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India involved in terrorist activities: Malik

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India involved in terrorist activities: Malik

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: Pakistan is not involved in terrorist activities in Afghanistan, Adviser to Prime Minister on Interior Rehman Malik said on Friday, adding that these were all allegations by India which was itself involved in terrorism, reported a private TV channel.

According to ARY One World, Malik told an American TV channel that Pakistan was fully co-operating with Afghanistan, and that it was India that was involved in terrorist activities. He said Pakistan was a sovereign state and would not allow foreign troops to take action inside its territory.

Denying the presence of Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan, Malik said the country’s army was capable of taking action against militants. He said Pakistan, Afghanistan and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) should evolve a joint course of action against terrorism.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Is Malik referring to Indian support for BLA and clandestine dealing with the seperatists in Balochistan? :what:
 
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Bari jaldi khail aya ha kah India is supporting terrorism. Why in the hell are the CBMs going for? A complete waste of time.
 
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India involved in terrorist activities: Malik

Daily Times Monitor


According to ARY One World, Malik told an American TV channel that Pakistan was fully co-operating with Afghanistan, and that it was India that was involved in terrorist activities. He said Pakistan was a sovereign state and would not allow foreign troops to take action inside its territory.


Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

The guy has really said this thing? Means pakistan "was" co operating and "was" a sovereign state and not now.
Is he serious about what he is saying?
 
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The guy has really said this thing? Means pakistan "was" co operating and "was" a sovereign state and not now.
Is he serious about what he is saying?

You're nitpicking. The fact is that India are now accused and...since their doesn't seem to be adequate defense
Guilty

:enjoy:
 
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You're nitpicking. The fact is that India are now accused and...since their doesn't seem to be adequate defense
Guilty

:enjoy:

Dude, you crack me up.

Since you have accused us, aren't you supposed to provide proof? All we have to do is wait it out while you fail to do so...
 
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No, Rehman Malik accused India, now India has to show that they are not guilty.
 
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You're nitpicking. The fact is that India are now accused and...since their doesn't seem to be adequate defense
Guilty

:enjoy:

Hey, even I don't think he must have said that probably the journalist error in typing, but if he really meant that then it is a big issue. But as somebody is accusing one country then it's his/her job to provide the proof and then we will defend:cheers:
 
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What will the world find more believeable?

Whatever is repeated more frequently, and at the highest levels - something that India has a head start on.

Accusations tend to carry a lot more weight when repeated after a major terrorist attack. If this trend continues, then another press statement after the next attack, and a quote of what Narayanan said, would end up having a lot of impact, and then just continue that trend.

Make sure your Ambassadors and other diplomats in Western capitals make it on Western TV netwroks to repeat said allegations, and Narayanan's quotes.

However I would rather both sides back down - Pakistan has made a huge step forward in CBM's, if you look at the trade policy announced by this government. It is set to boost imports from India, and bilateral trade in general, tremendously. That is the way forward.

Current Moderation in public opinion on Kashmir also bodes well for the future, since a resolution to the dispute can be achieved, and such CBM's will help continue to moderate opinion.
 
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Whatever is repeated more frequently, and at the highest levels - something that India has a head start on.

Accusations tend to carry a lot more weight when repeated after a major terrorist attack. If this trend continues, then another press statement after the next attack, and a quote of what Narayanan said, would end up having a lot of impact, and then just continue that trend.

Make sure your Ambassadors and other diplomats in Western capitals make it on Western TV netwroks to repeat said allegations, and Narayanan's quotes.

However I would rather both sides back down - Pakistan has made a huge step forward in CBM's, if you look at the trade policy announced by this government. It is set to boost imports from India, and bilateral trade in general, tremendously. That is the way forward.

Current Moderation in public opinion on Kashmir also bodes well for the future, since a resolution to the dispute can be achieved, and such CBM's will help continue to moderate opinion.

Agree with you AM that both countries have to back down and move towards making a positive environment.
 
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Whatever is repeated more frequently, and at the highest levels - something that India has a head start on.

Accusations tend to carry a lot more weight when repeated after a major terrorist attack. If this trend continues, then another press statement after the next attack, and a quote of what Narayanan said, would end up having a lot of impact, and then just continue that trend.

Make sure your Ambassadors and other diplomats in Western capitals make it on Western TV netwroks to repeat said allegations, and Narayanan's quotes.

However I would rather both sides back down - Pakistan has made a huge step forward in CBM's, if you look at the trade policy announced by this government. It is set to boost imports from India, and bilateral trade in general, tremendously. That is the way forward.

Current Moderation in public opinion on Kashmir also bodes well for the future, since a resolution to the dispute can be achieved, and such CBM's will help continue to moderate opinion.

Bang on target.

Just a few arguments>>>
CBMs: Good move.

Kashmir: LoC into IB; the Indian public won't settle for anything less. Plus, you cannot moderate public opinion of 1 billion people over something as strong as this.

Accusations: Will continue; if you were in our shoes, you would do the same thing.

AM: The largest danger to Pakistan is not India, it is its own image and the really intelligent guerilla war brewing inside it. Plus your chest-thumping about moral support (K, Taliban) and ISI's strength in the past is haunting you guys now.

Most posters here ignore these.
 
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'RAW Is Training 600 Baluchis In Afghanistan': Mushahid Hussain

'Raw is Training 600 Baluchis in Afghanistan' : Mushahid Hussain

14 may 2006: Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed is a man who wears many caps: he is the Pakistan Senate foreign relations committee chairman, the secretary-general of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League, and widely regarded as Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's right-hand man. A former editor of a major national daily, Hussain knows a thing or two about the unrest in Baluchistan. It was a parliamentary committee headed by him that had recommended that the government grant autonomy to the Baluchis, and ensure their province wasn't forgotten in the rapid economic development of Pakistan.

