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New confessions force India to reflect on anti-Muslim bias

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New confessions force India to reflect on anti-Muslim bias
source
By Simon Denyer and Rama Lakshmi

When a series of bomb attacks ripped through Muslim neighborhoods, mosques and shrines in India in recent years, suspicion fell firmly on a familiar culprit: Islamist terror. After each incident, scores of Indian Muslims were rounded up, and many were tortured. Confessions were extracted, the names of various militant “masterminds” leaked to the media and links with Pakistan widely alleged.

Never mind that most of the victims were Muslims; it seemed natural to many people, from New Delhi to Washington, to assume the attacks were the work of extremist Pakistani militants and their Indian Muslim sympathizers, intent on fanning religious tensions in India and disrupting the peace process between the nuclear-armed rivals.

But those investigations, and the assumptions behind them, were turned on their head early this year by the confession of a Hindu holy man. Swami Aseemanand told a magistrate that the bomb makers were neither Pakistani nor Muslim but Hindu radicals, bent on revenge for many earlier acts of terrorism across India that had been perpetrated by Muslims.

His statement, subsequently leaked to the media, alleged that a network of radicals stretched right up to senior levels of the country’s Hindu nationalist right wing. It also exposed deep-seated prejudices within the police against the country’s minority Muslim population.

Ironically, the charges may also have helped India and Pakistan to get back to the negotiating table last month after relations broke down in the wake of the 2008 attacks on Mumbai.

Like many Indians, Aseemanand was furious with terrorist attacks in the country carried out by Muslims. “We should answer bombs with bombs,” he told a small group of Hindu extremists in June 2006, only to discover a plot was already well under way.

In the ensuing 18 months, bombs were placed on bicycles in a Muslim cemetery in the western town of Malegaon, hidden under a granite slab in a mosque in Hyderabad and left in a lunchbox in an important Sufi shrine in Ajmer, all targets Aseemanand said he suggested.

In another attack, 68 people, most of them Pakistanis, were killed when suitcases packed with explosives were placed next to gasoline bottles on a train headed from western India to Pakistan. Many of the victims were unable to escape the inferno because of bars on the train windows, and their bodies were burned beyond recognition.

Evidence that radical Hindus, including an army colonel who is suspected of supplying the technical expertise and the explosives, were behind several of these bombings began to surface more than two years ago, and several people were arrested, including Aseemanand.

But his statement is the first clear evidence that Indian Hindu terrorists were to blame for the deaths of Pakistani Muslim travelers on the Samjhauta, or Friendship, Express.

Pakistan reacted to the news with ill-disguised glee, arguing that the botched investigations and the subsequent confession confirmed its suspicions that India “lacked the courage” to prosecute radical Hindus.

In India, there was sober reflection in some quarters about prejudices against Muslims. The Hindu right’s old adage, that “while not every Muslim is a terrorist, every terrorist is a Muslim,” could no longer be trotted out with a straight face.

India had been insisting it would not restart a formal peace process with Pakistan until that country properly investigated and prosecuted state-sponsored militants blamed for the attacks on Mumbai, which left 166 people dead.

Pakistan responded in kind, demanding a fuller and faster investigation into the train attack. India put on a brave face, but the revelations were an embarrassment, one official privately admitted, as Indian media judged that their government had lost some of the moral high ground.

In a sense, though, the episode provided the political cover at home for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to agree this month to do what he secretly wanted and restart the peace process with Pakistan, said Commodore Uday Bhaskar of the National Maritime Foundation, a New Delhi think tank.

“Before, terrorism was projected in public opinion in black-and-white terms, that all terrorism was because of Muslims and because of Pakistan,” he said. Aseemanand’s confession “had an unintended positive kind of fallout and introduced a malleability into the India-Pakistan interaction.”

More damaging were Aseemanand’s accusations against high-ranking members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or RSS, a religious group that spreads its Hindu revivalist ideology, known as Hindutva, through a network of schools, charities and clubs.

The RSS, the ideological parent of the country’s main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, is also engaged in a sometimes violent contest with Christian missionary groups operating in India.

According to Aseemanand, the main organizer of the attacks was an RSS worker called Sunil Joshi, in his mid-30s, from the town of Dewas in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

Relatives describe Joshi as a conservative and deeply religious man of very few words. Joshi viewed Muslims as “worthless,” his niece said. In December 2007, after most of the bomb attacks had taken place, Joshi was gunned down in the street near his family home. Police say Joshi’s gang turned on him, but some investigators and family members believe he was killed because he was about to turn himself in to the police.

