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Afghanistan exit seen as peril to C.I.A. Drone Missions and spying on Pakistani nukes.

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May be. May be not!
seriously do a poll on this website and see how many pakistanis agree with your views. i mean most people on this site are educated since they are using computers ect.
i will bet you money that 90 percent of the people will disagree with everything you have to say.
indians will always support you because they always support anti-pakistan views.
 
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About 13000 MRAPs and other APCs in Afghanistan. I would love to say that NATO, should give 13000 MRAPs and 100,000 APCs to Afghans to secure their home land.
 
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If you are a big power, then think like a big power and you will understand why powers bigger than India would like to keep an eye on Indian weaponry.

It is really simple, if AND ONLY IF you think like a big power's citizen.

Hope you understand

Big power dont means interfere in others matter and bullying other small countries.But when our national interest challlenged
we can also do that.
 
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The problems are far greater for Afghanistan than for USA, no matter what the final agreement turns out to be, or not:

Afghanistan’s uncertain future: Playing with fire | The Economist


Afghanistan’s uncertain future
Playing with fire
Hamid Karzai’s vilification of America is risking his country’s security
Feb 1st 2014 | KABUL | From the print edition

Thanks to its bewildering president, Afghanistan has seen relations with the United States plunge to new lows just two months before a presidential election. If Hamid Karzai cannot reach an agreement with America for some troops to stay, then NATO is scheduled to pull out completely by the end of the year. Thus, though Mr Karzai will step down at the end of a possibly drawn-out process of choosing his successor, his unpredictability, and his desire to settle scores before going, threaten his country’s interests far into the future.

Confirmation of serious trouble came first in November, on the occasion of a loya jirga, a grand assembly of 2,500 community leaders and tribal elders. The meeting was convened to approve a bilateral security agreement (BSA) with America that will allow a small number of foreign troops to continue training and assisting Afghan security forces. Without their presence, many Afghans fear that flows of foreign aid will dry up and that, unable to resist the Taliban, the state might collapse.

The BSA had taken nearly a year to negotiate, and the loya jirga overwhelmingly endorsed it. Yet Mr Karzai used the occasion to attack his American allies for myriad perceived failings and to announce new conditions for his signing the pact. He also suggested that the responsibility for doing so should probably fall to his successor. (Mr Karzai is constitutionally barred from contesting another term.)

Since then, Mr Karzai has continued to give free rein to his resentments. On January 25th he held a press conference in which he excoriated the Americans further. He accused them of engaging in a “psychological war” in their efforts to seal the BSA and acting as a “rival” rather than as a friend. For good measure, Mr Karzai insisted that America must start serious peace talks with the Taliban—an impossibility, given the Taliban’s hostility to the BSA. If the Americans would not accept his conditions, he added, “they can leave anytime and we will continue our lives”.

Mr Karzai has also gone out of his way to raise the temperature over two other issues. The first is over civilian deaths from a NATO bombing strike on January 15th on the village of Wazghar in Parwan province north of the capital, Kabul. The second is a dispute over the release order of 88 detainees at Bagram prison, which America handed over to Afghanistan last year. Angry American officials say that 17 prisoners to be freed were involved in making bombs that killed 11 Afghan soldiers and they claim that most of the other detainees also have blood on their hands. But Mr Karzai describes Bagram as “a place where innocent people are tortured and insulted and made dangerous criminals”.

The row over what exactly happened at Wazghar has become both toxic and farcical. NATO says it was the Afghan army that called in the strike when its soldiers were under heavy fire from Taliban positions in two village compounds. NATO acknowledges that civilians, including two children, died in the action. But it says the lives of dozens of Afghan soldiers and a handful of American advisers were at risk. As it is, an Afghan and an American soldier were killed. But a report commissioned by Mr Karzai asserted that 13 villagers had died after relentless bombing, with not a Taliban fighter to be seen. America, in other words, was guilty of a war crime.

