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Pakistan biggest concern to stability in South Asia: NYT

What nonsense? You think that pakistan isn't the source of terrorism in the region?.

There are a few thousand terrorists and hundreds of terrorism groups in Pakistan.



lol..Yeah boy humper...look at your map and look at the state of your country.

LMAO Stupid curry svcker. At least we have a country. No matter what state it is in. This can always be fixed. You just worry about your own country because the last time I heard Indian women are afraid of Indian rapist men. It feels so great not to be part of that filthy country that you belong to.
 
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Pakistan is the only country in this world threatening to use Nuclear weapons and can find 100's of videos claiming their shameless politicians and intellectuals for using the same.I don't know which world they are living !
 
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At least we have a country. No matter what state it is in. This can always be fixed. You just worry about your own country because the last time I heard Indian women are afraid of Indian rapist men.

lol..your women don't even have the right to be afraid..lest they will need 4 male witnesses to report a rape...and unless they don't, they end up in prison themselves on adultery charges.
 
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Pakistan is the only country in this world threatening to use Nuclear weapons and can find 100's of videos claiming their shameless politicians and intellectuals for using the same.I don't know which world they are living !

India started a a nuclear arms race in South Asia. You reap what you sow.

lol..your women don't even have the right to be afraid..lest they will need 4 male witnesses to report a rape...and unless they don't, they end up in prison themselves on adultery charges.

LMAO Coming from an Indian who belongs to a country where women are raped and killed in public transport in front of other people. Heck, where women are molested with steel rods. Coming from an Indian where Indian men don't think it is a crime to rape women. Coming from an Indian who belongs to a country where documentaries are banned for exposing the truth. You keep your BS to yourself filthy fvck. You're exposed to the bloody bone. You have no leg to stand on and no right to speak or point with any finger. You're complete filth. Worry about your own problems filth.
 
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India started a a nuclear arms race in South Asia. You reap what you sow.

If that is the case first US started, then Russia then China and India could not keep idle.India can afford weapons and our politicians didn't claimed for eating grass to have one.
 
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If that is the case first US started, then Russia then China and India could not keep idle.India can afford weapons and our politicians didn't claimed for eating grass to have one.

They did. Hence, you reap what you sow.
 
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India started a a nuclear arms race in South Asia. You reap what you sow.



LMAO Coming from an Indian who belongs to a country where women are raped and killed in public transport in front of other people. Heck, where women are molested with steel rods. Coming from an Indian where Indian men don't think it is a crime to rape women. Coming from an Indian who belongs to a country where documentaries are banned for exposing the truth. You keep your BS to yourself filthy fvck. You're exposed to the bloody bone. You have no leg to stand on and no right to speak or point with any finger. You're complete filth. Worry about your own problems filth.

Lol, coming from a pakistani...Lmao. .you can get away with it just because it's a pakistani forum.
 
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The only source on the web where I can find this rubbish article on is the Times of India @ Pakistan biggest concern to stability in South Asia: NYT - The Times of India

Nonetheless, maybe now the alleged "leading US daily today" can also look deeper into the cause of this regional instability and turn its attention to all the atrocities being perpetrated by the terrorist Indian army in the Pakistani province of Kashmir. Atrocities which have continually been neglected by the world community as they've gotten into bed with Indians on commercial deals in a bid to energize their own stalling economies.

If "the leading US daily today" looks hard enough it may even come to realize that it was India ,who in its quest to match China, initially pursued a nuclear weapons programme, the fruit of which it eventually attempted to use to coerce Pakistan into conceding its territory.

It's sickening to see all the international-Pakistan bashing which tabloid journalists have been perpetrating to cash in on Pakistan's questionable international standing. Instead of just berating us for the sake of money and momentary fame, if these pseudo-intellectuals would care to delve deeper into the regional dynamics and political history of South-East Asia they'd be more than just pleasantly surprised to see to who the blame actually lies with.

Actually I'm surprised "the leading US daily today" didn't suggest deploying troops to Pakistan and China to help the Indians out.
If it makes you feel any better, Here is the original.

Instead of shooting the messenger discuss the contents.


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/06/opinion/nuclear-fears-in-south-asia.html?mabReward=A5

06mon01web-master675.jpg

A Pakistani military parade in Islamabad in March.CreditAamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The world’s attention has rightly been riveted on negotiations aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear program. If and when that deal is made final, America and the other major powers that worked on it — China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany — should turn their attention to South Asia, a troubled region with growing nuclear risks of its own.

Pakistan, with the world’s fastest-growing nuclear arsenal, is unquestionably the biggest concern, one reinforced by several recent developments. Last week, Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, announced that he had approved a new deal to purchase eight diesel-electric submarines from China, which could be equipped with nuclear missiles, for an estimated $5 billion. Last month, Pakistan test-fired a ballistic missile that appears capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to any part of India. And a senior adviser, Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, reaffirmed Pakistan’s determination to continue developing short-range tactical nuclear weapons whose only purpose is use on the battlefield in a war against India.