RSS national executive member Indresh Kumar, suspected of mentoring and financing the bomb-making gang, said in an interview that the accusations against him represented a “deep political conspiracy” by the ruling Congress party to defame him and the RSS.

Certainly, some members of the secular Congress party have enjoyed and exploited the Hindu nationalist opposition’s discomfort over the allegations. Rahul Gandhi, a leading member of Parliament and heir apparent to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, even told the US ambassador in 2009 that radicalized Hindu groups were a bigger threat to India than support for Lashkar-i-Taiba, a militant group that is accused in the Mumbai attacks, according to a cable released by WikiLeaks.

Gandhi was widely criticized for that assertion, but the RSS has found itself on the defensive. In a series of conversations with The Washington Post, the group’s leaders portrayed the bomb makers as either paid agents of Pakistani military intelligence or simply as a violent splinter group of their peaceful movement.

Ajai Sahni, a terrorism expert who runs the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi, said the militants were just “the fringe of a fringe” within the Hindu right. But “the sympathies may be deeper within the core of Hindutva,” he said.

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So Indians blame others of making conspiracy theories but clearly, as shown above, they make conspiracy theories themselves too?
 
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So Indians blame others of making conspiracy theories but clearly, as shown above, they make conspiracy theories themselves too?

Everyone country has conspiracy theorists. What matters is what % of population of that country believes in those theories, and how popular they are.
 
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^ India is not behind at all even if you consider what you say.
 
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Everyone country has conspiracy theorists. What matters is what % of population of that country believes in those theories, and how popular they are.

what matters most is how good is your sources, theories and supporting primary evidence and if the international community accepts it or not.
 
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A feature that needs to pointed out, because, at least in my experience here where Pakistani and Indian posters begin comparing everything other than the subject of the thread, that there is a fundamental difference between the quality and basis of the prejudice and it's political behavior in Pakistan and India - In India it's clear that there is and it is not a recent phenomenon - though using laws such as POTA are a new phenomenon - an insidious anti-Muslim sentiment that arises from a unique view of history and sense of nationalism.

In Pakistan, on the other hand, the insistence on divinely ordained prejudice and of course divinely ordained laws to further that prejudice, puts Pakistan in an altogether different category - where as in India the anti-Muslim sentiment plays out in political discourses (read economic), in Pakistan the playing out of such sentiment has actually led to the diminishing of the state and the very social fabric -- but of course you judge for yourself
 
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what matters most is how good is your sources, theories and supporting primary evidence and if the international community accepts it or not.

Bharat is no better in that case either, since evidence for the assertions is lacking and next to non-existant. And no, international community accepting it makes no difference, that too if the international community being referred to is sections of the west who have vested interests in believing the conspiracy theories. It just means they're conspiracy theorists as well.

Btw, no, the "whole world" doesn't believe what Bharat says. Stop confusing only some sections of the west with "the whole world". If you're talking about states, only the bharati and Afghani state have made any serious accusations. Remember, bharat + afghanistan does not equal the whole world.
 
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Bharat is no better in that case either, since evidence for the assertions is lacking and next to non-existant. And no, international community accepting it makes no difference, that too if the international community being referred to is the west who have vested interests in believing the conspiracy theories. It just means they're conspiracy theorists as well.

as long as the west have an upper hand it does matters..and we are in a better position to present our case and put pressure on them.
 
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as long as the west have an upper hand it does matters..and we are in a better position to present our case and put pressure on them.

Look how seriously western states take what you say. US never accused Pakistan, Cameron changed his statement after leaving Bharat, etc. No country has made any serious accusations against Pakistan besides Bharat and Afghanistan. That tells you a lot. Some bharatis (not sure if that includes you) have deluded themselves into believing that the whole world believes what they say, when the ground reality differs heavily from it. It's even western countries, let alone the whole world.

Also, just for geographical knowledge purposes, West + India + Afghanistan does not equal the whole world.
 
