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Peshawar Massacre - TTP kills hundreds of school kids (Avoid graphic pics/vids)

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The EU and Western media disapproving executions.

Justice at risk as Pakistan rushes convicts to the gallows


"The government is trying to tell people that they are fighting terrorism, but I think this is just an act of vengeance."

"It's a kneejerk reaction by the government to appease the masses," Shahzad Akbar, a legal fellow at the human rights organisation, Reprieve, said.

Source: BBC News - Justice at risk as Pakistan rushes convicts to the gallows

"Pakistan’s government has chosen to indulge in vengeful blood-lust instead of finding and prosecuting those responsible for the horrific Peshawar attack" - Human Rights Watch

"This is a cynical reaction from the government. It masks a failure to deal with the core issue highlighted by the Peshawar attack, namely the lack of effective protection for civilians in north-west Pakistan" - Amnesty International

"The death penalty has no measurable deterrent effect on levels of insurgent and terrorist violence" and "may even be counter-productive" - United Nations

Source: Pakistan slammed for resuming executions after school massacre - Yahoo News
 
The EU and Western media disapproving executions.

Justice at risk as Pakistan rushes convicts to the gallows


"The government is trying to tell people that they are fighting terrorism, but I think this is just an act of vengeance."

"It's a kneejerk reaction by the government to appease the masses," Shahzad Akbar, a legal fellow at the human rights organisation, Reprieve, said.

Source: BBC News - Justice at risk as Pakistan rushes convicts to the gallows

"Pakistan’s government has chosen to indulge in vengeful blood-lust instead of finding and prosecuting those responsible for the horrific Peshawar attack" - Human Rights Watch

"This is a cynical reaction from the government. It masks a failure to deal with the core issue highlighted by the Peshawar attack, namely the lack of effective protection for civilians in north-west Pakistan" - Amnesty International

"The death penalty has no measurable deterrent effect on levels of insurgent and terrorist violence" and "may even be counter-productive" - United Nations

Source: Pakistan slammed for resuming executions after school massacre - Yahoo News



HRW wants us to fight the terrorists with our hands tied behind our backs.

Terrorists being hanged have been in the system for long long time and I believe our court system has become a mouth peace of terrorists and Islamists.

Where Mullah Burqa and Malik Ishaq types are let go, while poor hapless Pakistanis accused of blasphemy are languishing in jails.

If we are not allowed to use court system to hang these terrorists SOBs, then the only thing left is to use methods that Columbia used to stop escobar types.

Just do wiki on "search bloc" and columbia to find more about it.
 
HRW wants us to fight the terrorists with our hands tied behind our backs.

Terrorists being hanged have been in the system for long long time and I believe our court system has become a mouth peace of terrorists and Islamists.

Where Mullah Burqa and Malik Ishaq types are let go, while poor hapless Pakistanis accused of blasphemy are languishing in jails.

If we are not allowed to use court system to hang these terrorists SOBs, then the only thing left is to use methods that Columbia used to stop escobar types.

Just do wiki on "search bloc" and columbia to find more about it.

Why do you think that human rights organisations in the West are being so critical?
 
That's their job.

There must be more to it. Very bad timing for human rights organisations to voice their opposition when so many children have been butchered in broad daylight. Public opinion is firmly against the TTP.
 
Who killed our children?
Humayun Gauhar in Islamabad

After turning Peshawar’s Army Public School into a killing field one of the terrorists phoned his handlers and asked: “We have killed all the children in the auditorium. What do we do now?” The handler replied: “Wait for the army people, kill them before blowing yourself up.”

Not just the terrorists, I’ll tell you who really killed our children. We did. We did by our callous attitude. We did by holding forth thoughtlessly, unwittingly becoming apologists for terrorism. We did by electing and tolerating terrible leadership. We did by tolerating the demented sermonizing of demonic mullahs in mosques, madrassas and political parties. Thus did we allow terrorists to thrive. They are the products of our perfidy. They just press triggers. We give them guns, not books as Malala lamented. Most of all, I am angry with myself for not standing up more against society’s duplicity.

