st century to spread democracy is definitely not conducive for the totalitarian regime in Beijing.

India’s chaotic but successful democracy is an eyesore for the authoritarian regime in Beijing. Unlike India, China is handicapped as it lacks the soft power – an essential ingredient to spread influence. This further adds fuel to the fire.

mapIn addition, the growing irrelevance of Pakistan, their right hand that operates against India on their behest, is increasing the Chinese nervousness. Obama’s AF-PAK policy is primarily a PAK-AF policy. It has intelligently set the thief to catch the thief. The stated withdrawal from Iraq by America now allows it to concentrate its military surplus on the single front to successfully execute the mission. This surplus, in combination with other democratic forces, enables America to look deep into resource rich Central Asia, besides containing China’s expansionist ambitions.

To offset this adverse scenario, while overtly pretending to side with the West, the Chinese covertly ordered their other proxy, North Korea, to test underground nuclear explosions and carry out trials of missiles that threaten Japan and South Korea. The Chinese anxiety is understandable. Under Bush’s declared policy of being ‘a strategic competitor’ alongside the ‘axis of evil’, they shared a large strategic maneuverability with others of similar hues. However, Obama policies wisely deny such a luxury by reclaiming more and more international strategic space ceded by the previous administration.

highlight-1The communists in China, therefore, need a military victory to unite the disillusioned citizenry behind them. This will assist in marketing the psychological perception that the 21st century belongs to China and assert their deep belief in the superiority of the Chinese race. To retain the communist party’s hold on power, it is essential to divert attention from the brewing internal dissent. In an autocratic system normally the only recipe to unite the citizenry is by mannpulating their nationalistic feelings. The easy method for Beijing to heighten the feeling of patriotism and forging national unity is to design a war with an adversary. They believe that this will help them to midwife the Chinese century. That is the end game rooted in the abiding conviction of the communists that the Chinese race is far superior to Nazi Germany and is destined to “Lord over the Earth”.

At present, there is no overall cost benefit ratio in integrating Taiwan by force with the mainland, since under the new dispensation in Taipei, the island is ‘behaving’ itself. Also, the American presence around the region is too strong for comfort. There is also the factor of Japan to be reckoned. Though Beijing is increasing its naval presence in the South China Sea to coerce into submission those opposing its claim on the Sprately Islands, at this point of time in history it will be unwise for recession-hit China to move against the Western interests, including Japan. Therefore, the most attractive option is to attack a soft target like India and forcibly occupy its territory in the Northeast.

Ideally, the Chinese believe that the east-wind should prevail over the west-wind. However, despite their imperial calculations of the past, they lag behind the West, particularly America, by many decades. Hence, they want the east-wind to at least prevail over the other east-wind, i.e., India, to ensure their dominance over Asia. Beijing’s cleverly raising the hackles on its fabricated dispute in Arunachal Pradesh to an alarming level, is the preparatory groundwork for imposing such a conflict on India. A sinking Pakistan will team up with China to teach India “the final lesson”.

The Chinese leadership wants to rally its population behind the communist rule. As it is, Beijing is already rattled, with its proxy Pakistan, now literally embroiled in a civil war, losing its sheen against India. Above all, it is worried over the growing alliance of India with the United States and the West, because the alliance has the potential to create a technologically superior counterpoise.

All these three concerns of the Chinese communists are best addressed by waging a war against pacifist India to achieve multiple strategic objectives. But India, otherwise the biggest challenge to the supremacy of China in Asia, is least prepared on ground to face the Chinese threat.

How will India repel the Chinese game plan? Will Indian leadership be able to take the heat of war? Have they laid the groundwork adequately to defend India? Is the Indian military equipped to face the two-front war by Beijing and Islamabad? Is the Indian Civil Administration geared to meet the internal security challenges that the external actors will sponsor simultaneously through their doctrine of unrestricted warfare?

The answers is an unequivocal ‘NO’. Pacifist India is not ready by a long shot either on the internal or the external front.

It is said that long time back, a king with an excellent military machine at his disposal could not stomach the violence involved in winning wars. So he renounced war in victory. This led to the rise of the pacifist philosophies. The state either refused to defend itself or neglected the instruments that could defend it.

