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Imran raises the bar for other leaders to follow

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Imran raises the bar for other leaders to follow

Demonstration in Pakistan’s tribal areas today may not force US to end its drone campaign, but it at least sets a strong precedent

By Farhan Bokhari | Special to Gulf News
Published: 20:00 October 6, 2012


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When Imran Khan, Pakistan’s cricket star-turned-politician, ventures into Pakistan’s tribal areas today to demand an end to US drone strikes on the country’s territory bordering Afghanistan, he will surely be making history.

For years, Imran has been the lone voice among Pakistani politicians, campaigning for an end to controversial drone attacks carried out by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The CIA’s rationale behind such attacks is squarely that of targeting a region which the US claims has become a hotbed of militants who have routinely attacked western troops in Afghanistan.

Yet, over time, evidence has piled up suggesting that many of the casualties in these attacks are innocent civilians, including women and children, who are just caught in the cross-fire.

While some of these attacks may have targeted militants, the presence of an overwhelmingly large number of innocent people among the victims only raises profound questions over the legitimacy of using drones.

Though considered a potent weapon in military terms, involving no risk to human life among western military troops, given the pilot-less character of drones, they have indeed created a far bigger risk to prospects of stability than what is measurable in statistical terms.

In less than two years from now, the US-led western military alliance deployed in Afghanistan will reach its deadline of withdrawing troops from Afghanistan. Between now and then, if indeed the withdrawal proceeds on schedule, thousands of western troops along with their military hardware, which by some estimates could be worth approximately $60 billion (Dh220.68 billion), will leave the perils of conflict-ridden Afghanistan.

Yet, what will surely stay behind will be the legacies from the past 11 years since a US-led campaign was launched on Afghanistan, following the terror attacks on New York on September 11, 2001. Among those legacies, drones and the destruction they have caused will be remembered for years to come.

While difficult to measure in statistical terms, the anger that has been triggered with these attacks will not end with the withdrawal of western troops, even if a peace formula between the key combatants is finally reached in Afghanistan.

The record from the attacks in Pakistan’s tribal areas bordering Afghanistan clearly suggests that the policy has become increasingly controversial over time. Across Pakistan, where anti-US sentiment has grown over time, the matter of drones has become central to the criticism of Washington’s policies.

While Imran’s campaign by his own admission seeks to press the case on moral grounds, there is no strong political dimension to this case. Imran has indeed become Pakistan’s first mainstream politician to have ventured towards a frontier region that is widely considered to be unsafe beyond the challenges which surround other parts of the country.

Imran’s gesture stands in sharp contrast to a leader like President Asif Ali Zardari, who has not ventured into the frontier region bordering Afghanistan during his four-year presidency. Zardari’s refusal to step in to a region that is central to Pakistan’s ongoing campaign against militants has only reinforced his character as a “bunker leader”, who is simply unable to lead his country from the front.

Going forward, Imran’s example now raises the challenge for other Pakistani leaders to follow suit. Though Imran’s demonstration today in itself may not force the US to end its drone campaign, it at least sets a strong precedent, recording a public protest by Pakistanis to the use of what is clearly a controversial military tactic.

There is indeed also a strong global dimension to the use of drones in Pakistan. Elsewhere too, such as in Yemen, the CIA has begun employing a similar tactic disregarding their controversial character. The mere possibility, no matter how remote, of innocent deaths caught in the cross-fire must force a review of a tactic that may be successful militarily, but defeats the very objective of consolidating a military gain.

An ultimate assessment, if made just on the strength of body counts, will surely just miss out the wider point raised. A recent study released by Stanford University in the US raised some compelling questions pointing towards the imperfect nature of the gains from carrying out repeated drone attacks. More than a decade after the New York terrorist attacks triggered a US-led global military belligerence in the name of fighting terror, evidence such as the findings of the Stanford University report must lead to a fundamental shift in global policies on tackling security challenges.

Farhan Bokhari is a Pakistan-based commentator who writes on political and economic matters.

Imran raises the bar for other leaders to follow | GulfNews.com
 
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Going forward, Imran’s example now raises the challenge for other Pakistani leaders to follow suit. Though Imran’s demonstration today in itself may not force the US to end its drone campaign, it at least sets a strong precedent, recording a public protest by Pakistanis to the use of what is clearly a controversial military tactic.

There is indeed also a strong global dimension to the use of drones in Pakistan. Elsewhere too, such as in Yemen, the CIA has begun employing a similar tactic disregarding their controversial character. The mere possibility, no matter how remote, of innocent deaths caught in the cross-fire must force a review of a tactic that may be successful militarily, but defeats the very objective of consolidating a military gain........

