That's not what the U.S. did. After smashing the Al-Q base in Afghanistan the U.S. created flypaper in Iraq which sucked in to destruction many thousands of the rank-and-file trained in Osama bin Laden's training camps. Now the drones are in the process of killing the Al Qaeda leaders who would terrify Muslims into joining its ranks.
Saddam Hussain's credibility went down the tube when he used chemical munitions on Kurds & Iranians.
He was a brutal dictator to those who dissented. But he was in the cross-hairs of terrorist groups like al qaeda as he was a secular baathist.
"Al qaeda in Iraq" came into being only AFTER the US invaded. It was America's misguided adventure in Iraq that caused chaos in Iraq. So IF and only IF what you are saying is 100% accurate, you have your own to blame. Sorry to break it to you.
Offer the people better governance than they're getting and the Haqqanis will lose any popular base; furthermore, if the problem is on both sides of the border then the solution is joint operational command. But I doubt you can ever solve the problem without attacking the corruption that exists in your society from the bottom to the top.
now this i agree with.....the existence of this so-called haqqani group however (which exists on BOTH sides of the porous Durand Line) is purely a reaction to NATOs presence in Afghanistan. Remove NATO from the equation, such groups that see themselves as 'resistance' will lose their steam and any support they may have.
Contrary to popular belief, the people of FATA want investment and want schools -- so that the lives of future offsprings could be improved.
Rooting out corruption from bottom up -- starting from grass-roots level and going up to the MNAs and Senators -- is a damn good start and we can only pray that this happens sooner or later for our sake and our country's sake.
Matters need to be taken out of the hands of military professional and into the hands of professional politicians. All theater-level decisions require political judgment and this should not be in the hands of military commanders.
civilian affairs are best reserved for civilians but Army is compelled to go beyond its job description when the civilians make a mockery of democracy and leave the country in a precarious situation. We lack a unified front of "professional" politicians and I hope that would change. Day to day politics in Pakistan is very dirty.
Do you remember B. Bhutto's story from her memoirs? She recounted Mushy's explanation about how the P.A. could capture Srinigar. But B.B. countered that by pointing out how the combination of international forces in response to such a move would eventually work to Pakistan's disadvantage and compel a retreat.
the people of Sri Nagar are very pro-Pakistan. I suppose this was part of his reasoning and logic. No need however to delve into Kashmir here as its totally irrelevant to this topic.
Looks like all the Pakistanis agree with Roggio's judgment that any offensive won't be meaningful in nature - they just don't like the deception being waved like a flag in the open. Which only endorses the very worst criticisms in the comments about Pakistani conduct - duplicity concealing enmity.
i'd just look at Pakistan Army's track record since, say, 2008. I think they are doing what they can to counter the insurgency. These types of unconventional wars (which consist of day to day squirmishes and battles) are not win overnight. The Americans have a bad habit of expecting immediate results. They are very unrealistic, and we see that in Afghanistan.
that's why your Pentagon and State Dept/White House officials are often at loggerheads with eachother
No. The U.N. Security Council says Afghanistan isn't a fully sovereign state but is in the process of getting its act together. Pakistan, on the other hand, is supposed to be a fully sovereign state but it is in violation of UNSCR 1373 which obliges it to act against terrorists on its territory. Pakistan is thus at fault here, not the U.S.
Pakistan has contributed more in the fight against terrorism than ANY other country and it has paid a HUGE price. Hopefully NATO's actions and missteps will be corrected so that less burden is placed on us.
In the past 3 months alone cross-border attacks from NATO-controlled Afghanistan are steeply on the rise. Soldiers signed up for the job to face, confront and kill the enemies of Pakistan.....but civilians did not.
Afghanistan is an increasingly troublesome country and sooner or later something concrete will have to be done to stop this treachery.