Most men don’t have ball
The problem is that most of our men don’t have balls; our women do. Why not hand Pakistan over to women? They would do a damn sight better job than men who are only good at contemplating their navels and then haranguing us with whatever nonsense comes to their challenged minds.
Control your anger, Humayun. Cut to the chase. Beating chests won’t do. Learn from the tragedy of the coldblooded massacre of 144 people including 132 schoolchildren, analyze mistakes and find corrections. Time to understand: THIS IS OUR WAR. Own it, fight it. Understand that terrorism is akin to a venom-spewing tree. Plucking its leaves, cutting branches and chopping its trunk doesn’t work. Destroy its roots in the ground and in our minds where they are most dangerous.
It took this tragedy to bring our ‘misleaders’ together in a ‘Political Fest’. A photograph of these geniuses makes one’s heart sink: are these the men who are going to lead our destiny? God help us, but He will not until we help ourselves first. Start by kicking misleaders out of our body politic that they have been polluting for years. Many of them called the terrorists “stakeholders”, “sulking compatriots”, “one of us” with whom we must hold a dialogue and allow them to open an office here. They must be mollycoddled and brought back in the fold. We lost eight precious months and the element of surprise before the army launched an operation against them with a reluctant prime minister going along. These men around the table who would lead our destiny admit that elections were rigged, that there is corruption and yet would support an illegal government on the pretext of supporting sham democracy and a political system that benefits them and them alone.
Lacking originality, the Political Fest decided to set up a committee. Yippee! The terrorists must be quaking with fright. The army forced them to agree to hang all convicted terrorists forthwith.

What should be done?
1. Formation of a National War Government even if it comprises buffoons to get national consensus on the new anti-terrorism strategy.
2. Parliament should immediately declare a counter Jihad against fake Jihadi terrorists.
3. Declare a National War Emergency. Don’t let the fake treason case against General Musharraf weigh on what passes for your minds.
4. Empower the National Counter Terrorism Authority (NCTA), give it funds and a head. Don’t quibble over whether a general (who would do a damn sight better job) or a pet civilian should head it. If government can spend billions on metro-buses and motorways, surely it can give much-needed fewer funds to NACTA. Problem is, motorways and metro buses give kickbacks; NACTA doesn’t. For God’s sake get satiated now you politicians.
5. Launch a simultaneous countrywide operation against terrorists of all ilk.
6. Give Afghanistan 24 hours to hand over terrorists and separatists to us or we will come to get them ourselves. Their lament that we don’t give their terrorists to them should be agreed to. There should be no such thing as “their terrorists” and “our terrorists”, “Good Taliban” and “Bad Taliban” just as there are no ‘Good Demons’ and ‘Bad Demons’. Demons are demons, period. All terrorists are everyone’s terrorists and should be dealt with collectively. Forget this fifth front nonsense.
7. Strengthen laws so that terrorists don’t easily get bail.
8. Establish summary courts run on due process with one appeal. Implement sentences immediately so terrorists don’t sit in jail foisting hell.
9. Create a narrative to counter the pernicious brainwashing narrative of terrorists and their sympathizers.
10. Kick out pro-terrorist mullahs from all mosques and madrasas.
11. Strengthen PEMRA to properly regulate media so that it doesn’t let these demons and their apologists spew their demented venom and pollute minds.
12. Unite people against terrorism government must end State Terrorism, like the Model Town massacre.
13. Make contemporary curricula for all educational institutions and ban the terrorist-producing Nebraska curriculum that the US made to create Mujahedeen against the Soviets.

Outrage has boomeranged
It is easy to jump to conclusions in a storm of emotions. But the bloody outrage has boomeranged against the terrorists who tried to lower our morale by coinciding their heinous act with the fall of Dacca on December 16, spread terror and nip future soldiers in the bud by killing army and civilian children in an army school. This is the fallout, good and bad:
1. People are finally accepting that the war on terror is our war and we are fighting it for ourselves.
2. Instead of showing the army up as ineffective, public support for the army has increased, though one wonders how many more straws the army camel’s back can take before it breaks. Or is it a mule from the famous ‘Mule Battalion’. Many want the army to take over again, but what they should actually demand is true democracy through change of system.
3. They have darned somewhat the tattered civil-military relationship. This should dilute Nawaz Sharif’s “terrible fear” of army intervention. It won’t as long as he doesn’t go too far down the path of imbecility. The Peshawar carnage should show him that situations can change instantaneously and cause reaction. He should remember how his world changed when he illegally sacked General Musharraf, hijacked his plane and tried to send it to India. Bizarre is a word not unknown to us.
4. They succeeded in showing Imran Khan’s KPK provincial government as incompetent.
5. They succeeded in ending Imran’s protests against election fraud and prevented the shutting down of the country on December 18. This has helped Nawaz Sharif more than the terrorists. Perhaps it also gave Imran the chance to get out of a blind alley because he wouldn’t ratchet up his protest by storming the citadels of the great. He is convinced that this system can put him in office through honest elections, little realizing that honest elections aren’t possible in this system.