When local news outlets and the New York Times questioned the veracity of the report, carried out by a virulently anti-American MP, the government brought several villagers to Kabul to back up its claims. The move backfired. A photograph was produced purporting to show a funeral for dead villagers. But some in the media thought the photograph looked familiar. In reality, it had been taken a couple of hundred miles from Wazghar—in 2009.

To the consternation of American officials, Mr Karzai now appears to be compiling a list of insurgent-style attacks which he claims the Americans were behind as part of a plot to undermine his government and destabilise the country. The list apparently includes an attack on January 17th on a Kabul restaurant that killed 13 foreign civilians and at least seven Afghans and had been immediately claimed by the Taliban.

Mr Karzai may even believe some of his outlandish assertions. Cocooned in the presidential palace, he receives delegations of elders from around the country only too happy to peddle eccentric theories. On January 27th James Cunningham, America’s ambassador in Kabul, portrayed Mr Karzai’s views as “deeply conspiratorial” and “divorced from reality”.

Mr Karzai’s behaviour is, unsurprisingly, having a corrosive effect in Washington, DC. Last week Congress halved proposed development aid to Afghanistan for the coming year, ruled out big new infrastructure projects carried out by the armed forces, and cut by three-fifths the Pentagon’s $2.6 billion bid to add “critical” capabilities to the Afghan security forces. The White House appears to have accepted the cuts without a murmur.

How much President Barack Obama’s exasperation with Mr Karzai now threatens America’s commitment to a security agreement is unclear. In his state of the union speech on January 28th, Mr Obama said that, with an agreement, America would stand by Afghanistan and keep on a “small force” of Americans who, with NATO allies, would train and help Afghan forces in other ways and go after what remains of al-Qaeda.

He appears to have heeded advice he received from the senior American commander in Afghanistan, General Joseph Dunford. General Dunford took the unusual step of going to the White House a day before the speech to plead for the president to agree to keep 10,000 American troops in Afghanistan after 2014 (backed by a further 2,000, mainly from Germany and Italy). General Dunford’s plan is supported by the defence secretary, Chuck Hagel; the secretary of state, John Kerry; the CIA director, John Brennan; and the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Martin Dempsey. They argue that this force is the minimum that can accomplish anything and still be capable of protecting itself.

In a bid to make the plan more palatable to Mr Obama, General Dunford suggested that the “enduring force” need only stay for two years rather than the possible decade envisaged by the BSA. That would allow the president, on leaving office in 2017, to claim that he had brought all of America’s troops home from two wars. But other voices in the White House, not least Joe Biden, the vice-president, would prefer a much smaller force, devoted only to counter-terrorism. The longer the signing of the BSA is delayed, the more likely the enduring force is to be whittled down. Military advice would then quickly swing to the “zero option” of no troops at all.

What the Americans, and indeed many Afghans, appear to be hoping is that even if Mr Karzai must now be written off as hostile, his successor will want to sign the security pact. It looks a reasonable bet. According to Lotfullah Najafizada of Tolo News, the BSA is supported by most Afghan government ministers, the heads of the security forces and all the main presidential-election candidates.

A two-month election campaign opens on February 2nd, and most pundits see it as a four-horse race between a former foreign minister, Abdullah Abdullah, a candidate in 2009 and no ally of Mr Karzai, and three others who hope to gain the outgoing president’s still-useful endorsement: Ashraf Ghani, a former World Bank official; Zalmay Rassoul, another former foreign minister; and Qayum Karzai, an elder brother of the president. All are considered more pro-Western than Mr Karzai and understand the importance of keeping some foreign troops in the country to help the fast-improving but still fragile Afghan army in its dogged fight against the Taliban.

The worry, however, is that the election will go to a second round and that no winner will emerge until June. The new president will then have to concentrate on putting together a government seen as reasonably legitimate and competent. That could push the likely date for signing the security agreement to early August, dragging out the uncertainty (there are already signs of capital flight) and frustrating military planning. American and other NATO commanders still think it will be doable—so long as Mr Obama’s patience holds up in the face of Mr Karzai’s relentless provocations.

