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CHIEF DON'Ts : Talat Hussain

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The new army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, has his work cut out. In the crucial years that lie ahead, his to-do list is long. But this list is also predictable. There is belligerent Delhi, scheming Kabul, badly-inclined Iran and the new face of terrorism, the Islamic State, drawing dispersed groups on our own land.

However, the less-imagined is his don’t list. This list, if prepared dispassionately, can bring greater clarity towards the tasks at hand. In preparing the don’t list, the COAS can learn from his predecessor, General (r) Raheel Sharif. And what he needs to learn essentially is how not to be like him in several key respects.

In the first instance, the new chief has to revive the army’s institutionalised decision and planning mechanism that has been severely damaged by General Raheel’s endless self-projection and self-centeredness. Many unfortunate consequences flowed from this policy. One, everything flowed towards the person of the COAS, and the rest of the institution was marginalised in what represented the entire army in the public sphere. Press releases and tweets in praise of the general’s activities substituted what ought to have been articulation of collective weight and wisdom of senior commanders on serious matters.

It is true that the army is not a parliament of equals: the one who sits at the head carries the maximum authority. But it is not a one-man rule institution either. It cannot be in the modern day and age. The army chief’s personal profile has to reflect the institution’s deliberated and studied policy. The new COAS can bring this side of his office back to life and put a reasonable ceiling on his personal media profile that touched insane heights under his predecessor.

The second consequence of General Raheel’s media-domination strategy was the tendency to commit to irrational goals that were militarily nebulous but did resonate with a public addicted to the mumbo jumbo of quick-fixes. So the big claims went something like this: terrorism has been eliminated; terrorists have been totally neutralised; parts of Fata are close to becoming Switzerland; by December all internally displaced families will be back in their homes; Pakistan’s borders have become totally secure. The list goes on and on.

This excessive embellishment of modest gains created exceptionally embarrassing situations. When in the middle of tall claims spectacular terrorist attacks happened there were no answers to be given only more bluster and more rhetoric. In this year alone, there have been close to 400 violations of Pakistan’s territorial perimeter from the eastern and north-western sides. Three years’ tally sits close 800. Now that is a scary figure but one that underscores the precarious nature of the country’s external environment and demands thoughtful deliberations.

Almost 80,000 families (some 800,000 people) still await return to their homes. This is a grim reality that rains on the pompous parade of achievements. A military commander’s claims must be borne out by facts. The new army chief must bring some realism to posturing on success and resist the temptation of playing to the gallery at the cost of professional credibility.

The third consequence of General Raheel’s media manoeuvre was to create a bubble of political expectations and let a vast group of jackals, hyenas and vultures constantly chase the potential hunt that was the sitting government. There can be many reasons to insist that the Nawaz government doesn’t deserve to be in power and early elections should be considered a serious possibility, but all paths to this change must go through the constitutional door.

On General Raheel’s watch there were any number of events that bordered on conspiracy to oust the sitting government through suspect methods, and his command was seen playing an underhand hand in this trouble by stoking the image of ‘change being imminent’. A countless number of times his name showed up on posters, in campaigns, as a third umpire in protests and in serious conversations across the diplomatic tables about causing the government to collapse and yet not once did he officially disassociate the army or himself from this amazing drama of hopes and dreams.

Generally, the army chief’s office, like all high offices, is exceptionally sensitive to needless controversies. That was exhibited recently when the head of a banned organisation tried to hurl an insane charge against one of the five candidates for the office of army chief but was slapped down so hard that he had to issue a rebuttal in less than 24 hours. This happened because he was told to take back his words and not play dirty politics with a name that could become the army chief. He obliged. He understood the consequences of not obliging.

That’s how neutrality can be ensured, and how effectively an important office can be protected from being used for petty gains by others. General Raheel did not do that. While he never crossed the constitutional line beyond which lies the murky world of coups, he allowed his name to float around scandalously close to the constitutionally alien territory.

There is reason to believe that a veritable army of crystal-ball gazers was nurtured. They vented their venom on screen as information for years, making a complete fool of this nation and pretending to represent the ‘Raheel thinking’. They operated with impunity. They cited ‘defence sources’ freely. They claimed they had been briefed. They had more ‘leaks’ from high security meetings than any hard-working journalist can dream of. They toured Fata. They sat in formal briefings and benefited from informal conversations where news agendas were set. They were never stopped as they marinated their declared goals against a sitting government in General Raheel’s deep praise.