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en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistan_and_state_terrorism
akistan has been accused by Bangladesh , India, Afghanistan , Iran and other nations ( including the United States,[ 1 ][ 2 ] and the United Kingdom [ 3 ] ) of its involvement in the terrorism in Kashmir, India and Afghanistan .
Satellite imagery from the FBI [ 5 ] and data produced by India ' s Research and Analysis Wing suggest the existence of several terrorist camps in Pakistan , with at least one militant admitting to being trained in the country. [6 ]
Many nonpartisan sources believe that officials within Pakistan ’ s military and the Inter- Services Intelligence (ISI ) sympathize with and aid Islamic terrorists , saying that the " ISI has provided covert but well- documented support to terrorist groups active in Kashmir, including the al-Qaeda affiliate Jaish -e - Mohammed" .[ 8 ]
Though Pakistan had previously denied involvement in terrorist activities in Kashmir, President Asif Ali Zardari admitted in July 2010 [9
Press editorials from around the world have consistently and strongly condemned Pakistan ' s "terror exports ". [15 ]
In fact , many consider that Pakistan has been playing both sides in the fight against terror , on the one hand helping to curtail terrorist activities while on the other , stoking it .[ 16 ]
Even the noted Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid has accused Pakistan' s ISI of providing help to the Taliban, [18 ] a statement echoed by many , including author Ted Galen Carpenter , who states that Pakistan has "assisted rebel forces in Kashmir even though those groups have committed terrorist acts against civilians ".[ 19 ] Author Gordon Thomas states that whilst aiding in the capture of Al Qaeda members , Pakistan "still sponsored terrorist groups in the disputed state of Kashmir, funding , training and arming them in their war on attrition against India ". </ ref> Journalist Stephen Schwartz notes that several terrorist and criminal groups are " backed by senior officers in the Pakistani army , the country ' s ISI intelligence establishment and other armed bodies of the state ". [ 20 ] According to the author Daniel Byman, "Pakistan is probably today' s most active sponsor of terrorism. "[ 21] Gordon Brown, former Prime Minister of the UK, recently stated that seventy- five percent of the terror plots in the UK had links to Pakistan.[ 22 ] Writing in The Australian Foreign , editor Greg Sheridan commented, " following the terror massacres in Mumbai , Pakistan may now be the single biggest state sponsor of terrorism, beyond even Iran. Yet it has never been listed by the US State Department as a state sponsor of terrorism"Pakistan ' s intelligence agency , the ISI , has often been accused of playing a role in major terrorist attacks across the world including the September 11 , 2001 attacks in the United States ,[24 ] [25 ] [26 ]Based on communication intercepts , US intelligence agencies concluded Pakistan ' s ISI was behind the attack on the Indian embassy in Kabul on July 7 , 2008 , a charge that the governments of India and Afghanistan had laid previously . [42 ]Pakistan is accused of giving aid to the Taliban , "which include [s ] soliciting funding for the Taliban, bankrolling Taliban operations , providing diplomatic support as the Taliban 's virtual emissaries abroad , arranging training for Taliban fighters , recruiting skilled and unskilled manpower to serve in Taliban armies , planning and directing offensives, providing and facilitating shipments of ammunition and fuel, and on several occasions apparently directly providing combat support ," as stated by the Human Rights Watch .[ 46]The Pakistani intelligence agency , the ISI , is believed to be aiding these organizations in eradicating perceived enemies or those opposed to their cause , including India , Russia , China, Israel, the US , the UK and other members of NATO.[ 53 ][ 54] [55 ] [56 ]
 
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New confessions force India to reflect on anti-Muslim bias
source
By Simon Denyer and Rama Lakshmi

When a series of bomb attacks ripped through Muslim neighborhoods, mosques and shrines in India in recent years, suspicion fell firmly on a familiar culprit: Islamist terror. After each incident, scores of Indian Muslims were rounded up, and many were tortured. Confessions were extracted, the names of various militant &#8220;masterminds&#8221; leaked to the media and links with Pakistan widely alleged.

Never mind that most of the victims were Muslims; it seemed natural to many people, from New Delhi to Washington, to assume the attacks were the work of extremist Pakistani militants and their Indian Muslim sympathizers, intent on fanning religious tensions in India and disrupting the peace process between the nuclear-armed rivals.

But those investigations, and the assumptions behind them, were turned on their head early this year by the confession of a Hindu holy man. Swami Aseemanand told a magistrate that the bomb makers were neither Pakistani nor Muslim but Hindu radicals, bent on revenge for many earlier acts of terrorism across India that had been perpetrated by Muslims.

His statement, subsequently leaked to the media, alleged that a network of radicals stretched right up to senior levels of the country&#8217;s Hindu nationalist right wing. It also exposed deep-seated prejudices within the police against the country&#8217;s minority Muslim population.

Ironically, the charges may also have helped India and Pakistan to get back to the negotiating table last month after relations broke down in the wake of the 2008 attacks on Mumbai.