From the print edition: Asia
 
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Our diplomat do a wrong in US and break their law.She must be punished.But we stands for her because she represent India and US laws authorities mistreat her.You know what .US states department allow her return to India and we expelled their diplomats.Now I ask you one question.Except Russia ,China and some south American states.Can your country or any other country can break their law and can escape from them?.
Now I repeat India is not in US payroll.Till now we maintained a NAM approach.And India can move forward without US help.This so called US superpower came last decade to us and talk a lot about friendship.we dont beg them.We proud about that.
And we will maintain cooperation with them only for our national interest.If they turn against us ,then India a stable full fledged democracy will also turn against them.You dont know about India that is why you talk like this.we may quarrel each other for various reason and it is natural in a diversified country.But when some outsider attack us .We will become one.India.
:offtopic:
stick to topic dude or u will be reported.
 
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@FaujHistorian
One thing that US dont know nothing is about our nuclear weapons.In 2009 they can even figure out missing PAk nukes
.But they are absolutely blind about Indian nukes.Till now except only sentence in this article.they dont express fear about Indian nukes.They know they dont need it.
For US pakistan is to different compared to India.You already figure it out in nuke deals.
Missing Pakistani Nukes Aww You mean Missing Indian NuKe Scientist =)))
 
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What will happen to Pakistan if NATO will exit Afghanistan....???

Answer in detail with proof or either don't answer it at all. Ok.
In Few Months Terrorism In Pakistan Will be Over TTP WIll be finished
you need Proof before So called WOT Before US was in Afg Their was 0 Bomb Blast In Pakistan 0 Terrorism activaty supported by Afghan taliban Now Whole thing is opposite
 
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Missing Pakistani Nukes Aww You mean Missing Indian NuKe Scientist =)))

You dont need to compare India with Pakistan.You know,we know ,the US and the whole world know there is lot a gap between India and Pakistan.And US cant treat India like they treat Pakistan.
 
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I replied you to clear doubt.IF you have any argument to counter it ,then do it.They cant work against India. that all
lol ok they can't
they are even afraid of India ok.:coffee:
now stick to topic!
Sorry for posting in wrong section i meant to post in Jokes :rofl:

You dont need to compare India with Pakistan.You know,we know ,the US and the whole world know there is lot a gap between India and Pakistan.And US cant treat India like they treat Pakistan.
ohhh someone please console this kid
i can't see him crying!! :cry::cry::cry:
 
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lol ok they can't
they are even afraid of India ok.:coffee:
now stick to topic!
Sorry for posting in wrong section i meant to post in Jokes :rofl:


ohhh someone please console this kid
i can't see him crying!! :cry::cry::cry:

Stick to the topic man.Beware US base drones in Afghanistan after they sign this agreement.
Dont cry when drones fly over Pakistan again.You may take time to understand facts.Lot of gap between India and Pakistan
 
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You dont need to compare India with Pakistan.You know,we know ,the US and the whole world know there is lot a gap between India and Pakistan.And US cant treat India like they treat Pakistan.
Treating Has nothing 2 Do with any thing
But 1 thing Pakistan have never had any problem protecting its Nukes Not a single accident Shows how well protected they are
You Cant Say that about any other country Not EVEN US , India , Russia all these states have security lapses I dont have to give you links do i ?
 
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Treating Has nothing 2 Do with any thing
But 1 thing Pakistan have never had any problem protecting its Nukes Not a single accident Shows how well protected they are
You Cant Say that about any other country Not EVEN US , India , Russia all these states have security lapses I dont have to give you links do i ?

May problem with nuclear materials but not nuclear weapons.Pakistan handle too less volume of nuclear materials in civilian field compared to any other countries.so there is no such serious lapses in civilian field of Pakistan
 
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May problem with nuclear materials but not nuclear weapons.Pakistan handle too less volume of nuclear materials in civilian field compared to any other countries.so there is no such serious lapses in civilian field of Pakistan
Nuclear Weapons ? arnt You fogetting Your Nuclear Reactor Breach ?
Arnt You Forgetting Your Nuclear Scientist was kidnapped and later was found dead

Yes THeir is No Problem In Pak Neither In civilan neither In army They keep their secrets well protected
 
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