Who does it benefit?
1. The government under inordinate pressure, though I am not suggesting for a moment that it was behind the massacre.
2. India, for it would love Nawaz Sharif to remain in office and continue his India-pandering. I am certainly suggesting that India might be behind the dastardly deed, as it has been behind many before.
3. Afghanistan perhaps for it makes Pakistan more dependent on its cooperation.
Whose fault is it? It is our collective fault for not standing up to state and non-state terrorism and not supporting something good when it is being done. We opposed President Musharraf when he tried to cleanse the Lal Masjid of terrorist mullahs not because we like them but because we hated Musharraf more. We supported chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry when Musharraf sacked him not because we liked him but because we liked Musharraf less. A confused ‘elected’ government restored Iftikhar Chaudhry and his cohorts who in turn restored the terrorist Mullah Burqa to Lal Masjid. Today he supports the school massacre as justified reaction to the army’s anti-terrorist operation in North Waziristan and government lets him be. That people are protesting outside the mosque means that they have finally woken up and are learning. They should storm it and do what Musharraf was forced to leave undone. Refuse to pray in the mosque until it is purified and cleansed of these Devil’s demons.
The deficiency of testosterone producing orbs primarily afflicts our politicians, pseudo intellectuals, most male media anchors and analysts. Our religious leaders are semi-literate and so mentally challenged that they twist the Word of God to achieve their ends, shamelessly preach it and act against the Word of God, like “thou shalt not kill” for killing one human being is akin to killing the whole of humanity. Fazlur Rahman who exploits religion for his politics and has the temerity to call himself ‘Maulana’ says his heart beats as one with the Taliban. Today to save his politics he says that killing children is not Jihad. Haven’t children been killed by terrorists before you moron?
humayun.gauhar786@gmail.com
 
Such an inhuman assault on Army Public School Peshawar was a deliberate act of those multiple agencies which have been working against Pakistan and her forces. It is a direct result of poor foreign policy of Pakistan. CIA has aided the attack to make Pak Army "do more". CIA been aiming, for ages, to involve Pak Army more seriously yet deeper and deeper in its so called "WOT". On the other hand, India which has been fighting in a defensive mood against Pakistan for quite sometime through a full scale proxy war exploiting our vulnerabilities and weaknesses as such RAW has had lion's share in the attack. Unfortunately, Nawaz Sharif is completely incompetent therefore a corrupt and untrustworthy leader of Pakistan. He watches CIA and Indian interests whilst remains the PM of Pakistan. As such, he has some highly controversial yet extremely expensive projects e.g Metro Bus service on this priority but he won't take following steps which the country desperately needs to counter the terrorism:

1- Unfortunately, given India is increasingly using Afghan soil to target Pakistan, it's not PM Sharif's concern to secure Pak-Afghan border at all. Basically, to build a 1,500-mile fence along its border with Afghanistan can prevent insurgents, fire arms/drug smugglers. Nevertheless, the border could be further secured by installing vehicle scanners on the crossing areas just like they been installed on UK-France border crossings.

2- Sadly, Sharif government seems to have no political will whatever to return Afghan refugees despite the fact that this has become an issue of Pakistan's national security for years.

3- Then, there is a burning yet ignored issue is of widely spread illegal firearms. This issue is causing a massive chaos for the country's internal law & order situation though it is suffice to prove Mr Sharif remains incompetent with no sense of direction but corruption . As so dangerously the illegal firearms been getting smuggled through Pak Afghan border and then freely supplied throughout the country from Khyber to Karachi for decades. Therefore there is no police on the earth which can control crime rate throughout Pakistan without addressing this root cause. It is evident that Afghan refugees has played a major role in this culture of crime. PM Sharif government has no will whatsoever to deal with this burning issue which has been fueling target killings in Karachi and sectarian killings etc throughout Pakistan - as one thing leads to another.

4- A poor national foreign policy is not being addressed either.

5- Unfortunately a ban or at least regularisation of foreign NGOs is also missing from the priority list of the government of Pakistan.