Imran raises the bar for other leaders to follow | GulfNews.com

Pakistan's other leaders will not follow suit, and the use of drones as a military tactic is here to stay. PTI's march will be just as much as a flash in the pan as DPC's. Remember their outcry?
 
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Pakistan's other leaders will not follow suit, and the use of drones as a military tactic is here to stay. PTI's march will be just as much as a flash in the pan as DPC's. Remember their outcry?

Result of that will be presented to everyone in a plate!
 
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Result of that will be presented to everyone in a plate!

Its too little too late.

He should not have waited for, foreign inspiration.

More effective, would have been ouster of Zardari.
 
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Imran Khan holds no important post just a leader of political party that has absolutely No power so far in pakistan one cant compare him to other leaders who will be Guaranteed a target in FATA areas and be fools to go their.
 
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Other leaders are such a low on morals that one of them called him biggest MUNAFIQ in Pakistan. Shame on those american stooges of ppp/pmln/jui/anp/mqm.
 
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A very poignant article about Imran Khan.

Quote


When we are alone

S Iftikhar Murshed
Sunday, October 14, 2012


“The good Lord set definite limits on man’s wisdom, but set no limits to his stupidity-and that’s not fair,” lamented Konrad Adenauer, chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1949 to 1963. Forty-five years after the death of the man, who led his nation out of the ruins of World War II to become a major power, the politicians of Pakistan have proved how accurate he had been in his assessment of human imbecility.

Adenauer, the quintessential realist, was quick to establish close relations with Germany’s bitterest enemies, notably France and the United States, as that was the only way he could set his country on the trajectory of phenomenal economic growth. Emotions had no place in his politics. But in Pakistan, the leadership, whether in the government or in the opposition, have unfailingly exploited public anger so easily stirred by perceived violations of national sovereignty or insults to religion.

Ensnared in the dreadful hold of emotional politics, Imran Khan vowed that he would lead an anti-drone “peace march” with a hundred thousand of his followers to Kotkai, South Waziristan. But the tsunami he had threatened to unleash fizzled out, and no more than a mere 10,000 people joined the march. The chief of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) was prohibited by the relevant authorities from advancing beyond Tank, a sleepy little town outside the conflict-ravaged Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata). The reason for this was the perilous security situation, as is apparent from a recent report which reveals that, three years after the commencement of the military operations in Fata, codenamed Rah-e-Nijat, only Sararogha, which is one of the six subdivisions in South Waziristan, has been completely pacified. But this did not stop the PTI leader and his supporters from projecting the escapade as a stupendous success.

Imran Khan’s speech on October 7 in Tank was the usual mix of rabid anti-Americanism interlaced with religious exhortations. With unmistakable sacerdotal contempt, he admonished President Zardari to fear God and not the Americans. Drones, it was claimed, had killed mainly civilians, but not a word was uttered about the 35,000 or more, men, women and children ruthlessly slaughtered in terrorist attacks perpetrated by the TTP and its allies.

But the PTI leader is merely one of many politicians infected with the virus of paranoiac nationalism and religious self-righteousness. Maulana Fazlur Rehman, who heads his own faction of the Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), accused him of being “an agent of the West,” and then, unbelievably, added: “Imran Khan should ask himself why people call me a representative of Islam and him of Zionism.” Despite his fulminations against the West, the Wikileaks cables reveal that Maulana Fazlur Rehman had assured the US ambassador in Pakistan that he would unhesitatingly promote American interests in the country if Washington backed his prime ministerial ambitions.

The self-styled “representative of Islam,” whose ability to make morbidly absurd statements has never abandoned him, said that the actual purpose of the PTI’s aborted march to Kotkai was to provide Imran Khan’s former brother-in-law, a British Jew, an opportunity of filming the “sensitive” tribal areas of Pakistan. An amused Islamabad-based diplomat commented: “Perhaps the good Maulana should consider a film career for himself. He would make an excellent Santa Claus for which he has the beard and the build and is never without his bag full of surprises. We often refer to him as ‘the ubiquitous Santa Claus of Pakistani politics.’ “

Last week, the PTI vice chairman, former foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, appeared on two prime-time television talk shows and, for reasons difficult to fathom, was tremulous with a sense of triumph that the purpose of the “peace march” had been achieved. Whatever that undefined purpose was, drone strikes will continue. The number of Predator attacks during the Bush administration was 52 and this increased sharply under President Obama who has, till now, authorised 296 strikes. The trend is set to continue, regardless of who wins the November 6 US presidential election.