This was accompanied by deliberate myth-building around Gen Raheel as the ‘greatest general’ to have ever walked the face of this country. Every step he took to go to his office was made to sound like a favour to the nation. Every ordinary visitor who complimented him out of courtesy was shown as an endorsement of his exceptional leadership. Every customary medal or an official sash given by the hosts was catapulted to the level of the Victoria Cross. Politicians repeated the hand-written script of greatness because sucking up to the chief of army staff is a long tradition. The media lapped up, or had to lap up, the official line. Others reinforced this image because this made them look ‘so patriotic’. So the folklore spread far and wide.

This was needless. Being the chief of the Pakistan Army is legendary enough. When a nuclear-armed force of under a million is at your disposal, you are very, very important already. You don’t need dubious everymen to become your brand ambassadors. Allowing them to play this role is to deface the office of the army chief. The new army chief needs to cut himself off from this sorry tradition of his name being debated freely in useless political conversations made by frivolous men and women.

And finally the new chief must bring military operations like Zarb-e-Azb out of the temple of mindless worship to the hard planning board of the military directorate (which is where an army chief has to be seen instead of on screen at PR functions). Operation Zarb-e-Azb is an important operation with results but is also a continuation of previous equally important operations with just-as-important results. The sacrifices of men in Zarb-e-Azb stand equal to those who were martyred in the Malakand, Dir, Buner, Bajaur, Mohmand, Kurram, Orakzai and South Waziristan, to name just a few.

Operation Zarb-e-Azb is the endpoint of a decade-long journey the nation has taken along side its forces on a path that is awash with the precious blood of beautiful sons. But like all military operations of the past this one too must be scrutinised and evaluated, and hard decisions taken about its future. This operation in North Waziristan was initially planned to close in two months at a cost of 25 billion rupees. How come it got stretched to two and half years with a 200 billion rupee bill without any closure in sight?

The new chief would do well to take an honest stock of what transpired in the last three years and learn, without malice and ill-will, what not to do now that he occupies this coveted throne of thorns and roses for a full tenure.


The writer is former executive editor of The News and a senior journalist with Geo TV.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/167980-Chief-donts
 
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Can expect this only from geo tv or 2 other media outlets it's really a good thing that RS retired on time otherwise i can imagine to what new low's these sellouts can stoop to. What a brilliant attempt of character assassination of RS shame on this a****e lakh di lanat BC :hitwall:
@Zibago @django @Moonlight @Mentee


yea the media cell and its paid dogs. indeed the merasi ladder has reached to the top for tallat hussain no wonder all the garbage is in geo jang the news.
Just wait the other 2 dogs (Et&Dawn) will soon start barking too.
 
Was expecting such Op-Eds post retirement. But have started coming earlier than expected. Will be interesting to see the role of ISPR in coming years.
 
Damn...was expecting him to be conferred with Field Marshal title! Idar toh pura scene he ulta hai! :frown:
 
What a load of hogwash..........i can't believe i used to like this guy. So what if RS was trying to improve the image of the Military, he was doing things that our PM was supposed to do but NS was too busy defending his corrupt wealth and pleasing his overseas masters.
 
Lol, Dr Shahid Masood said in his last program that after resignation, Raheem Shariff's character assassination will begin by Maryam Nawaz's media cell.

And here we go. Geo news throwing down the initial dice.

Regarding Zarb e Azb in North Waziristan..the main military objective was indeed completed under two months (dislodging TTP and establishing military control on the area).

But you can't do that and come back lol..military needs to hold the ground and let civilian govt do its job of establishing complete state control...but government failed there. But oh well, it's military's fault

Raheel Sharif is regarded in high regard not because of media publicity..but for his leadership and consequential decision making. He took on TTP,Baloch insurgents, AND MQM in Karachi and established peace in Pakistan. Casualties from terrorism declined to their LOWEST in a DECADE under his command. That is why he is seen as the greatest general of Pakistan. His proactive war fighting won us many battles and made Pakistan stand on its feet.

