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Chief of Army Staff | General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

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COAS General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, at Yadgar-e-Shuhada, during his visit to Artillery Centre, Attok (21-09-2011) – Photo ISPR.

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COAS General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, during his visit to Artillery Centre Attok. (21-09-2011) – Photo ISPR.
 
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COAS General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, at Yadgar-e-Shuhada, during his visit to Artillery Centre, Attok (21-09-2011) – Photo ISPR.

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COAS General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, during his visit to Artillery Centre Attok. (21-09-2011) – Photo ISPR.

Who is on right side of Kayani ? Is it Gen Tariq Khan ? (great moustache)
 
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i can bet bottom $ that they are discussing the haqqani network!!!

Of course, conversation wasn’t so smooth. Mullen’s statements in after days clearly proof of running conflicts where they couldn’t even decide any cooperation & further step to remove rift in military relations. Kayani’s face looks like in aggressive mode and surprising over Mullen’s argument.

Likely Kayani passed statement or decision which may motivated Mullen that he joined Leon Panetta press conference to blame Pakistan directly while Kayani’s activities after that meeting also support this idea. ISPR silent and only political body is put front line for counter statements.
 
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COAS has said that Pakistan should not be singled out for bashing.

Mullen

One interesting thing from the report i saw on TV,

1- The COAS has NOT denied Pakistan's involvement in his statement.

2- He has said that only Pakistan is not responsible for realtions with them, suggesting, IMO, that other countries (USA) is also involved in some role.

But he has not denied it, interesting.
 
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Allegations against ISI ‘baseless’: Kayani


ISLAMABAD: Chief of Army Staff Ashfaq Pervez Kayani said on Friday US accusations that it is running a proxy war and supporting the al Qaeda-linked Haqqani network are “very unfortunate and not based on facts”.

Responding to scathing criticism by the US military’s top officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, Kayani denied allegations that his country is “exporting” terror to neighbouring Afghanistan. “While taking note of the recent statements made by Admiral Mullen... Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, termed these as very unfortunate and not based on facts,” a Pakistani military statement quoting him as saying.

“This is especially disturbing in view of a rather constructive meeting with Admiral Mullen in Spain,” referring to a recent meeting between the pair in Spain. Mullen on Thursday bluntly accused Pakistan of “exporting” violent extremism to Afghanistan through proxies and warned of possible action to protect American troops. Mullen said the country’s main intelligence agency the ISI was actively supporting Haqqani network. Mullen called the Haqqani network a “veritable arm” of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency”. He accused the Haqqanis – with ISI backing – of this month’s truck bombing on a NATO base in Afghanistan that wounded 77 Americans; a 19-hour siege on the US embassy in Kabul; and a June attack on the InterContinental hotel in Kabul. Responding to the question of contacts with Haqqanis, the Pakistan army chief said that “Admiral Mullen knows fully well which all countries are in contact with the Haqqanis. Singling out Pakistan is neither fair nor productive.” Kayani hoped “the blame game” should give way “to a constructive and meaningful engagement for a stable and peaceful Afghanistan, an objective to which Pakistan is fully committed,” the statement added. afp
 
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US Centcom chief visits Pakistan amid rift


AP Today

Gen. James Mattis, head of US Central Command.

ISLAMABAD: A top American military commander is in Pakistan for meetings with army leaders at a time of intense strain between the two countries.

A US Embassy spokesman said Gen. James Mattis, head of US Central Command, arrived late Friday and was scheduled to meet army chief Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani.

Ties between Islamabad and Washington are in crisis after American officials stepped up accusations that Pakistan’s premier spy agency was aiding insurgents in neighboring Afghanistan, including those who took part in an attack on the US Embassy last week in Kabul.

Kayani said on Friday that the charges were baseless, while other officials here have urged Washington to present evidence to back up such a serious allegation.
 
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The Kayani doctrine

There are two types of arms in an army: fighting and supporting. Out of the fighting arms – those which bear the brunt of frontline action – Pakistan’s army features three branches: the armoured corps (comprised of tanks), the infantry (foot as well as mechanised troops) and the artillery (constituted by, unsurprisingly, some very big guns).

Effectively, an army officer’s early years are spent learning the basics of the arm he is attached to. For example, before he was a general, General Zia commanded a troop, a squadron, a unit, a brigade and even a division of tanks. Little surprise that he was a bit of a tank (in an insensitive, power-tripped kind of way) himself when it came to eliminating the opposition. Like the forbidding equipment he was trained on as a young officer, Zia had an iron-fist, scorched earth, destroy-it-all approach to his adversaries. Most interestingly, his end – caused by a huge explosion – was also similar to the destruction of a tank. If he had not exploded in mid-air, he most probably would have kept pulverising Pakistan.