Like many Indians, Aseemanand was furious with terrorist attacks in the country carried out by Muslims. &#8220;We should answer bombs with bombs,&#8221; he told a small group of Hindu extremists in June 2006, only to discover a plot was already well under way.

In the ensuing 18 months, bombs were placed on bicycles in a Muslim cemetery in the western town of Malegaon, hidden under a granite slab in a mosque in Hyderabad and left in a lunchbox in an important Sufi shrine in Ajmer, all targets Aseemanand said he suggested.

In another attack, 68 people, most of them Pakistanis, were killed when suitcases packed with explosives were placed next to gasoline bottles on a train headed from western India to Pakistan. Many of the victims were unable to escape the inferno because of bars on the train windows, and their bodies were burned beyond recognition.

Evidence that radical Hindus, including an army colonel who is suspected of supplying the technical expertise and the explosives, were behind several of these bombings began to surface more than two years ago, and several people were arrested, including Aseemanand.

But his statement is the first clear evidence that Indian Hindu terrorists were to blame for the deaths of Pakistani Muslim travelers on the Samjhauta, or Friendship, Express.

Pakistan reacted to the news with ill-disguised glee, arguing that the botched investigations and the subsequent confession confirmed its suspicions that India &#8220;lacked the courage&#8221; to prosecute radical Hindus.

In India, there was sober reflection in some quarters about prejudices against Muslims. The Hindu right&#8217;s old adage, that &#8220;while not every Muslim is a terrorist, every terrorist is a Muslim,&#8221; could no longer be trotted out with a straight face.

India had been insisting it would not restart a formal peace process with Pakistan until that country properly investigated and prosecuted state-sponsored militants blamed for the attacks on Mumbai, which left 166 people dead.

Pakistan responded in kind, demanding a fuller and faster investigation into the train attack. India put on a brave face, but the revelations were an embarrassment, one official privately admitted, as Indian media judged that their government had lost some of the moral high ground.

In a sense, though, the episode provided the political cover at home for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to agree this month to do what he secretly wanted and restart the peace process with Pakistan, said Commodore Uday Bhaskar of the National Maritime Foundation, a New Delhi think tank.

&#8220;Before, terrorism was projected in public opinion in black-and-white terms, that all terrorism was because of Muslims and because of Pakistan,&#8221; he said. Aseemanand&#8217;s confession &#8220;had an unintended positive kind of fallout and introduced a malleability into the India-Pakistan interaction.&#8221;

More damaging were Aseemanand&#8217;s accusations against high-ranking members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or RSS, a religious group that spreads its Hindu revivalist ideology, known as Hindutva, through a network of schools, charities and clubs.

The RSS, the ideological parent of the country&#8217;s main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, is also engaged in a sometimes violent contest with Christian missionary groups operating in India.

According to Aseemanand, the main organizer of the attacks was an RSS worker called Sunil Joshi, in his mid-30s, from the town of Dewas in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

Relatives describe Joshi as a conservative and deeply religious man of very few words. Joshi viewed Muslims as &#8220;worthless,&#8221; his niece said. In December 2007, after most of the bomb attacks had taken place, Joshi was gunned down in the street near his family home. Police say Joshi&#8217;s gang turned on him, but some investigators and family members believe he was killed because he was about to turn himself in to the police.

RSS national executive member Indresh Kumar, suspected of mentoring and financing the bomb-making gang, said in an interview that the accusations against him represented a &#8220;deep political conspiracy&#8221; by the ruling Congress party to defame him and the RSS.

Certainly, some members of the secular Congress party have enjoyed and exploited the Hindu nationalist opposition&#8217;s discomfort over the allegations. Rahul Gandhi, a leading member of Parliament and heir apparent to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, even told the US ambassador in 2009 that radicalized Hindu groups were a bigger threat to India than support for Lashkar-i-Taiba, a militant group that is accused in the Mumbai attacks, according to a cable released by WikiLeaks.

Gandhi was widely criticized for that assertion, but the RSS has found itself on the defensive. In a series of conversations with The Washington Post, the group&#8217;s leaders portrayed the bomb makers as either paid agents of Pakistani military intelligence or simply as a violent splinter group of their peaceful movement.

Ajai Sahni, a terrorism expert who runs the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi, said the militants were just &#8220;the fringe of a fringe&#8221; within the Hindu right. But &#8220;the sympathies may be deeper within the core of Hindutva,&#8221; he said.