If other generals before him had done that, they would have had same respect.

New COAS can earn even higher respects amongst people by tackling TTP to the end, going after militants in Punjab, and destroying all sectarian terrorist organizations in Punjab and Sindh. Who's stopping him?

But Talat Hussein and Geo would have us believe that Raheel Shareefs popularity was a result of ISPR twitter feed and not his actual achievements. Please, f*ck off.
 
this bozo works for the jang group of crooks and charlatans ....nothing more need be said.....sahulatkar e dehshatgard....
 
What a load of hogwash..........i can't believe i used to like this guy. So what if RS was trying to improve the image of the Military, he was doing things that our PM was supposed to do but NS was too busy defending his corrupt wealth and pleasing his overseas masters.

Lol, Dr Shahid Masood said in his last program that after resignation, Raheem Shariff's character assassination will begin by Maryam Nawaz's media cell.

And here we go. Geo news throwing down the initial dice.

Regarding Zarb e Azb in North Waziristan..the main military objective was indeed completed under two months (dislodging TTP and establishing military control on the area).

But you can't do that and come back lol..military needs to hold the ground and let civilian govt do its job of establishing complete state control...but government failed there. But oh well, it's military's fault

Raheel Sharif is regarded in high regard not because of media publicity..but for his leadership and consequential decision making. He took on TTP,Baloch insurgents, AND MQM in Karachi and established peace in Pakistan. Casualties from terrorism declined to their LOWEST in a DECADE under his command. That is why he is seen as the greatest general of Pakistan. His proactive war fighting won us many battles and made Pakistan stand on its feet.

If other generals before him had done that, they would have had same respect.

New COAS can earn even higher respects amongst people by tackling TTP to the end, going after militants in Punjab, and destroying all sectarian terrorist organizations in Punjab and Sindh. Who's stopping him?

But Talat Hussein and Geo would have us believe that Raheel Shareefs popularity was a result of ISPR twitter feed and not his actual achievements. Please, f*ck off.
There is gonna be more BS from this low life and his other low life buddies in the future about RS we should boycott this trio (ET, dawn & geo) and demand their ban enough is enough RS has earned the respect after what he did for this nation he didn't got it because of a few tweets from ISPR but obviously these low life sellouts won't understand this.
 
The new army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, has his work cut out. In the crucial years that lie ahead, his to-do list is long. But this list is also predictable. There is belligerent Delhi, scheming Kabul, badly-inclined Iran and the new face of terrorism, the Islamic State, drawing dispersed groups on our own land.

However, the less-imagined is his don’t list. This list, if prepared dispassionately, can bring greater clarity towards the tasks at hand. In preparing the don’t list, the COAS can learn from his predecessor, General (r) Raheel Sharif. And what he needs to learn essentially is how not to be like him in several key respects.

In the first instance, the new chief has to revive the army’s institutionalised decision and planning mechanism that has been severely damaged by General Raheel’s endless self-projection and self-centeredness. Many unfortunate consequences flowed from this policy. One, everything flowed towards the person of the COAS, and the rest of the institution was marginalised in what represented the entire army in the public sphere. Press releases and tweets in praise of the general’s activities substituted what ought to have been articulation of collective weight and wisdom of senior commanders on serious matters.

It is true that the army is not a parliament of equals: the one who sits at the head carries the maximum authority. But it is not a one-man rule institution either. It cannot be in the modern day and age. The army chief’s personal profile has to reflect the institution’s deliberated and studied policy. The new COAS can bring this side of his office back to life and put a reasonable ceiling on his personal media profile that touched insane heights under his predecessor.

The second consequence of General Raheel’s media-domination strategy was the tendency to commit to irrational goals that were militarily nebulous but did resonate with a public addicted to the mumbo jumbo of quick-fixes. So the big claims went something like this: terrorism has been eliminated; terrorists have been totally neutralised; parts of Fata are close to becoming Switzerland; by December all internally displaced families will be back in their homes; Pakistan’s borders have become totally secure. The list goes on and on.

This excessive embellishment of modest gains created exceptionally embarrassing situations. When in the middle of tall claims spectacular terrorist attacks happened there were no answers to be given only more bluster and more rhetoric. In this year alone, there have been close to 400 violations of Pakistan’s territorial perimeter from the eastern and north-western sides. Three years’ tally sits close 800. Now that is a scary figure but one that underscores the precarious nature of the country’s external environment and demands thoughtful deliberations.