Similarly, before he was a ‘commando’ or even the ‘chief executive’, General Musharraf was an artilleryman (or a gunner, as all such soldiers are called). Gunners have a notable reputation in the army. Sure, they see a lot of front-line action, but every soldier knows that gunners are never really in the thick of things. Thanks to their calculators, compasses, maps, and protractors and yes, guns (huge, overcompensating guns), their tertiary, secondary and primary jobs are to scare, badger or blow (respectively) the opposition from miles away. Unfortunately, due to inaccuracy in their calculations, and despite good surveillance and/or intelligence, gunners may end up either missing the enemy, killing civilians and sometimes even their own forces – and because of entrenchment, they rarely ever get to see what’s coming. For those who watch Musharraf the politico, this should all sound very familiar.

Commandos, on the other hand, are snobby know-it-alls who are trained to survive before being trained to kill. Clearly, in retrospect, Mush was more of an artilleryman and less of a commando, but did have a bit of both worlds in him: inherent inaccuracy, combined with a propensity to be a know-it-all, but without any survival instincts.

Musharraf’s artillery regiment is also famous for another, more generous act: when it can no longer – usually thanks to a technological upgrade – use a certain gun, it transfers that weapon to the infantry. For example, mortars were once used by the artillery, but are now deployed by our foot soldiers. Call it a transition of power, or a deathly tradition of hand-me-down, but the gunners and the Queen of Battle (as the infantry is universally referred to) share a special relationship: what is unfit for the artillery, the infantry makes do with.

Pakistan’s ‘Soldier’s Soldier’, General Ashfaq Kayani, is an infantryman, and he is making do with what the artilleryman Musharraf left him with. In his almost 40 years with the army, Kayani has commanded a lot of men (sections, platoons, units, brigades, divisions, even corps and yes, one very, very important directorate), but as an “infantarian”, his early training denied him the steel-blanket security of a tank or the embedded safety of a distant gun position.

Before the motorcades, the MI and SSG details, the trips to Spain, the Time Magazine power rankings, the golf presidencies and the ivory cigarette filters, Kayani was trained to be a foot soldier and face fire: directly and with little protection. That should say something about his martial raisons d’état.

More than armour’s cavaliers, or the keen, lean and mean gunners, (yes, that is what artillerymen are lovingly referred to in the army, though Mush doesn’t qualify for any of those terms these days) Kayani’s early schooling instilled in him the critical doctrine of the fighting arms: at the end of the day, the guns and the tanks might do a lot of damage, but it is the infantryman who always secures an objective. Thus, a good infantryman always has to be his ‘own man’.

And it doesn’t end there. A good infantry officer also has to work harder to protect his men and assets than his armour and artillery colleagues. Why? Because without the hardened protection of armour, and the covered distance of artillery, all bets are off for safety when the infantry’s foot soldiers are deployed. So infantry officers, used to higher fatalities in the field – where they confront danger directly in the eye – have a natural proclivity to be more cautious and protect their own when it comes to battlefield engagements.

That is the tip of the iceberg of what is the Kayani doctrine: Pakistan’s Silent Soldier is naturally more conservative in his cost-benefit analysis of committing troops to battle, thus he can be expected to resort to unconventional tactics where the costs of engagement seem low: espionage, subterfuge, asymmetrical warfare and what the army calls ‘minor ops’. Compounded by his ‘son of the soil’ Jhelum roots, Kayani can also be held to better understand the larger psyche of the army (most of that armed force is constituted of infantry troops).

As for his resume, (DG-ISI, DG-MO, X corps commander, Benazir’s deputy military secretary) it looks like he has always been the right guy in the right place at the right time...But that perfect coincidence begs the question: Was Kayani ‘groomed’ by the Establishment – Pakistan’s Deep State – to be the right guy in the wrong place at the wrong time, at least for the rest of us?

The Kayani doctrine - Wajahat S Khan
 
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Weekend Edition, September 24-25, 2011

The Price Paid By Pakistan
America’s Shambles in Afghanistan


by BRIAN CLOUGHLEY


In the course of research for a paper on US-Pakistan relations I came across a speech given by President Obama in March this year, titled ‘A New Strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan’. It was interesting and quite informative, if misguided and engagingly ingenuous, but the riveting sentence that leapt from the page to my astonished eyes was the declaration that “The United States of America did not choose to fight a war in Afghanistan.”

It’s a bit like being told “Hitler didn’t cause World War Two”, or reading a newspaper headline like “Republican Politician Tells Truth” or “Netanyahu Says Arabs are Human” But the Obama assertion was even more bizarre.