The list of such imminent priority actions is short yet sadly these have never been given a priority by PM Sharif or his government. Consequently, the country is sinking deeper and deeper into crisis.
There is no point in blaming others for your own faults; the fittest survives. The USA always does so and shall always watch her own national interest. Yet, unfortunately, Pakistani leadership hasn't got a clue of such a thing which can be called as "the national interest of Pakistan".

But in a way the west has to be blamed for this situation because Pakistan has historically been mistreated and India has deliberately been taken sides of. The history is full of many examples to prove my point from 1971 war (when Pakistan was never given the promised backing/arms until she lost the war) to the use of nuclear technology for power generation (Unlike India Pakistan been dragged back from using nuclear tech for generating electric so facing the worst blackouts/electricity shortage ever).

In a nutshell, the problem not only lies in the lack of leadership in Pakistan (due to the brain drain, poor education system etc) but also it is caused by the extensive interference by the west in general and the USA in particular. Thus such interference has had never been based on Pakistan's national interest and it never will be - why should it be - but common sense is not so common.
In this context both sides have to share the blame - Pakistanis have not learnt from the past yet the west been shortsighted and taken their fear from Islam too far. To be honest, an independent yet educated and developed Pakistan would be a much presentable, adorable and beneficial Pakistan to the world. And to achieve that west and particularly USA needs to review its Pak-India policy and relationship purely on equality, respect and sincerity basis.

However, this situation can never get too idealistic as CIA isn't a human rights organisation neither its basic agenda is to make this world a beautiful/peaceful place. Therefore if Pakistan ever had a few sincere leaders they were simply not allowed to proceed by USA. So the most common scenario has had been to chose and impose a ruler (no matter how corrupt but) willing to watch CIA's agenda - regardless of the wishes plus welfare of the common people of Pakistan. Evidently, a freshest example of this is Prime Minister of Pakistan Mr Sharif. Most certainly, to get in power, he had to have a deal with the states. As such he has frequently been updating CIA of Pak Army's halfheartedly fought WOT but also helped TTP to chose Peshawar/KPK for the attack in question so that the demonstrations of Justice Moment (PTI) could be pulled down. Which leaves many wondering what MI and ISI doing in Pakistan? Well, lack of leadership has undermined the role of key state institutions of the country such as MI and ISI.

(I am a practicing lawyer in England. You can find and follow me on twitter Malik M Javed Aslam)
 
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Now that more than a week has passed and my anger against the perpetrators of this heinous crime has been cooled down a bit and I have had time to reflect on the after math of this incident.

There are three questions to be asked:

Who was responsible?

TTP have claimed the responsibility and also provided the justification by quoting the incident if Banu Qurayza Jews just after the Battle of the Trench in the year 5 Hijra. As usual it was misquoted; the judgement that all fighting men be out to the sword was pronounced not by the holy Prophet (PBUH) but by the mutually agreed arbitrator Saa’d of Al – Aws.

There is no doubt that TTP are responsible. However, many a times before TTP had claimed responsibility, but I have personally heard Munawwar Hasan of JI saying “How do we know it is the Taliban? It could be anyone on the phone claiming to be Taliban spokesman.”

Why the school?

Taliban always choose soft targets. Girl’s school are their favourite, but any school will do.

Why the consensus this time?

Pakistan has suffered more than 50,000 civilian casualties without any change in the Talban support. Naturally 127 Christian died & the 250 who were injured in the 22 Sept, 2013 twin suicide attacks on All Saints Church in Peshawar on 22nd September 2013. Blood of the innocent Christian victim was of no consequence in the eyes of the PTI leader.

Darling of the Burger Crowd Imran (Taliban) Khan declared that if he were the Prime Minister, Zarab e Azb would not have taken place. Of course in the eyes of the PTI supporters Taliban Khan can do no wrong.

On Jan. 21 this year, a bus carrying Hazara youths returning from pilgrimage to Shia shrines in Iran—many mixing business with faith—were blown up by a suicide-bomber’s car in the Mastung district approaching Quetta. Over 24 mangled bodies were extracted from the wreck of the pulverized bus. The Hazara of Quetta went through their routine of laying the dead bodies out on Alamdar Road and refused to bury them until the state of Pakistan pledged to take action against the killers.

LEJ boasted that they were responsible. But banned SSP leader Mulla Ludhianavi is a darling of Rana Sana Ullah; therefore “NOTHING” has been done.

