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al-Qaida: Wage Holy War Against Pakistan

Cheetah786

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http://www.breitbart.tv/html/2917.htmlCAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Al-Qaida's deputy leader issued a video Wednesday calling for Pakistanis to wage a holy war against their government in retaliation for the attack by Pakistan's army on the Red Mosque in Islamabad.

Ayman al-Zawahri's 4-minute, 24-second address focused entirely on the clashes between Islamic students and Pakistan's army at the mosque.

The video was released by al-Qaida's multimedia branch, as-Sahab. Its authenticity could not immediately be confirmed, but two U.S.-based terrorism monitoring groups also reported it.
 
Ah!!!! The Vulture's starts to swoon!!!!
 
yak na shud, do shud

(or something like that)
 
in other headlines, Pakistan to send babar up their a$$.
 
He thinks pakistanies will going to do something like this coz some jerks says so!!!lol
 
He thinks pakistanies will going to do something like this coz some jerks says so!!!lol

Its not the mainstream Pakistanis like you or others here to whom this is addressed. there are a lot of disillusioned guys out there who may fall prey. Pakistan needs to double up its vigil. Any setback now in the form of massive bomb attack or major offensive against PA would make the world believe that extremism has gained strength in Pakistan.
 
Its not the mainstream Pakistanis like you or others here to whom this is addressed. there are a lot of disillusioned guys out there who may fall prey. Pakistan needs to double up its vigil. Any setback now in the form of massive bomb attack or major offensive against PA would make the world believe that extremism has gained strength in Pakistan.

Majority pakistanies are like me. A very few are left which may try to follow him as for PA, its one of the best in the world one cant think of striking the army and think he"ll get away no way!!! As for the world they know we are fighting extermism and in such case they help not oppose the situation.:pakistan:
 
Majority pakistanies are like me. A very few are left which may try to follow him as for PA, its one of the best in the world one cant think of striking the army and think he"ll get away no way!!! As for the world they know we are fighting extermism and in such case they help not oppose the situation.:pakistan:

Reports says its just a group of 80 - 100 foreign militants who come in every month that creates havoc in Iraq and they are supposed to have killed or wounded moe than 4000 in this year alone.

So a minority is not an issue. Inteligence gathering has to be at its best. Your security apparatus failed to find out or failed to report the existance of high value extremists taking shelter in lala Masjid.
 
Reports says its just a group of 80 - 100 foreign militants who come in every month that creates havoc in Iraq and they are supposed to have killed or wounded moe than 4000 in this year alone.

So a minority is not an issue. Inteligence gathering has to be at its best. Your security apparatus failed to find out or failed to report the existance of high value extremists taking shelter in lala Masjid.

Nope. Actually it wasnt our security failure but it was the government who was delaying the action. They knew all the time what was happening they just waited you might say politics was one factor. Secondly they were also trying to avoid the casulities. Anyhow after this the security will be tightened anyways
 
Nope. Actually it wasnt our security failure but it was the government who was delaying the action. They knew all the time what was happening they just waited you might say politics was one factor. Secondly they were also trying to avoid the casulities. Anyhow after this the security will be tightened anyways

I was watching this program 'Pakistan- Athreat within' on CNN, the mullah who was killed made a statement that when he was being hotly pursued by PA in the NWFP area he was right in Islamabad, hiding in a house there.
 
I was watching this program 'Pakistan- Athreat within' on CNN, the mullah who was killed made a statement that when he was being hotly pursued by PA in the NWFP area he was right in Islamabad, hiding in a house there.

Whts the point??? The guy got killed whr ever he was. The american inteligence is the best there is yet they could not figure out whr osama or mullah ummer is? It might take some time but the inteligence does figure it out what is happening in the country.
 
Whts the point??? The guy got killed whr ever he was. The american inteligence is the best there is yet they could not figure out whr osama or mullah ummer is? It might take some time but the inteligence does figure it out what is happening in the country.

Foreign intl sevice has its limitations compared to domestic one. ISI is more effective than CIA in Pakistan.
 
I was watching this program 'Pakistan- Athreat within' on CNN, the mullah who was killed made a statement that when he was being hotly pursued by PA in the NWFP area he was right in Islamabad, hiding in a house there.

LOL same Mullah who claimed that they only had 14 Kalashnikov's.inside the compound.:azn:
 
Moderate Pakistanis applaud extremist crackdown

The Army raid on a pro-Taliban mosque in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, has raised fears of an extremist backlash but many in the country's so-called "silent majority" say the Government was right to act.

While hardliners have been able to stir-up anger each time President Pervez Musharraf moves against them, most people in Pakistan have traditionally been tolerant Muslims and many oppose the militant drive to install Islamic law.

For many of the one million people in Islamabad, the raid - the deadly climax of a three-month stand-off with radicals - has restored an uneasy calm, despite a lingering fear of revenge attacks.

"Never before has Islamabad seen anything like this, nor should it be allowed in future," garment shop owner Mohammad Siddiq said.

"We are all Muslims but that doesn't give a few clerics the right to teach us Islam."

The stand-off at the Red Mosque, less than two kilometres from the presidential palace, began in April when chief cleric Maulana Muhammad Abdul Aziz set up a religious court to bring the capital under Islamic law.

This week, in the final battle with radicals holed up in the mosque, firebrand cleric Abdul Rashid Ghazi died in a hail of bullets while militant snipers fired at soldiers from the minarets and booby-trapped the compound.

In recent weeks, his radical students, including bearded Talibs and women in burqas, had abducted Chinese women they accused of prostitution and harassed shops selling western DVDs in the city, which is among Pakistan's most liberal.

"These people were making life difficult for everyone and that, too, in the name of Islam," Mehreen Shah, a housewife, said. "They should not have been given such liberty in the first place.

"Enlightened people were under threat from bearded militants - whether they are video shop owners, beauty parlours or even school and college girls."

A female student who asked not to be named said: "How can you allow someone to start running around and enforcing sharia the way Ghazi was, through kidnappings, threats and attacks?"

Reacting with fury to the massive raid, Al Qaeda's global deputy commander Ayman Al-Zawahiri has called for holy war, saying in a new Internet posting: "Muslims of Pakistan, your salvation is only through jihad."

But many members of Pakistan's silent majority of moderate Muslims would prefer to just get on with life after a traumatic week that saw plumes of smoke billowing above the Pakistani capital.

"It's a sad end but life may return to normal in one or two days, which is good news for a poor person like me," taxi driver Rahim Shah said, after manoeuvring around road blocks and police checkpoints for more than a week.

"If half the city is under curfew and the other half under construction, it affects your business, even if you're a taxi driver."

The guns have fallen silent for now but many residents say the battle and Ghazi's death have escalated tensions and predict it will embolden those who are fighting to turn their country into a hardline Islamic state.

"I don't agree with his style of politics," college student Umer Farooq said of the dead cleric. "But he has certainly become a symbol of defiance and did not surrender despite the odds against him."

-AFP
 
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