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@SMC all above are from wiki..those may not be enough for you as " evidence/proof"..but these are the allegations(as per you conspiracy theories ) made by other nations, media, org etc..it's certainly does not put pakistan in good light as a state.yes you can accuse all of them as biased but that also would not help much because the west,media etc controls the world largely..and their opinion matters.i can't afford to have long debate in this thread because it's off topic.
 
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Only countries to have blamed the Pakistani state are Afghanistan and India. Wikipedia is NOT a source as these sections in particular are controlled by Indian admins. I am not talking about Kashmir in the past - I am talking about recent claims such as helping Taliban, ISI helping Kashmiri separatists in the RECENT uprisings, and ISI taking part in Mumbai attacks. Nobody besides bharat and Afghanistan have made any accusations in that case. If you want to talk about Kashmir (the past) then I can talk about Mukhti Bahini and then it comes down to what one considers a terrorist and what one considers a freedom fighter.

And yeah, what exists against Pakistan are allegations (i.e. conspiracy theories - call them what they are, don't sugar coat it), no evidence has been provided for these claims.

In fact western media has been quite ineffective in doing what you claim it has done, because outside of India and Afghanistan, only a small portion of the western citizenry believes these conspiracy theories. And outside the western citizenry, there's nothing at all.

You may have a point on how western media may effect perception but that's not what we're discussing here. People in the west want to believe certain things, including a boogeyman for their failure in Afghanistan, so what is believed or not believed is irrelevant. If there's no evidence to support the claims, then what one believes is not important. What we're trying to get at is objectively analyzing the evidence for these claims, i.e. trying to get at the truth.
 
