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T-Faz

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I present to you news articles of final years of Zia's rule and the soviet war in afghanistan.

Zia Blames Kabul for Terrorist Blast in Pakistan

The Washington Post | July 16, 1987 | Richard M. Weintraub |

President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq today linked two massive terrorist bombings that killed at least 72 here last night to agents opposed to Pakistan's support for Afghan guerrillas fighting against the Kabul regime and Soviet forces there.

Business and government life came to a halt in reaction to the bombings, which also left 140 hospitalized, including 15 listed in critical condition tonight.

Zia, who flew to Karachi today from Islamabad, was able to visit survivors in only one of two major hospitals because angry students were demonstrating at the other.

Zia Blames Kabul for Terrorist Blast in Pakistan - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com

Pakistan's Premier Points At India in Fatal Bombings

The Washington Post | July 17, 1987 | Richard M. Weintraub |

Pakistani Prime Minister Mohammed Khan Junejo said tonight that India and not Afghanistan may have been behind the two car bombings Tuesday that killed at least 72 persons here.

Junejo, who cut short a state visit to Japan to rush back to Karachi, appeared to be distancing himself from President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, who said yesterday that he believed the bombing was related to Pakistan's support for Afghan refugees and that recent bombings were "only the beginning" of a severe test for this country.

The two bomb blasts, and earlier ones in Rawalpindi, Lahore, and Peshawar

Bombs kill 7 as Pakistani opposition hits Zia's rule

Chicago Sun-Times | July 6, 1987 | Copyright

KARACHI A series of bombs killed seven people and wounded at least 50 Sunday in Pakistan as opposition parties held protest rallies to mark the 10th anniversary of a coup that brought President Mohammad Zia ul-Haq to power.

Police said the explosions came around midday in Lahore.

ZIA TIES AFGHANS TO KARACHI BLASTS AS THE TOLL INCREASES TO 75 DEATHS

KARACHI, Pakistan - President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq said yesterday that Afghan agents were responsible for bombings Tuesday that killed 75 persons. It was the deadliest terrorist bombing in Pakistan's history.

Police and rescue workers, meanwhile, removed the last of the bodies from the wreckage of the fashionable Saddar market and residential area, which was teeming with shoppers, commuters and street vendors when the bombs exploded. More than 300 people were injured.

At Karachi's two central hospitals, relatives tried to identify victims from photographs posted on bulletin boards.

The rest of Pakistan's largest city was virtually shut down, as officials

KGB: War between India and Pakistan

This is an untold spy story culled out from the files of KGB spy Vasili Mitrokhin. But this story you won't find in the recently published The Mitrokhin Archive II by Christopher Andrew. Outlook has accessed it from the documents which had been out in the public domain. Believe it or not, in 1981, the KGB resident in Delhi proposed that another war between India and Pakistan would be advantageous for the Soviet Union and the Babrak Karmal regime in Afghanistan, and that India and Pakistan "must be steered in that direction".

"The KGB carried out active measures jointly with the Hungarians, who were in operational contact with an Indian hack based in Vienna."

It was in December 1979 that the Russians had invaded Afghanistan and installed Babrak Karmal as president.

The proposal to provoke a war between India and Pakistan is included in a paper that Mitrokhin presented in 2002 to the Cold War International History Project based in Washington. This material, however, is separate from the information from KGB files he referred to in the 1999 book co-authored with Cambridge scholar Christopher Andrew or even The Mitrokhin Archive II.

www.outlookindia.com | KGB Diary

There are many similar incidents where bombs in Islamabad and other were perpetrated by the KGB-KHAD-RAW nexus and there was much suffering. Now Musharaf was brave enough to keep playing all sides but it all went wrong during a fight between a Pakistani Army Major and NSA chief had an argument.

Now the question is why did the military/government not purge the the previously used ways of carrying out bombing in pakistan, these terrorists are from tribal areas and should have been cornered their and crushed. They were given a chance to spread and now easily carry out attacks. Why are they not being pursued through their profile and even if they cannot be found, stop ammunition flowing to and from areas.

Also we need to control and destroy the Jamaat-e-islami and other such fronts. The spread of wahabism and poverty in the 90's, needs to be reversed.
 
