Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Forget about Afghanistan, even China can't do anything in case Pakistan is attacked. though some lip service is needed in diplomacy.
China can definitely intervene and save Pakistan's nuclear a**, but the Chinese always see if the cost/benefit ratio is in their favor first. Depending on the scale of attack Chinese intervention will be between unlikely to very unlikely.
Mine toooooMy personal feeling is that this Karzai character makes anti-Pakistan statements whenever he recieves more $$$ from the indos. And when he wants some more, pro-Pakistan statements start to come out.
To be honest, Mr Karzai does not really mean what he says. What concerns me more is why does he need to make such a statement ? Are the Pakistani people so insecure that they feel that a war with either India or the US is inevitable
...
Sometimes, one must learn to distinguish between "FEEL GOOD" statements and reality.
Yes - one must distinguish between "feel good" statements and reality. I bet it feels good to think about the Afghans siding with India in any future war. But let's look at the facts.
Afghanistan has heavily leaned on Pakistan for the past thirty years. Though in the past, during the British era, Afghanistan closed it's borders when Muslims tried to migrate away from British rule, Pakistan buried the hatchet and literally one-third of Afghanistan moved into Pakistan. We took a principled stand and helped our Afghan brothers, US support started coming after two years(when the war started, CIA expected the mighty Red Army to crush the resistance within three months - they had been undefeated thus far), and for two years Pakistan supported the Afghan Mujahideen on it's own.
Tens of thousands of Pakistani youth joined the Afghan jihad, along with Muslims coming in from all over the world. The Pakistan Army SSG officer endearingly called "Colonel Imaam" trained Afghan groups in special forces warfare, and had also been a teacher of Mullah Omer, who now heads the Afghan resistance. When the Soviets deployed their Spetznaz crack troops and the Mujahideen were overpowered in the face of superior tactics and high-tech weaponry, our SSG was covertly deployed deep inside Afghan territory to help the resistance. There were pitched battles near areas such as Panjshair that the Soviets could not overwhelm, and even they publically raised protests about their suspicion that they were fighting Pakistani SSG units and not the ragtag Afghan militia. When the US-backed "Pakistani Taliban" kidnapped Colonel Imam, Mullah Omer himself sent a delegation to request that he be freed.
Very recently when the US pressured Pakistan on the Haqqani group after Adm. Mike Mullen's public statements alleging Pakistan having ties with this sub-group of the resistance, the central Afghan resistance issued public statements to the effect that Pakistan was not responsible for the Haqqani group. This surprised many international analysts, because the Mujahideen leadership was publically trying to alleviate pressure from Pakistan - they didn't have to come to Pakistan's help like that. The western intelligence agencies have been alleging for years that a segment within the ISI is playing a very similar role to the one they did in the 80's against the Soviet army, alleging that this segment(they call it the "S Wing" of the ISI) comes up with strategic planning and overall tactical direction and guidance for the Afghan resistance. I don't know if their allegations are true, but if it is, Pakistan is absolutely right to help the Afghans repel another invader. When we helped them in the 80's it was lauded internationally, our morality cannot simply re-define based on the US mood at the time.
So do some research, learn some facts, and then some and play some more. The Afghan victory against the Americans would be a victory for Islam and the Pakistani people, perhaps it might not be a victory for our political elite, but that's not bad really. India poured alot of money into the puppet regime in the Soviet era as well, the army India trains is the one the local resistance groups fight, this made the locals hate India then, and it makes them hate India now.
i don't think his point was the Soviet-Afghan war
---------- Post added at 01:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:29 PM ----------
Incidentally. Why is the guy with long hair and a black scarf supposed to be an SSG officer? Any particular reason for singling him out?
so you liked the look of him in a film and decided he was SSG?