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On January 20 , 2001 , six persons were killed and 50 others injured in two separate bomb blasts in Dhaka. Home Minister Mohammad Nasism held the JEI and its affiliates responsible for the attack. Water Resources Minister Abdur Razzak accused Pakistan' s ISI of having instigated the incidents .
BANGLADESH & JIHADI TERRORISM --AN UPDATE
In a furious response that has stunned the international diplomatic community , Polish justice minister Andrzej Czuma on Monday blamed Pakistan' s ''apathy '' in tackling terrorism for the killing of a Polish geologist who was kidnapped by the Pakistani Taliban from Attack town in Punjab. "The structure of the Pakistani government is behind this apathy . The Pakistani authorities encourage these bandits, " Czuma told a Polish news agency , even as the horrific killing recalled the similar beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
world-of-terrorism.blogspot.com/2009/02/angry-poland-accuses-pakistan-of.html
Afghan and Indian officials removed a body from the Indian Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, after a bombing there on July 7 . Multimedia Back Story With Eric Schmitt Related Times Topics: Pakistan Doug Mills /The New York Times Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani of Pakistan visited Washington this week . The conclusion was based on intercepted communications between Pakistani intelligence officers and militants who carried out the attack, the officials said , providing the clearest evidence to date that Pakistani intelligence officers are actively undermining American efforts to combat militants in the region. The American officials also said there was new information showing that members of the Pakistani intelligence service were increasingly providing militants with details about the American campaign against them , in some cases allowing militants to avoid American missile strikes in Pakistan &#8217; s tribal areas. Concerns about the role played by Pakistani intelligence not only has strained relations between the United States and Pakistan, a longtime ally , but also has fanned tensions between Pakistan and its archrival , India . Within days of the bombings , Indian officials accused the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence , or ISI , of helping to orchestrate the attack in Kabul, which killed 54 , including an Indian defense attaché. This week , Pakistani troops clashed with Indian forces in the contested region of Kashmir, threatening to fray an uneasy cease - fire that has held since November 2003. The New York Times reported this week that a top Central Intelligence Agency official traveled to Pakistan this month to confront senior Pakistani officials with information about support provided by members of the ISI to militant groups . It had not been known that American intelligence agencies concluded that elements of Pakistani intelligence provided direct support for the attack in Kabul. American officials said that the communications were intercepted before the July 7 bombing , and that the C.I .A. emissary , Stephen R . Kappes, the agency &#8217; s deputy director , had been ordered to Islamabad , Pakistan&#8217; s capital, even before the attack. The intercepts were not detailed enough to warn of any specific attack . The government officials were guarded in describing the new evidence and would not say specifically what kind of assistance the ISI officers provided to the militants. They said that the ISI officers had not been renegades , indicating that their actions might have been authorized by superiors . &#8220; It confirmed some suspicions that I think were widely held, &#8221; one State Department official with knowledge of Afghanistan issues said of the intercepted communications. &#8220;It was sort of this &#8216; aha&#8217; moment . There was a sense that there was finally direct proof .&#8221; The information linking the ISI to the bombing of the Indian Embassy was described in interviews by several American officials with knowledge of the intelligence . Some of the officials expressed anger that elements of Pakistan &#8217; s government seemed to be directly aiding violence in Afghanistan that had included attacks on American troops . Some American officials have begun to suggest that Pakistan is no longer a fully reliable American partner and to advocate some unilateral American action against militants based in the tribal areas . The ISI has long maintained ties to militant groups in the tribal areas , in part to court allies it can use to contain Afghanistan &#8217; s power. In recent years , Pakistan&#8217; s government has also been concerned about India &#8217; s growing influence inside Afghanistan , including New Delhi &#8217; s close ties to the government of Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president . American officials say they believe that the embassy attack was probably carried out by members of a network led by Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani, whose alliance with Al Qaeda and its affiliates has allowed the terrorist network to rebuild in the tribal areas. American and Pakistani officials have now acknowledged that President Bush on Monday confronted Pakistan&#8217; s prime minister , Yousaf Raza Gilani , about the divided loyalties of the ISI . Pakistan &#8217; s defense minister , Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar, told a Pakistani television network on Wednesday that Mr . Bush asked senior Pakistani officials this week , &#8220; &#8216; Who is in control of ISI ?&#8217; &#8221; and asked about leaked information that tipped militants to surveillance efforts by Western intelligence services. Pakistan &#8217; s new civilian government is wrestling with these very issues, and there is concern in Washington that the civilian leaders will be unable to end a longstanding relationship between members of the ISI and militants associated with Al Qaeda . Spokesmen for the White House and the C.I. A. declined to comment for this article. Pakistan &#8217; s ambassador to the United States , Husain Haqqani, did not return a call seeking comment . Further underscoring the tension between Pakistan and its Western allies , Britain&#8217; s senior military officer said in Washington on Thursday that an American and British program to help train Pakistan &#8217; s Frontier Corps in the tribal areas had been delayed while Pakistan&#8217; s military and civilian officials sorted out details about the program &#8217; s goals.
www.nytimes.com/2008/08/01/world/asia/01pstan.html?_r=1
Nato' s top brass accuse Pakistan over Taliban aid By Ahmed Rashid in Kabul Last Updated : 1 :22 AM BST 06 /10 / 2006 Commanders from five Nato countries whose troops have just fought the bloodiest battle with the Taliban in five years , are demanding their governments get tough with Pakistan over the support and sanctuary its security services provide to the Taliban . Nato' s report on Operation Medusa , an intense battle that lasted from September 4 -17 in the Panjwai district , demonstrates the extent of the Taliban' s military capability and states clearly that Pakistan ' s Interservices Intelligence ( ISI ) is involved in supplying it.
Nato's top brass accuse Pakistan over Taliban aid - Telegraph
Adm . Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, gestures during a press conference in Baghdad, Iraq, July 27 . On Tuesday , Mullen expressed concern about Pakistan ' s Inter-Services Intelligence ( ISI ), saying any links between it and terror outfits were ' completely unacceptable ,' over allegations in WikiLeaks documents posted Sunday.
WikiLeaks fallout: US, UK, India criticize Pakistan as terror haven - CSMonitor.com
In an exclusive interview to NDTV' s Prannoy Roy , Assange said that every piece of information on the ISI ' s links with terror is genuine and authentic . Here ' s an excerpt from the interview : Prannoy Roy : How authentic do you think this information is? Julian Assange : The information has been authenticated as coming from the US military. These are internal US military reports . Most of them are reports from the military about a battle they have just had or just about to have, a sub section of them are intelligence reports from informers of various kind.
Wikileaks chief to NDTV: Info on ISI-terror link authentic
 
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mukthi bahini is not internationally recognised terrorist organization as far as i know.where as in kashmir all kind of org were supported by pakistan.

bangladesh minister, admiral mullan,wiki leaks, poland minister, UK prime minister, london school of economics, all are pointing fingers at pakistan.tell me why not the world naturally believe them rather than pakistan ?
i see your stand is - they are not yet proven and they are biased.let me tell you unlike police investigation and court trails in the case of individuals or organisations within the country, international matters where countries and it's agencies are involved nothing really can proven.in this matters perceptions and intelligence info and world support is what matters.you/pakistan being technically correct will not help in international matters.
 
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