Any ‘extreme’ is dangerous, as it tends to create imbalance in statecraft.

highlight-2We saw that in the unjust unilateral aggression in Iraq. It diminished the American aura and recessed the economy. China’s despotic regime is another extreme, scared to permit political dissent. This will fuel an explosion worse than the Tiananmen Square. Despite the use of disproportionate force and the demographic invasion of Tibet, Beijing’s hold remains tenuous. Pakistan’s over-aggressive agenda in the name of jihad haunts it now to the point of fragmentation of the State.

Similarly, India’s pacifism is the other extreme. 26/11s will occur on a regular basis as it infects policy-making. Such extreme postures on either side invariably generate wars. Armed with an aggressive Wahabi philosophy, Pakistan, in cohort with China, wants to destabilize a pacifist India. India’s instruments of state steeped in pacifism are unable to rise to its defence.

In the past sixty years, the deep-rooted pacifism contributed to the Civil Administration, ceding control of forty per cent of the Union’s territory to the Maoists and ten percent to the insurgents, effecting a shrinking influence internally, as well in the ‘near abroad’.

India must rapidly shift out from its defeatist posture of pacifism to deter China. New Delhi’s stance should modify, not to aggression, but to a firm assertion in statecraft. The state must also exclusively retain the capability of intervention by use of force internally as well as externally. If it permits the non-state actors to develop this capability in competition, then the state will whither away. On the contrary, the state machinery should ensure a fast-paced development in the Red Corridor even it if has to hold Maoists hostage at gunpoint. The state’s firm and just intervention will dissolve the Maoist movement.

Keeping in view the imminent threat posed by China, the quickest way to swing out of pacifism to a state of assertion is by injecting military thinking in the Civil Administration to build the sinews. That will enormously increase the deliverables on ground – from Lalgarh to Tawang.

Illusion of “China’s Attack on India Before 2012″

Chinese Response, By Chen Xiaochen

The 2000 km border between China and India has been a notable absence from press headlines in the years since then-Indian PM Vajpayee’s 2003 visit to Beijing. Tensions, however, have risen again as India announced last month a plan to deploy two additional army divisions and two air force squadrons of Su-30 Fighter Unit, some 60,000 soldiers in total, in a disputed border area in the southern part of Tibet, which India claims as its state of Arunachal Pradesh.

Adding fuel to the flames is an article by Bharat Verma, editor of Indian Defense Review, predicting that China will attack India before 2012, leaving only three years to Indian government for preparation.

highlight-3According to Mr. Verma, “growing unrest in China” due in part to economic downturn will leave the Chinese government looking for something to “divert the attention of its own people from ‘unprecedented’ internal dissent, growing unemployment and financial problems.” China will also want to strike India before the latter becomes powerful, which is the reason for the 2012 “deadline.” India, with its growing affiliation with the West, is yet weak under China’s fire.

But a “China’s attack” is not going to happen, and one wonders at the basis for Mr. Verma’s thinking. First, although it is true that China’s macro-economy has taken a hit from the global financial crisis, the extent of the damage is under control. Recent statistics shows China’s economy grew 7.1% in the first half of 2009, while its foreign exchange reserve has exceeded $2 trillion. China’s stimulus plan has been effective and given people confidence. China will survive the global downturn as well or better than the rest of the world’s economies.

And even if China’s economy was really all that bad, would the government try to distract “unrest” by taking military actions against India? Mr Verma’s reasoning rests on a lack of documentation. Looking into the past 60 years, China has no record of launching a war to divert public attention from anything. Moreover, while Mr. Verma supposes the Chinese Communist Party has no cards to play other than “invading India,” the Party, widely experienced in dealing with domestic disputes, will hardly in only three years have run out of all options facing potential social instability. Moreover, even if Chinese leaders considered such an option, they would certainly be aware that an external war would severely jeopardize domestic affairs.

Other reasons the author mentions in the article are also vague. The Western powers would not take kindly to a Chinese conflict with India, leaving China rightfully reluctant to use force in any case other than extreme provocation. US forces well deployed in Afghanistan and Pakistan could check any China’s military action in South Asia. And then there is also the nuclear problem: there has never been a war between two nuclear equipped nations, and both sides would have to be extremely cautious in decision-making, giving more room for less violent solutions.