At least 55 people, including children and security personnel, were killed and about 200 others injured in a powerful suicide blast in Pakistan at Wagah on Sunday Nov 2nd, minutes after the popular flag- lowering ceremony at the main Indo-Pak land border crossing. The al-Qaeda affiliated group Jundallah claimed responsibility for the dastardly attack.


Except the usual rhetoric condemnation, “Nothing” was done. Munawwar Hasan of JI was still reaffirming his support for the Taliban butchers in his speech on 23rd Nov 2014 in Lahore he called for waging “Jihad and Qital Fisabilullah.”

The main difference this time being was that it was “ARMY” school and majority of the victims were offspring of the serving or retired army personal. The bitter truth is that no matter how hateful the Peshawar attack was; Pakistan is so full of extremist sympathizers that no has the will to oppose Taliban beyond a few TV declarations condemning the heinous acts with Ifs and buts. Except for ANP, MQM& PPP, all other political leaders are too cowardly to even publically name the perpetrators; as if all the acts were committed by the ‘Ghosts’. Thankfully, unlike the spineless politicians Pak Army brass doesn’t have any such qualms.

IMHO this fact and the mood of the nation calling for retribution were the primary factors that there was consensus at the APC for confronting the extremist menace head on instead of continued appeasement.

I am hoping the blood of the 140 odd innocent children & their brave teachers would not be in vain. And despite JI & PTI reluctant support, all sections of the civil society would stand united behind the Pak Army to root out the poison of extremism and love of Taliban ideology from Pakistan.
 
Facts, logics? You my friend are the definition of a terrorist mindset. Where the **** did NA atrocities 1992-1996 come in? what has that got to do with anything in Pakistan. ANA is a piece of shit, this however, the blame rests with us for not taking care of our problems in the right time and always blaming everyone but us.

For you, any one who reply to Iranian Republic Guard in equal terms is your enemy #1.

You are a definition of traitor... you are one of those who are full of hate for every one out of your tribe.
You are wearing mask of liberal, which you are not. You are the real culprit, misleading the world with your falsification and discoursing any hint leading to direction Iran, with personal slurs and baseless accusations.

ANA are agents of Iran, getting paid and tasked from other haters of Pakistan.... just like you are.
Those cowards, can do nothing more than killing kids.. before it was Afghan kids and now its Pakistani kids, while you have a task is to instigate sect. war in Pakistan, with all of your obvious propaganda filled with tons of hate.

In one of your previous posts.. you threatened me just like a hateful coward. How far are you with it?

Next time you want to discuss with me... keep it free of accusations, same is the message for your coward IRG friends, who can do no more than assaulting Pakistani villagers and running smuggling of oil and bitumen into Pakistan and heroin out of Afghanistan and hurling personal slurs on Pakistanis only at defence.pk.

so long.

As if the Army pays attention to public opinion in the discharge of its duties.

Seriously, it is fair to criticize the Army for what it does wrong, but to accuse it of something as you just did of trading favorable public opinion for the lives of nearly 140 children is simply wrong and unfair.

Army does nothing wrong.... and it can't be criticized on public forums or media.
However, if they do not teach Indians a lesson, then they will definitely be wrong.
All traitors of Pakistan, should be brought to justice.
 
After years of delays, Pakistan cracks down on violent Extremists



Pakistani paramilitary soldiers and police officials search for suspects in a residential area of Islamabad following a massacre this week at an army-run school. (Sohail Shahzad/EPA)

By Tim Craig and Carol Morello December 28 at 4:44 PM 


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — After pledging for years to crack down on violent Islamists, Pakistani authorities are now taking exceptional steps to do so, with a major military operation against the militants and a vow to rein in radical propaganda.

The government’s campaign has intensified in the wake of a massacre at an elite army-run school in Peshawar this month, reflecting a striking change in public opinion about the danger posed by the extremist groups.

The new effort also suggests an important political shift in a country where parties have traditionally laid out competing views on how to confront homegrown militants. Pakistani political leaders appeared together last week in Islamabad, the capital, to embrace the government’s new anti-terrorism measures, which include registering all religious schools and blocking funding of extremist groups.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s government and the country’s powerful military have agreed on 20 steps to tackle the terrorist threat. The government plans to try terrorism suspects in military courts, block the use of social media and other forms of communication by terrorists, and establish a 5,000-member paramilitary force that can take the fight against militancy deep into Pakistani cities.

The army has vowed to further expand its military offensive against the Pakistani Taliban and groups such as al-Qaeda in the country’s remote tribal areas bordering Afghanistan.