These investments reflect the Pakistani Army’s continuing obsession with India as the enemy, a rationale that allows the generals to maintain maximum power over the government and demand maximum national resources. Pakistan now has an arsenal of as many as 120 nuclear weapons and is expected to triple that in a decade. An increase of that size makes no sense, especially since India’s nuclear arsenal, estimated at about 110 weapons, is growing more slowly.

The two countries have a troubled history, having fought four wars since independence in 1947, and deep animosities persist. Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India has made it clear that Pakistan can expect retaliation if Islamic militants carry out a terrorist attack in India, as happened with the 2008 bombing in Mumbai. But the latest major conflict was in 1999, and since then India, a vibrant democracy, has focused on becoming a regional economic and political power.

At the same time, Pakistan has sunk deeper into chaos, threatened by economic collapse, the weakening of political institutions and, most of all, a Taliban insurgency that aims to bring down the state. Advanced military equipment — new submarines, the medium-range Shaheen-III missile with a reported range of up to 1,700 miles, short-range tactical nuclear weapons — are of little use in defending against such threats. The billions of dollars wasted on these systems would be better spent investing in health, education and jobs for Pakistan’s people.

Even more troubling, the Pakistani Army has become increasingly dependent on the nuclear arsenal because Pakistan cannot match the size and sophistication of India’s conventional forces. Pakistan has left open the possibility that it could be the first to use nuclear weapons in a confrontation, even one that began with conventional arms. Adding short-range tactical nuclear weapons that can hit their targets quickly compounds the danger.

Pakistan is hardly alone in its potential to cause regional instability. China, which considers Pakistan a close ally and India a potential threat, is continuing to build up its nuclear arsenal, now estimated at 250 weapons, while all three countries are moving ahead with plans to deploy nuclear weapons at sea in the Indian Ocean.

This is not a situation that can be ignored by the major powers, however preoccupied they may be by the long negotiations with Iran.
 
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If it makes you feel any better, Here is the original.

Instead of shooting the messenger discuss the contents.


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/06/opinion/nuclear-fears-in-south-asia.html?mabReward=A5

06mon01web-master675.jpg

A Pakistani military parade in Islamabad in March.CreditAamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The world’s attention has rightly been riveted on negotiations aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear program. If and when that deal is made final, America and the other major powers that worked on it — China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany — should turn their attention to South Asia, a troubled region with growing nuclear risks of its own.

Pakistan, with the world’s fastest-growing nuclear arsenal, is unquestionably the biggest concern, one reinforced by several recent developments. Last week, Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, announced that he had approved a new deal to purchase eight diesel-electric submarines from China, which could be equipped with nuclear missiles, for an estimated $5 billion. Last month, Pakistan test-fired a ballistic missile that appears capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to any part of India. And a senior adviser, Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, reaffirmed Pakistan’s determination to continue developing short-range tactical nuclear weapons whose only purpose is use on the battlefield in a war against India.

These investments reflect the Pakistani Army’s continuing obsession with India as the enemy, a rationale that allows the generals to maintain maximum power over the government and demand maximum national resources. Pakistan now has an arsenal of as many as 120 nuclear weapons and is expected to triple that in a decade. An increase of that size makes no sense, especially since India’s nuclear arsenal, estimated at about 110 weapons, is growing more slowly.

The two countries have a troubled history, having fought four wars since independence in 1947, and deep animosities persist. Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India has made it clear that Pakistan can expect retaliation if Islamic militants carry out a terrorist attack in India, as happened with the 2008 bombing in Mumbai. But the latest major conflict was in 1999, and since then India, a vibrant democracy, has focused on becoming a regional economic and political power.

At the same time, Pakistan has sunk deeper into chaos, threatened by economic collapse, the weakening of political institutions and, most of all, a Taliban insurgency that aims to bring down the state. Advanced military equipment — new submarines, the medium-range Shaheen-III missile with a reported range of up to 1,700 miles, short-range tactical nuclear weapons — are of little use in defending against such threats. The billions of dollars wasted on these systems would be better spent investing in health, education and jobs for Pakistan’s people.

Even more troubling, the Pakistani Army has become increasingly dependent on the nuclear arsenal because Pakistan cannot match the size and sophistication of India’s conventional forces. Pakistan has left open the possibility that it could be the first to use nuclear weapons in a confrontation, even one that began with conventional arms. Adding short-range tactical nuclear weapons that can hit their targets quickly compounds the danger.

Pakistan is hardly alone in its potential to cause regional instability. China, which considers Pakistan a close ally and India a potential threat, is continuing to build up its nuclear arsenal, now estimated at 250 weapons, while all three countries are moving ahead with plans to deploy nuclear weapons at sea in the Indian Ocean.

This is not a situation that can be ignored by the major powers, however preoccupied they may be by the long negotiations with Iran.

As I said, rubbish. If I were given a penny for every time I've heard reports of the imminent collapse of Pakistan's economy I would be relatively well-off.

Heck ever since then, I've seen Greece go under and an international financial crisis that put the Lehman Brothers out of business, but Pakistan is still there...trundling along at its own modest pace making scandalous nuclear headlines the world-over.

Pakistan is the national equivalent of Charlie Sheen. Lol.

Also I noticed how you underlined the paragraphs glorifying India. You like the word 'conventional' and 'sophistication' don't you. Meh.
 
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