Almost 80,000 families (some 800,000 people) still await return to their homes. This is a grim reality that rains on the pompous parade of achievements. A military commander’s claims must be borne out by facts. The new army chief must bring some realism to posturing on success and resist the temptation of playing to the gallery at the cost of professional credibility.

The third consequence of General Raheel’s media manoeuvre was to create a bubble of political expectations and let a vast group of jackals, hyenas and vultures constantly chase the potential hunt that was the sitting government. There can be many reasons to insist that the Nawaz government doesn’t deserve to be in power and early elections should be considered a serious possibility, but all paths to this change must go through the constitutional door.

On General Raheel’s watch there were any number of events that bordered on conspiracy to oust the sitting government through suspect methods, and his command was seen playing an underhand hand in this trouble by stoking the image of ‘change being imminent’. A countless number of times his name showed up on posters, in campaigns, as a third umpire in protests and in serious conversations across the diplomatic tables about causing the government to collapse and yet not once did he officially disassociate the army or himself from this amazing drama of hopes and dreams.

Generally, the army chief’s office, like all high offices, is exceptionally sensitive to needless controversies. That was exhibited recently when the head of a banned organisation tried to hurl an insane charge against one of the five candidates for the office of army chief but was slapped down so hard that he had to issue a rebuttal in less than 24 hours. This happened because he was told to take back his words and not play dirty politics with a name that could become the army chief. He obliged. He understood the consequences of not obliging.

That’s how neutrality can be ensured, and how effectively an important office can be protected from being used for petty gains by others. General Raheel did not do that. While he never crossed the constitutional line beyond which lies the murky world of coups, he allowed his name to float around scandalously close to the constitutionally alien territory.

There is reason to believe that a veritable army of crystal-ball gazers was nurtured. They vented their venom on screen as information for years, making a complete fool of this nation and pretending to represent the ‘Raheel thinking’. They operated with impunity. They cited ‘defence sources’ freely. They claimed they had been briefed. They had more ‘leaks’ from high security meetings than any hard-working journalist can dream of. They toured Fata. They sat in formal briefings and benefited from informal conversations where news agendas were set. They were never stopped as they marinated their declared goals against a sitting government in General Raheel’s deep praise.

This was accompanied by deliberate myth-building around Gen Raheel as the ‘greatest general’ to have ever walked the face of this country. Every step he took to go to his office was made to sound like a favour to the nation. Every ordinary visitor who complimented him out of courtesy was shown as an endorsement of his exceptional leadership. Every customary medal or an official sash given by the hosts was catapulted to the level of the Victoria Cross. Politicians repeated the hand-written script of greatness because sucking up to the chief of army staff is a long tradition. The media lapped up, or had to lap up, the official line. Others reinforced this image because this made them look ‘so patriotic’. So the folklore spread far and wide.

This was needless. Being the chief of the Pakistan Army is legendary enough. When a nuclear-armed force of under a million is at your disposal, you are very, very important already. You don’t need dubious everymen to become your brand ambassadors. Allowing them to play this role is to deface the office of the army chief. The new army chief needs to cut himself off from this sorry tradition of his name being debated freely in useless political conversations made by frivolous men and women.

And finally the new chief must bring military operations like Zarb-e-Azb out of the temple of mindless worship to the hard planning board of the military directorate (which is where an army chief has to be seen instead of on screen at PR functions). Operation Zarb-e-Azb is an important operation with results but is also a continuation of previous equally important operations with just-as-important results. The sacrifices of men in Zarb-e-Azb stand equal to those who were martyred in the Malakand, Dir, Buner, Bajaur, Mohmand, Kurram, Orakzai and South Waziristan, to name just a few.

Operation Zarb-e-Azb is the endpoint of a decade-long journey the nation has taken along side its forces on a path that is awash with the precious blood of beautiful sons. But like all military operations of the past this one too must be scrutinised and evaluated, and hard decisions taken about its future. This operation in North Waziristan was initially planned to close in two months at a cost of 25 billion rupees. How come it got stretched to two and half years with a 200 billion rupee bill without any closure in sight?