U.S. officials and Western analysts note that Pakistan has a nearly decade-long history of making promises to combat terrorism that it proved unwilling or unable to keep. And they remain skeptical that Pakistan has the wherewithal for a sustained campaign against an Islamist militancy that includes groups suspected of longtime ties to Pakistani intelligence officials.

Still, Obama administration officials say they are encouraged that, after years of delay, Pakistan’s leaders have acknowledged the problems they face and are starting to take determined steps to address them.


They cite signs that Pakistan is improving coordination with Afghanistan, where Pakistani Taliban commanders have traditionally sought shelter. Pakistan has also been tempering its public condemnations of U.S. drone strikes that target militants on its soil. But it is unclear whether Pakistan ultimately can change a culture of extremism rooted in some religious schools and mosques and allowed to fester for years in the country’s lawless tribal belt.

‘A very critical juncture’

Pakistan finds itself at a crossroads. Over the past decade, more than 50,000 Pakistani civilians and soldiers have been killed in terrorist attacks and in the fight against extremists. The rising violence has wrecked the economy and threatened the nuclear-armed country’s ties to the West.

But many of the attacks have generated little outrage in a public that had become inured to violence.

The Dec. 16 assault on the school, however, was a deeply personal blow to Pakistanis. Not only were most of the 149 victims teenagers, but many also were on the fast-track toward careers in the military, which is highly esteemed in this country. Even conservative religious scholars are now rallying behind the government’s offensive.

“Pakistan is fighting its own war of existence and at a very critical juncture,” said Allama Tahir Ashrafi, a noted Islamic scholar who heads Pakistan’s religious clerics council. “It is a do-or-die situation for Pakistan.”


The attack touched Pakistanis not just because of the age of many of the victims. It occurred on the anniversary of one of Pakistan’s bleakest moments. On Dec. 16, 1971, the Pakistani army suffered a humiliating defeat in the Indo-Pakistani war, which led to half of the country breaking away and forming the new nation of Bangladesh.

The school massacre also came as Pakistanis grow increasingly uneasy about radicalism in the region. NATO troops ended their 13-year combat mission in Afghanistan on Sunday, leaving behind just 12,500 coalition soldiers to help train and support the Afghan army in its fight against Taliban insurgents. Meanwhile, the Islamic State’s rise in Iraq and Syria has generated fears that Pakistani radicals could adopt the group’s brutal techniques.



Even before the siege at the school, Pakistani authorities had launched a major military operation in the country’s northwest to drive the Pakistani Taliban and other Islamist groups from the lawless border region. A senior American official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely, said the ongoing offensive in North Waziristan is more serious in intent, longer in duration and greater in scope than the U.S. government had expected.

Pakistani officials say that more than 1,500 terrorists have been killed and that vast quantities of weapons have been seized. The U.S. official said the militants’ bases and communications abilities have also been disrupted.



New political unity


The school massacre has allowed the country’s powerful army chief, Gen. Raheel Sharif, to exert even more influence and has underlined for political leaders the need for tough new policies.

Pakistan’s prime minister has adopted a more hawkish tone, too. On Saturday, he publicly rebuffed U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who had called to urge him to reconsider his decision to resume executions of terrorists. As many as 500 prisoners held on terrorism charges could be hanged in the coming months now that the six-year moratorium has been lifted.

“The country is passing through extraordinary circumstances, which demand extraordinary measures,” Sharif told Ban, according to a statement from the prime minister.

Sherry Rehman, a former ambassador to the United States and a leader of the opposition Pakistan People’s Party, said Sharif is now leading with “clarity and resolve” and “doing his best to be a wartime leader.”

Muhammad Amir Rana, director of the Pak Institute for Peace Studies, said the release of the action plan marked the first time that all the country’s major political leaders have united in a “zero tolerance” policy on terrorism and extremist views.

Under the plan, Pakistan’s military will first target groups such as the Pakistani Taliban that pose “a direct threat” to the country.

To secure Afghanistan’s help in arresting or killing Pakistani militants living there, Pakistani forces will need to launch a parallel move against the Haqqani network and other Islamist groups in Pakistan that carry out attacks in Afghanistan, Rana said. Other groups that do not pose an imminent danger to either country would then have to be addressed, he said.


Pakistani leaders are encouraged that Afghanistan’s new president, Ashraf Ghani, has expressed a willingness to bolster security ties between the two countries. Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai often accused Pakistan of being the source of violent attacks inside Afghanistan.

