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Cameron's inflammatory comments against Pakistan: I meant Pakistanis are terrorists..

I doubt it, calling a whole nation terrorist is completely stupidness...

Radical thinkings are everywhere, not just in Pakistan...


The transcript of his speech is available and in public domain. Make up your mind if the context was what you make it out to be. No limit to interpretation but the boundaries of interpretation should be based on a foundation of rational ...
:cheers:
 
The transcript of his speech is available and in public domain. Make up your mind if the context was what you make it out to be. No limit to interpretation but the boundaries of interpretation should be based on a foundation of rational ...
:cheers:

Did he or didnt he say Pakistanis are terrorists?
 
Pakistan should call back their forigne relations officer from Britian -

I can't believe the day when we had aircraft accident , this idiot was in India calling Pakistan terrorist

This guy is a jerk has no common sense he is so blind to sell some business items to India , and will say/do anything to close the deal
 
Yeah, already told you , he think diplomacy is to be made by selecting sides... but its truly not,

He understand things wit his arse... Thats the exact problem.

Im curious where the hell did he go after india?
 
I doubt it, calling a whole nation terrorist is completely stupidness...

Radical thinkings are everywhere, not just in Pakistan...

I dont think he implied that at all. He simply said that the GoP needs to stop playing both sides in the war against terrorism..
 
LegionnairE: "Did he or didnt he say Pakistanis are terrorists?"

No, he did not.
 
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kerry-lugar bill means pakistan is tied to the usa led war on terror for a good 5 more years nothing will change that.
 
No, he did not.
WTH people are acting like he did

It could be a big insult, whatever europeans love to tagging up people, they called Turks barbarians for centuries... Thats their habit...
 
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Cameron Facing Rough Ride With Zardari

LONDON, Aug 1, 2010 (AFP) - David Cameron was facing tricky talks this week with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari after the British prime minister's remarks on the export of terror triggered a diplomatic spat.

Zardari's three-day visit later this week is likely to be overshadowed by the fall-out from Cameron's outspoken comments in Pakistan's rival neighbour India last week.

Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency has already pulled out of a visit to discuss counter-terrorism co-operation with British security services in London.

Cameron has come under fire in some British newspapers for a string of perceived diplomatic errors in his first major series of foreign visits, to the United States and India, in recent weeks.

Pakistan's Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira said Zardari would "explain the facts" over Cameron's "misperception", insisting that the row should not be allowed to sour relations between the two countries.

"If the prime minister of the UK has said something that is contrary to the facts on the ground, it doesn't mean that we should boycott each other," Kaira said Saturday at a press conference in London.

"The president of Pakistan will explain and have a dialogue and good discussion and he will explain the facts to the new government over here.

"We hope that... when they get the exact picture, they will agree with us."

Zardari is due for talks with Cameron on Friday at Chequers, the prime minister's country retreat.

Pakistan has been under intense scrutiny after leaked secret US military documents detailed alleged links between the ISI and Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.

Kaira rejected any such suggestion.

He said the planned ISI London visit had been postponed "because of their own commitments", adding that the stalled trip was "operational", involving lower-ranking ISI agents.

He said he expected that intelligence co-operation would continue.

"We are quite confident that when we have explained the situation to the new leadership over here, they will of course recognise and realise the sacrifices and actions the government of Pakistan has taken in relation to extremism," he said.

Cameron's comments were made Wednesday in Bangalore, India's southern technology hub.

"We cannot tolerate in any sense the idea that this country (Pakistan) is allowed to look both ways and is able, in any way, to promote the export of terror, whether to India or whether to Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world," he said.

David Miliband, the former foreign secretary, said Cameron's early forays into international diplomacy had been a mess.

"Cameron has used the past two weeks to make a verbal splash on foreign policy," the opposition Labour foreign affairs spokesman wrote in The Independent on Sunday newspaper.

"Like a cuttlefish squirting out ink, his words were copious and created a mess.

"Making a splash is not the same as making a difference.

"It would have been better for the prime minister to talk about ways we can support Pakistan."
 
The opposition parties in India, Pakistan or in UK will oppose and that is so hard to fathom?
:cheers:
 
A group of young men of Pakistani origin (not nationality) bombed London in July 2 years ago

Thats why the brits are suspicious of pakistan

A young boxer of Pakistani origin(not nationality) has been winning fights for England for quite some time now, I'm would like to see him being reffered to as a Pakistani.....................BTW i'm talking about Aamir Khan...............
 
Zardari the CU_T is going ahead with his 'have to check my bank accounts and settle the sale of Surrey Estate' trip to the UK despite Cameron calling Pakistani terrorists. Man! what a MF this Zardari A-Hole is indeed!
 
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