Further, it is important to realize there is no reason for China to launch a war, against India in particular. Economic development, rather than military achievement, has long been the consensus of value among China’s core leaders and citizens. Despite occasional calls to “Reoccupy South Tibet (occupied Chinese territory),” China’s decision-making is always cautious. It is not possible to see a Chinese “incursion” into India, even into Tawang, an Indian-occupied Buddhist holy land over which China argues a resolute sovereignty.

Last but not least, China’s strategy, even during the 1962 border war with India, has been mainly oriented towards the east, where Taiwan is its core interest, while the recent Xinjiang unrest highlights China’s growing anti-terrorist tasks in the northwest – both issues are more important than the southwest border. If China were to be involved in a war within the next three years, as unlikely as that seems, the adversary would hardly be India. The best option, the sole option, open for the Chinese government is to negotiate around the disputed territory.

However, there is one     scenario where there is possibility for war: an aggressive Indian policy toward China, a “New Forward Policy,” may aggravate border disputes and push China to use force – despite China’s appeal, as far as possible, for peaceful solutions.

Consider the 1959-1962 conflict, the only recorded war between China and India in the long history of their civilizations. After some slight friction with China in 1959, the Indian army implemented aggressive action known as its Forward Policy. The Chinese Army made a limited but successful counterattack in 1962.

Now, it seems “back to the future”. Mr. Verma asserts another war will happen before 2012, a half century after the last, regrettable one. India has started to deploy more troops in the border area, similar to its Forward Policy 50 years ago. Is Mr. Verma’s China-bashing merely a justification for more troops deployed along the border? Will India’s “New Forward Policy”, as the old one did 50 years ago, trigger a “2012 war?”

The answers lie mainly on the Indian side. Given China’s relatively small military garrison in Tibet, Indian’s 60,000 additional soldiers may largely break the balance. If India is as “pacific” as Mr. Verma says, and is sincere in its border negotiation, China-India friendship will remain. After all, China shares a long and mostly friendly cultural exchange with India as well as other neighbors. Now China is seeking deeper cooperation, wider coordination, and better consensus with India, especially in the global recession, and peace is a precondition for doing so. China wants to say, “We are on the same side,” as the Indian Ambassador did in a recent interview in China. Thus, “China will attack India before 2012″ is a provocative and inflammatory illusion.

US plan risks sparking war in the region: Chavez

August 20, 2009 Leave a comment

Colombian deal will not create bases’

Thursday, August 20, 2009
WASHINGTON: A new US-Colombia security pact that has angered some South American nations is aimed at fighting drug trafficking and terrorism and will not create US bases in the Andean nation, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday.

The proposal to allow US forces to use up to seven Colombian military installations has fuelled tensions in the Andes, where Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and his leftist allies oppose US influence. But Clinton sought to ensure critics like Chavez that the United States did not have ulterior motives with the bases.

“The agreement does not create US bases in Colombia,” Clinton said in a news conference with Colombian Foreign Minister Jaime Bermudez. “The United States does not have and does not seek bases inside Colombia.”

A senior State Department official said the plan combines a number of existing cooperation agreements relating to counter-narcotics, defence and security. Colombia, the world’s top cocaine exporter, has received more than $5 billion in US aid since 2000 to battle drug traffickers and Marxist FARC guerrillas waging Latin America’s oldest insurgency.

Under the new agreement, which was reached on Aug. 14 and is expected to be signed in a few weeks, there will be no” significant” permanent increase in US military presence in Colombia, Clinton said.

Under the current US agreement, US personnel levels in Colombia are capped at 800 military troops and 600 civilian contractors. There are around 268 US military personnel in the country, where US operations focus on providing training and intelligence support for the Colombian armed forces. The US military has key operations in six countries in the Latin American and Caribbean region.

Chavez says the US plan risks sparking war in the region and has vowed to reduce trade with Colombia as a reprisal.

He has said his country needs to be prepared for an attack and plans to beef up Venezuela’s army by buying tanks and other weapons from Russia.

Bermudez defended the bilateral agreement between Colombia and the United States and said it clearly spells out the principles of territorial integrity and non-intervention. Clinton urged critics of the deal to look at it closely.

“I would also ask that …more countries, you know, actually help us, help us in this fight. Don’t just stand on the sidelines, and certainly don’t contribute to the problems by doing and saying things that undermine the efforts that our governments are taking to try to protect the entire region from the scourge of narco-traffickers,” Clinton said.

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