The new chief would do well to take an honest stock of what transpired in the last three years and learn, without malice and ill-will, what not to do now that he occupies this coveted throne of thorns and roses for a full tenure.


The writer is former executive editor of The News and a senior journalist with Geo TV.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/167980-Chief-donts


Interesting article. I don't agree with a lot of the stuff. But I do agree and have mentioned it elsewhere, that the insane "over glorification" of the Pakistani military inside a nation of 200 million people needs to stop. The civilians, who really built the country after so much sacrifice, need to be in the commanding seat. That doesn't mean that I am under-estimating the crucial role the Pakistani military has been playing, but that's what any military would do when they are called upon to serve. There is no " messiah" type of a marketing campaign required after every small thing that the people in military get paid for very well to protecting their homeland.

Nowhere else in the globe a military gets talked about so much that it almost sounds like a stage of worshiping. The elected officials call the military as need be, not the other way around. I hope Pakistan gets to that stage of maturity soon. The US military is the most powerful military on the planet. I've never seen our generals putting their heads into various issues going around the country. And yes, we have good, bad and ugly politicians too, and there is a system that has matured overtime to help with the bad ones. Pakistani institutions need to mature up too and run the country together. Thanks
 
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Interesting article. I don't agree with a lot of the stuff. But I do agree and have mentioned it elsewhere, that the insane "over glorification" of the Pakistani military inside a nation of 200 million people needs to stop. The civilians, who really built the country after so much sacrifice, need to be in the commanding seat. That doesn't mean that I am under-estimating the crucial role the Pakistani military has been playing, but that's what any military would do when they are called upon to serve. There is no " messiah" type of a marketing campaign required after every small thing that the people in military get paid for very well to protecting their homeland.

Nowhere else in the globe a military gets talked about so much that it almost sounds like a stage of worshiping. The elected officials call the military as need be, not the other way around. I hope Pakistan gets to that stage of maturity soon. The US military is the most powerful military on the planet. I've never seen our generals putting their heads into various issues going around the country. And yes, we have good, bad and ugly politicians too, and there is a system that has matured overtime to help with the bad ones. Pakistani institutions need to mature up to and run the country together. Thanks
The reason people in Pakistan loves military so much is because they're the only one's that actually do their work properly and even the work of these so called useless ''civilians'' tell me what these civilians have done for Pakistan? which institution is independent today which institution is working properly today? can NAB do any investigation independently of any politician and than arrest them? can they arrest NS or Zardari? let's talk about police what PMLN has done to depoliticize Punjab police? did they arrested Shahbaz sharif and rana sana Ullah for model town massacre? but ah silly me how can they do that because punjab police is like private militia of PMLN thugs i am not even gonna talk about sindh police KPK gov have done a lot in this regard though so should we go on and talk about health and education than?
and one more thing this respect RS has earned is because of Zarb-e-Azb, karachi OP and replying modi in the language he understood except Zarb-E-Azb it was the duty of these civilians to do the other 2 things at which they failed terribly. NS didn't even appointed a foregin minister can you believe that?!!!
@Zibago @django @Hell hound would you guys like to add something?
 
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The reason people in Pakistan loves military so much is because they're the only one's that actually do their work properly and even the work of these so called useless ''civilians'' tell me what these civilians have done for Pakistan? which institution is independent today which institution is working properly today? can NAB do any investigation independently of any politician and than arrest them? can they arrest NS or Zardari? let's talk about police what PMLN has done to depoliticize Punjab police? did they arrested Shahbaz sharif and rana sana Ullah for model town massacre? but ah silly me how can they do that because punjab police is like private militia of PMLN thugs i am not even gonna talk about sindh police KPK gov have done a lot in this regard though so should we go on and talk about health and education than?
@Zibago @django @Hell hound would you guys like to add something?

Sir, I am no expert on your country's history. But I have read and researched the past 30 years with some experience as well.

So in the military (citing recent examples from the global media), generals can do corruption and their buddies can let them off? While at any given time in the history that I've researched, the Civilians are always blamed as the only "corrupt" thing worst than the garbage? How does this make sense?