Nobody grabbed America’s collective nose and ordered it to send special forces to go to Afghanistan’s Tora Bora region on 7 October 2001, along with a few dozen British colleagues and a now-rich bunch of raggy baggy Afghan warlords who took millions of CIA dollars in enormous shrink-wrapped bundles and then sat down on their money and did nothing – until they sent the cash to Dubai and Geneva, courtesy of the corrupt Kabul Bank. The prime mover in that farce (for such it was, alas, in spite of instances of exceptionally courageous conduct by US and British soldiers; I have had a first-hand description of the operation, but alas can’t recount it because of the UK’s Official Secrets Act), was the White House. The pathetic Blair of Britain followed in his usual fashion, desperate to have bonding photographs taken alongside the grinning Bush.

It was most certainly the United States of America that chose to invade Afghanistan. And it was the United States that manipulated the United Nations Security Council into a Resolution that seemed to give justification for its unwinnable war.

Two researchers in the British House of Commons have produced a paper titled ‘The Legal Basis for the Invasion of Afghanistan’. These analysts are not bleeding-heart liberals; they are intelligent, independent assessors of fact. And they wrote : “The military campaign in Afghanistan was not specifically mandated by the UN – there was no specific Security Council Resolution authorising the invasion – but was widely (although not universally) perceived to be a legitimate form of self-defence under the UN Charter.”

The whole thing was a con-job. And dozens of nations were summoned to give it a slimy veneer of quasi-legitimacy. They were all duped – or chose to be manoeuvred – into committing blood, young lives and treasure to the preposterously named “Operation Enduring Freedom.”

While writing this piece I went to the website icasualties and saw that yet more young foreign soldiers had been killed. Boys of 19 and 20 are dying in Afghanistan for . . . for what? There are no names of Afghan soldiers, of course, because they don’t matter to the West – any more than the deaths of Pakistani soldiers matter to Western politicians and generals who demand that “Pakistan must do more to combat terrorism.” What they mean is that even more soldiers of the Pakistan army and Frontier Corps should sacrifice their lives in order to make things easier for the West to claim that things are improving in its Afghan catastrophe.

Had there been no invasion of Afghanistan by foreign troops, Pakistan would not be in the dreadful situation in which it now finds itself. The fanatics came over the border and found sanctuary amid the lawless, savage, but culturally hospitable Pushtun tribes, which at that very time were being encouraged, with signs of modest success, to join mainstream Pakistan. But the displaced militants began energetic campaigns of propaganda and hatred, and then wreaked havoc by brainwashing home-grown barbarians to develop their own brand of evil mayhem.

Pakistan had no suicide bombings until 1995 when an Egyptian citizen tried to drive a bomb-truck into his embassy in Islamabad. There were no other attacks until 2005, when there were two, by sectarian religious fanatics. But then the foreigners’ war in Afghanistan really got going, and in 2007 there were over fifty suicide attacks in Pakistan, most of which directly targeted military forces. Since then it’s been a hideous growth industry. Last year fifty bombings killed over 1100 people, and so far this year the score is 500 dead innocents.

Thank you, Operation Enduring Freedom. And thank you, too, America, for the deaths of over 3,000 soldiers of the Pakistan army and Frontier Corps, because none of them would have been killed were it not for your war in Afghanistan.

Kabul’s US-endorsed and fraudulently elected government and its supporting foreign military forces whine about Pakistan being unable to control movement of militants to and from Afghanistan, and certainly it is impossible to do this – as the US well knows but won’t admit. Across its own fenced and heavily patrolled border with Mexico, which costs an annual 6 billion dollars to maintain and has over 20,000 border agents, pass hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants and thousands of tons of drugs every year.

Ignoring its own backyard cross-border shambles, the US demands that Pakistan commit its soldiers to invade its border Tribal Agency, North Waziristan to fight militants who – undoubtedly – cross the border to Afghanistan to fight there.

This operation – or, rather, long series of operations, because it would take years if mounted, would require some 60,000 soldiers, of whom a thousand would be killed in a two-year campaign – were that all the time it would take. There would be at least 3,000 Pakistan army and Frontier Corps soldiers wounded, with hundreds of them maimed for life. There would be thousands of widows, orphans and grieving parents and families.

The aim of the US and its dwindling number of international supporters in Afghanistan is not intended to further stability in Pakistan – because a North Waziristan military operation would mightily increase the numbers of suicide and other attacks throughout the country. Their objective is to make it easier for them to claim that their war in Afghanistan is going well, as part of President Obama’s ‘New Strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.’ Thousands of civilians would have to flee from their homes in Waziristan. The social and economic cost would be immense throughout the country.

Does Pakistan think this is a price worth paying?
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The US Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mullen, stated unequivocally on September 22 that Pakistan’s government and armed forces “use violent extremism as an instrument of policy”, and were responsible for the recent attack on the US embassy in Kabul, as well as “the 28 June attack against the Inter-Continental Hotel in Kabul and a host of other smaller but effective operations.”