Ghani has won assurances from Pakistan’s government that it will help organize reconciliation talks between the Afghan government and the Afghan Taliban, the U.S. official said.

Sharif, the Pakistani army chief, has also struck up a productive relationship with the new commander of coalition forces in Afghanistan, U.S. Army Gen. John F. Campbell.

Earlier this month, Sharif took Campbell on an aerial tour of North Waziristan so he could see the progress that Pakistani forces had made in clearing the area, according to a coalition official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Such gestures are helping to ease years of mistrust between U.S. forces and Pakistan’s military, which had been fed by a belief in Washington that this country had not done enough to control the flow of weapons and fighters across the border to Afghanistan.

U.S. officials still believe there is much more Pakistan needs to do to combat the Haqqani network. But the relationship is now stable enough that fruitful conversations about that militant group can be held, the U.S. official said.

Much of Pakistan’s military and civilian leadership has come to realize that Pakistan would also suffer if the Taliban returns to power in Afghanistan, said Marvin Weinbaum, a former analyst for Pakistan at the State Department who now directs the Center for Pakistan Studies at the Middle East Institute.

“There are finally indications that both sides realize they cannot succeed without the other,” Weinbaum said.

Despite the new steps by Islamabad, it could take years to seriously weaken the country’s extremist groups.

Weinbaum said there are still are no indications that either Pakistan or Afghanistan is prepared to make the kind of political changes and public investments needed for a long-term effort to combat militancy in the border region. Many tribal areas, for example, still lack clean drinking water and decent roads.



“There’s no question that the populations in these areas want everybody [in the militant groups] to go away,” Weinbaum said. “On the other hand, they have no great love for the government or the army with the behavior it engages in. It’s similar on the Afghan side. People have to choose, and it’s not easy.”

Another reason Pakistan’s new offensive could fall short is a lack of focus.

With Pakistan also facing an urgent problem with polio, chronic energy shortages and a history of political tumult, any domestic crisis could force the government to scale back its goal of eradicating terrorism, analysts say. A flare-up in tensions on Pakistan’s eastern border with India could also force the military to reassess its priorities.

Still, Rehman believes “this time will be different” because the faces of the dead and injured students will continue to haunt Pakistanis.

“They were children in a school. It was brutal, and it was targeted,” Rehman said. “Our soldiers are already on the front lines,” she added, and “we don’t need our children” endangered.



Morello reported from Washington. Shaiq Hussain in Islamabad and Haq Nawaz Khan in Peshawar contributed to this report.
 
For you, any one who reply to Iranian Republic Guard in equal terms is your enemy #1.

You are a definition of traitor... you are one of those who are full of hate for every one out of your tribe.
You are wearing mask of liberal, which you are not. You are the real culprit, misleading the world with your falsification and discoursing any hint leading to direction Iran, with personal slurs and baseless accusations.

ANA are agents of Iran, getting paid and tasked from other haters of Pakistan.... just like you are.
Those cowards, can do nothing more than killing kids.. before it was Afghan kids and now its Pakistani kids, while you have a task is to instigate sect. war in Pakistan, with all of your obvious propaganda filled with tons of hate.

In one of your previous posts.. you threatened me just like a hateful coward. How far are you with it?

Next time you want to discuss with me... keep it free of accusations, same is the message for your coward IRG friends, who can do no more than assaulting Pakistani villagers and running smuggling of oil and bitumen into Pakistan and heroin out of Afghanistan and hurling personal slurs on Pakistanis only at defence.pk.

so long.



Army does nothing wrong.... and it can't be criticized on public forums or media.
However, if they do not teach Indians a lesson, then they will definitely be wrong.
All traitors of Pakistan, should be brought to justice.
Somebody take this guy's weapons away before he kills half the neighborhood.
 
Somebody take this guy's weapons away before he kills half the neighborhood.

We have too many people like him in Pakistan. Security forces really have a hard task ahead of them.
 
Somebody take this guy's weapons away before he kills half the neighborhood.

How about you... how many Pakistanis did you hired to join the death brigades of mulla saddar?
Iran republic guard own this forum... without doubt.. but you are busted.

We have too many people like him in Pakistan. Security forces really have a hard task ahead of them.

So... you want people in Pakistan whom Iranians call scumbags and you side with them.
Is this the official policy of this forum... ? I think pretty much yes but apparently rejected by me.
You are the one security forces have to target not me.
 
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