Next, if the POTUS calls the Army Chief, sends him to a mission in Cuba to eliminate terrorists or drug lords, etc, will you see the US Army general in news, and a media campaign trying to portray him the best thing since Jesus? It doesn't work like that. When you enroll into the military, your oath is to protect the homeland and her people and constitution. It is not marketing yourself or taking credit for everything you do as that's your job.

There are plenty of very recent examples of how the civilian rule has benefited Pakistan that I've read and heard on tv a ton of times (at Western media at that). Please tell me which military rule built serious public welfare projects, infrastructure, a growth strategy for your country, economic growth, etc, etc?

In fact, as of the last general's rule, your country, sadly, was being declared as a failed nation. Today, you have the Brits, Germans, French, Italians, Chinese, Russians, etc, all wanting to do business with you and join the CPEC. And from some on here, it now appears that "providing the security" for the CPEC now means that it was a Pakistani Army's initiated project and will be so for the next centuries to come? When the reality is, the Chinese didn't invest a dime in the military's rule, outside of taking over a failed port management contract from Dubai ports (previous port management company at Gawader).

I hope you are realizing that I am trying to bring out some serious questions that I have at the least. Please don't insult me by calling me an Indian, or a Martian or someone who has never been to Pakistan as that's all false. I would appreciate a rather detailed response and courtesy to keep this discussion healthy. Thanks
 
The reason people in Pakistan loves military so much is because they're the only one's that actually do their work properly and even the work of these so called useless ''civilians'' tell me what these civilians have done for Pakistan? which institution is independent today which institution is working properly today? can NAB do any investigation independently of any politician and than arrest them? can they arrest NS or Zardari? let's talk about police what PMLN has done to depoliticize Punjab police? did they arrested Shahbaz sharif and rana sana Ullah for model town massacre? but ah silly me how can they do that because punjab police is like private militia of PMLN thugs i am not even gonna talk about sindh police KPK gov have done a lot in this regard though so should we go on and talk about health and education than?
and one more thing this respect RS has earned is because of Zarb-e-Azb, karachi OP and replying modi in the language he understood except Zarb-E-Azb it was the duty of these civilians to do the other 2 things at which they failed terribly. NS didn't even appointed a foregin minister can you believe that?!!!
@Zibago @django @Hell hound would you guys like to add something?
bias article written for a fat pay check. don't deserve any further attention.
 
So in the military (citing recent examples from the global media), generals can do corruption and their buddies can let them off? While at any given time in the history that I've researched, the Civilians are always blamed as the only "corrupt" thing worst than the garbage? How does this make sense?
RS arrested 12 military officers over corruption charges he made an example can NS do something like this? obviously he can't and you know why.
Next, if the POTUS calls the Army Chief, sends him to a mission in Cuba to eliminate terrorists or drug lords, etc, will you see the US Army general in news, and a media campaign trying to portray him the best thing since Jesus? It doesn't work like that. When you enroll into the military, your oath is to protect the homeland and her people and constitution. It is not marketing yourself or taking credit for everything you do as that's your job.
No he never marketed himself that's what i am trying to say this guy has earned this respect and he totally deserve it.
In fact, as of the last general's rule, your country, sadly, was being declared as a failed nation.
No it happened during Zardari's gov means during the gov of a "civilian"
Today, you have the Brits, Germans, French, Italians, Chinese, Russians, etc, all wanting to do business with you and join the CPEC. And from some on here, it now appears that "providing the security" for the CPEC now means that it was a Pakistani Army's initiated project and will be so for the next centuries to come?
Yes AlhamdullilAh that it is a very good news for my country.
The idea of CPEC was proposed by Musharraf not only that also because of these lazy corrupt to the core politicians China even asked gov to let military handle this project see there are tons of reasons why people love military so much.
Please tell me which military rule built serious public welfare projects, infrastructure, a growth strategy for your country, economic growth, etc, etc?
Yes during Musharraf's era GDP rate was over 8% investment was coming in. Law&Order situation was excellent economy was doing good.


I hope you are realizing that I am trying to bring out some serious questions that I have at the least. Please don't insult me by calling me an Indian, or a Martian or someone who has never been to Pakistan as that's all false. I would appreciate a rather detailed response and courtesy to keep this discussion healthy. Thanks
Ah don't worry i know there's nothing like that. :-)
 

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