Now Mullen isn’t the sharpest knife in the box, and has made many fatuous statements ever since he got into a position in which he thought that he could get headlines by making fantastic statements; but even for him, this was a lulu. He has also declared that the government and intelligence service and army of Pakistan have killed, or want to kill, American citizens. He has announced that Pakistan “jeopardises not only the prospect of our strategic partnership, but also Pakistan’s opportunity to be a respected nation with legitimate regional influence.”

He has utterly destroyed any tiny lingering trust between America and Pakistan.

Then, amazingly, on the one hand he declares that Pakistan is an international pariah and not to be regarded as reliable on any account, and then says “With Pakistan’s help we have disrupted al-Qaeda and its senior leadership in the border regions and degraded its ability to plan and conduct terror attacks”. This is so illogical and off-the-planet as to make one wonder if he had had a bevy of Scotches before he went in to the legislators’ Committee to which he testified.

And I’ll tell Mullen something he doesn’t know: Yes, Pakistan’s intelligence agency does have liaison with extremists. The Directorate of Inter Services Intelligence maintains contact with all sorts of loony, barbaric and evil organisations. Just as does the CIA. It does so, because it knows the people of these groups are ruthless, powerful and extremely dangerous and it wants to have a handle on what they do, and, if possible, engage them in negotiations on behalf of government. Just like the CIA did with, for example, Libya’s lunatic and murderous Gadaffi.

Mullen’s wacky pronouncements have pushed US credibility in Pakistan to an even further low, which might have been expected, given what his boss, defence secretary Panetta, has been spouting.

The US is threatening to invade Pakistan rather than endorse ongoing and extremely delicate negotiations with tribal and other fanatics in its western regions. The intention was made clear when Panetta, referring to Pakistan’s supposed support of militant operations in Afghanistan, declared that “We’re not going to allow these types of attacks to go on.”

I’ve got news for Mullen and Panetta. If they imagine the Pakistan Army will be a pushover like the Iraqis, they have another think coming. If US forces attempt an incursion into Pakistan in North Waziristan or anywhere else they will meet reaction not only from the tribes and militants but from a proud and professional army which will not accept flagrant violation of national sovereignty. I know the Pakistan Army, and I state flatly that man-for-man it will hammer any opponent, no matter if the skies are horizon-filled with US bombers.

Does America think this is a price worth paying?
 
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Muse, Sir, I am afraid the piece is too Pakistani-cultural for me to decipher the hidden meanings of this article. Is it Kiyani who is the "Decider" of Pakistani strategy vis a vis the US, India, Afghanistan, the Taliban, etc? Do the PA and ISI operate with a strong one-man rule type decision process? Or is there a committee process of which Kiyani is the Chairman? Is Wajahat S Khan a person who has the confidence of the leading PA personalities?
 
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Pakistani-cultural
???

Let me attempt an explanation, and forgive my presumption, it's not meant to offer offense:

The author wishes to say something about Kayani and the kind of person he is and it's implications - and the author's method is suggest how the kinds of jobs persons like Musharrraf and Kayani have done and how those jobs shaped these men. Kayani as in an infantryman , the author suggests is prone to see the achieving of objectives in a unconventional way, in addition, he suggests that kayani is very cautious - and goes on to ask: Was Kayani ‘groomed’ by the Establishment – Pakistan’s Deep State – to be the right guy in the wrong place at the wrong time, at least for the rest of us?


One has to wonder if Mr. Kayani reads Mr. Khan? and if he does, whether he is aware of the "concerns" a section of opinion harbor about Mr. Kayani.
 
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Its a politically motivated article the writer just don't like jia ul haq or musharraf.

And a another conspiracy theory i must say.
 
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Muse sire, this article is already posted in the relevant thread
 
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???

One has to wonder if Mr. Kayani reads Mr. Khan? and if he does, whether he is aware of the "concerns" a section of opinion harbor about Mr. Kayani.


Muse,

It is too late for Kiyani to change----. That article is pretty correct in its analysis of the personalities----. A person with the personality of Kiyani would never be the commanding general in the u s army----in a supporting general category yes---but not the leader---. Americans are too much into personality and leadership analysis----.

He was a poor choice of a leader to take charge of the army at this crucial stage----even at this critical stage---Kiyani is crying about his 'broken heart' at Mullen's accusations----'OH we had a very good relationship and understanding"----'It is painful to hear these accusations"-----.
 
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And therefore the "concerns" -- English know a thing or two about the personality types in the sub-continent -- Buy the pashtun, Honor the Balouch, Rule the Poun-jabbi, etc -- it seems the American think Kayani collects honors -- the US intelligence services are in a fighting mood -- but it is said that Pakistanis know a thing or two about US personality types, that the US and tribal Pashtuns share a personality trait, and that is that unless you DEMONSTRATE the will to not just challenge them but berate and knock em down, they just can't get themselves to respect you -- but of course one wonders if Mr. Kayani knows of this personality trait that the tribal Pashtun and the American share
 
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