In his usual theatrical style, Shah Mahmood Qureshi was vehemently critical of drone attacks which, he said, were illegal and violated Pakistan’s sovereignty. But during his tenure as foreign minister from March 31, 2008, to February 9, 2011, there were 184 such strikes (33 in 2008, 48 in 2009, 97 in 2010, and six in the first two months of 2011). Despite this, his resignation from the government was not prompted by Predator attacks, about which he professes to feel so strongly, but because of his bitter disappointment on being offered the Water and Power portfolio in the cabinet reshuffle of February 2011.

The Cambridge-educated PTI vice chairman claims that the drones have wrought havoc with the civilian population of the tribal areas. But reports about this are hugely divergent. Conclusive evidence has emerged that from 2004 to 2007 there were only ten drone strikes, and the first such attack, on June 18, 2004, resulted in the killing of the Pakistani militant, Nek Muhammad Wazir, in Wana, South Waziristan. This was followed by the elimination of Al-Qaeda’s Haitham al-Yemeni on May 14, 2005, in North Waziristan. Next in line, on November 30, 2005, was the outfit’s third in command, Abu Hamza Rabia, near Miranshah.

By March 2009, US officials announced that nine of Al-Qaeda’s top 20 commanders had been eliminated in Predator strikes. Pakistan’s archenemy, the TTP chief, Baitullah Mehsud, was killed on August 5 of that year and the next casualty three weeks later was Tahir Yuldashev, the leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. This was followed by the killing of Al-Qaeda’s Ilyas Kashmiri on September 8, 2009.

The list goes on and on, and this year Al-Qaeda’s operations organiser, Abdullah Khorasani, was killed on January 10, followed by the outfit’s chief in Pakistan, Badr Mansoor (February 8); Al-Qaeda’s second in command, Abu Yahya al-Libi (June 4); the leader of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, Abdul Jabbar (August 24, his predecessor, Abdul Haq, was killed in 2010); and Al-Qaeda’s coordinator with the TTP, Abu Kasha al-Iraqi (September 24).

This is only a small fraction of the confirmed fatalities among Al-Qaeda/TTP leaders. The leadership of these outfits has been decimated by the precision Predator attacks and a termination of these strikes would work to their advantage. What emerges is that the anti-drone hysteria is inspired by no higher a motive than gaining pre-election political mileage. One has only to scratch the surface and the truth is laid bare.

On Tuesday a brave little girl, Malala Yousafzai, was singled out and shot in the head by the TTP in her school bus while on her way home. She had merely sought her inalienable right to education in accordance with God’s first commandment in the Holy Quran.

The reaction of Imran Khan was: “In the guise of the Taliban, there are several criminal gangs who don’t even spare PTI workers by demanding extortion money... Drone attacks are carried out with the consent of the government, and, in reaction, the Taliban attack civilians.” When, God willing, the child recovers these words will leave an indelible imprint on her inner consciousness. One can now understand what Voltaire meant when he said: “We are rarely proud when we are alone.”

The writer is the publisher of Criterion quarterly. Email: iftimurshed@ gmail.com

When we are alone - S Iftikhar Murshed

UnQuote

Dont think anything else needs to be said about PTI's leader.
 
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That is a very biased article, and I am the one who calls him Taliban Khan. It makes no mention of the Salala incident or the many civilian deaths. A recent article in the Daily Fail stated that one in 50 deaths are those of terrorists. Call that collateral but to me, one in 50 is too high. 49 innocent children, women and men die because of one man.
 
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That is a very biased article, and I am the one who calls him Taliban Khan. It makes no mention of the Salala incident or the many civilian deaths. A recent article in the Daily Fail stated that one in 50 deaths are those of terrorists. Call that collateral but to me, one in 50 is too high. 49 innocent children, women and men die because of one man.

Serious dude ?

You may strive to be authentic when commenting ? or is this effort similar to Zardari's economic success stories ?

http://www.defence.pk/forums/national-political-issues/213181-when-you-alone.html#post3501446
 
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From a coward sitting in London - There is nothing more sad than one mass murderer pointing fingers at another. :rolleyes:

yeah right and a mighty coward who is scared to call spade a spade and wishes to negotiate with morons who killed 40000 of his own country men .. Great going :tdown:
 
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yeah right and a mighty coward who is scared to call spade a spade and wishes to negotiate with morons who killed 40000 of his own country men .. Great going :tdown:

Diplomacy is the solution for this crazy war.It takes an idiot to pull the trigger but a genius to bring peace. Decide your side.

It takes nothing but a phone call for the "loyal subject of the Queen" [By oath] who pretends to be a Pakistani, to talk absolute rubbish to the media and get its ignorant minion followers excited.
BUT it takes guts to not only say the words but say them on the ground and follow them up with actions. The difference between a fugitive and a statesman! so to speak.

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