M H AHSAN met Hussain at his residence in Islamabad's upscale E-sector, recently on his visit to Pakistan. Though the joke here is that the E is for Extremely Rich, Hussain's own home is modest. His phone keeps ringing as he takes calls from politicians of all ideological hues. Between calls, he talks about the Great Game India's playing inside Afghanistan and its possibility of destabilizing the region.
Excerpts:

Why should Pakistan complain about India having several consulates in Afghanistan?

They are two sovereign states. India currently has an extensive diplomatic presence in Afghanistan. It includes the Indian embassy in Kabul and another four consulates in Kandahar, Jalalabad, Mazar-e-Sharif and Herat. These Indian diplomatic missions serve as launching pads for undertaking covert operations against Pakistan, from Afghan soil.

Particularly, the Indian consulates in Kandahar and Jalalabad and their embassy in Kabul are used for clandestine activities inside Pakistan in general and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Baluchistan in particular.

Are you alleging that the Indian Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) is involved?

Indian diplomatic and RAW officials have significant ingress in the Afghan ministry of tribal affairs, and are exploiting it to conduct covert activities. Indian agents are instrumental in arranging meetings of tribal elders and Afghans with dual nationalities with Indian consulate officials in Jalalabad, and assisting them in spotting and recruiting suitable tribal elders from Jalalabad and Pakistan's North and South Waziristan Agencies for covert activities.

Are you then saying that RAW has managed a strong presence inside Afghanistan after the ouster of the Taliban?

RAW has established its training camps in Afghanistan in collaboration with the Northern Alliance remnants. Approximately 600 ferraris, or Baluchi tribal dissidents, are getting specialized training to handle explosives, engineer bomb blasts, and use sophisticated weapons in these camps.

Has India revived its links with the leaders of the erstwhile Northern Alliance who are in power in Afghanistan today?

India has invested heavily in its old connections with the leaders of the erstwhile Northern Alliance. It has sizeable support in Afghan parliament. Before the Afghan elections last year, the Indian ambassador called the Northern Alliance's major leadership at his residence and paid them a handsome amount to run their election campaign.

Are allegations of India placing troops in Afghanistan correct?

India is gradually increasing the number of its paramilitary personnel in Afghanistan. It is stationing them there on the pretext of providing security and protection to the Border Roads Organization, which is constructing the Zaranj-Dilaram road, and its consulates. From a few personnel, the strength of Indian troops has reached almost that of a company size force and even includes Black Cat Commandos.

Is the Afghan state helping India in these operations?

Yes, the Afghan Police, the Border Security Force and customs officials facilitate the visit of Indian diplomatic staff and intelligence agents to border areas, and help them to hold meetings with dissatisfied pro-Afghan dissidents, anti-state elements, and elders of the area. In this context, meetings of tribal elders are arranged by the Afghan intelligence agency (Riyast-i-Amniyat-i-Milli or RAM) at the behest of those RAW officials who serve in different diplomatic offices of India in Afghanistan. Indian agents are carrying out clandestine activities in the border areas of Khost and in Pakistan's tribal areas of Miranshah with the active support of Afghan Border Security Force officials.

If you remember, after Pakistan took action against the Baluchistan Liberation Army and other elements inside the province, the Indian external affairs ministry was quick to issue an unprecedented statement in December 2005; their strategic writers have started focusing on Baluchistan in their articles. This does not bode well for peace and stability in the region. I have no doubt that this will backfire on India.

Pak feels India is propping up the Baluch war: When the Pakistan government decided to ban the Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA) last fortnight, it was tacitly admitting to the situation having gone completely awry in the province of Baluchistan. For 17 months now, the BLA's engaged the battle-hardened Pakistani army, with alarming successes. Every now and then, BLA activists slip through the security cordon the army has thrown around sensitive installations to blow up bridges, rail tracks, electricity towers, and worse, gas pipelines.

The BLA's firepower, and its ability to undertake terrorist attacks with impunity, had months earlier raised the specter of a foreign power assisting the militant group.

Though several officials privately claimed that the Indian hand was fanning the discontent in Baluchistan, they desisted from naming it publicly.

Such diplomatic niceties were cast aside in December when New Delhi accused the Pak army of large-scale human rights abuses in Baluchistan. Not only did Islamabad ask New Delhi to douse the fire of insurgency in its own backyard, President Pervez Musharraf even told a TV channel that India was pumping funds into Baluchistan to create mischief there. New Delhi maintained a stony silence.

In late February, Musharraf presented Afghan President Hamid Karzai, on his visit here, documents detailing how India was using bases in Afghanistan to foment trouble in Baluchistan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. Till date, Afghanistan hasn't rebutted the charges.

Yet, as Islamabad battles insurgents, it is simultaneously under American pressure to improve ties with India and Afghanistan. As one senior foreign official told to this writer, "Matters are improving and we are talking to the Afghans and Indians all the time. We in no way want to put roadblocks in the composite dialogue with India and do not want to annoy the Afghans and give them an excuse to run to New Delhi."

This geopolitical compulsion is why no Pakistani minister or official is willing to go on record about India's destabilizing maneuvers in Pakistan.

Some feel that the BLA and tribal leader Nawab Akbar Bugti, whose Bugti tribe is at the vanguard of the armed movement, haven't been weaned away from the path of violence only because India has stoked their aspirations—and helped augment their stockpile of weapons. They say the BLA's demands are what most independent states encounter in their history. These include greater autonomy, a better share in the revenue accruing from the resources of the province, and a check on development projects which threaten to alienate the tribals from their land.

In an attempt to establish the state's writ, the army is searching for Akbar Bugti, who has gone underground.
 
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Gr8 so he knows how many people are getting trained. That's really wonderful
 
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