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waqt badal jata ha , chehray badal jatay hain leikin kirdar nahin badaltay!

Death to the enemies of Pakistan!
 
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Moscow's "Invisible War' Of Terror Inside Pakistan

The Washington Post | March 13, 1988 | Lally Weymouth | Copyright

Last July 14, a remote-control device triggered three car-bomb explosions in Karachi, killing 72 Pakistanis and injuring 260. Then, on September 19, a bomb exploded at a bus stop in Rawalpindi, killing five and injuring 19.

These brutal bombings provide just two examples of Moscow's secret war of terror against Pakistan. The Soviet-directed campaign began in the early 1980s, in an effort to pressure Pakistan to stop providing a base of operations for the mujaheddin in Afghanistan, and it has escalated sharply during the last two years. It is a dirty war-waged mostly against …

Moscow's "Invisible War' Of Terror Inside Pakistan - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com

Diplomatic Flurry Over Afghan War Sets Off Speculation; Soviet Visits Kabul; Armacost in Pakistan

The Washington Post | January 5, 1988 | Celestine Bohlen |

Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze left here today on an unexpected visit to Kabul, raising speculation about a possible Soviet diplomatic move in the eight-year-old war in Afghanistan.

The Soviet news agency Tass gave no details on the trip, which it described as a "working visit." Shevardnadze was last in Afghanistan a year ago, shortly before the Kabul government announced a policy of national reconciliation.

Shevardnadze's trip coincides with a visit to Pakistan by U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Michael H. Armacost, who discussed diplomatic …

Diplomatic Flurry Over Afghan War Sets Off Speculation; Soviet Visits Kabul; Armacost in Pakistan - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com

KEY SOVIET AIDE TO MEET AFGHANS IN PAKISTAN

The Boston Globe (Boston, MA) | January 4, 1989 | Associated Press

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The Soviet official in charge of settling the Afghan war is scheduled to arrive here today in his search for political arrangements that will enable the Soviets to get all their troops out of Afghanistan in six weeks as scheduled.

Foreign Ministry sources said the official, Yuli Vorontsov, is to spend four days in Pakistan, meeting with government officials and Afghan insurgent leaders.

Vorontsov is both the Soviet Union's first deputy foreign minister and its ambassador to Afghanistan. He met with guerrilla leaders a month ago in Saudi Arabia

KEY SOVIET AIDE TO MEET AFGHANS IN PAKISTAN - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA) | Encyclopedia.com


Soviet, Pakistan talks begin

Chicago Sun-Times | February 7, 1987 | Copyright

MOSCOW The Soviet Union and Pakistan yesterday began a new round of talks on Afghanistan, and Asian diplomats in Moscow expressed cautious optimism on prospects for agreements resulting in a withdrawal of Soviet forces.

Pakistani officials said Foreign Minister Sahabzada Yaqub Khan had three hours of talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze. No details were released, and officials said the two men would meet again today.

Yaqub Khan will be followed to

Soviet, Pakistan talks begin - Chicago Sun-Times | Encyclopedia.com

Afghan Talks Recess in Stalemate;Pakistan Awaits a Soviet Decision on Future of Kabul Regime

The Washington Post | March 11, 1987 | Richard M. Weintraub | Copyright

Despite the optimism expressed by U.N. mediators in Geneva, the abrupt end of the latest round of talks on Afghanistan without significant progress reflected the unwillingness of the Soviet Union so far to make the "hard decisions" necessary to end the seven-year-long conflict, according to Pakistani officials who have been following the negotiations closely.

While Moscow has considerably shortened the time span of a possible troop withdrawal, its position, as presented by Afghan negotiators in Geneva, still falls short of anything that would be acceptable to Pakistan or the United

Afghan Talks Recess in Stalemate;Pakistan Awaits a Soviet Decision on Future of Kabul Regime - The Washington Post | Encyclopedia.com

See the exact same pattern of talks with the insurgents and withdrawal, but with bombing in Pakistan to stop them helping the insurgents. I just hope we are able to pull through this one aswell.
 
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I think that Pakistan`s most biggest problem is that Pak is 1st ever Islamic Nu-Clrear state in the world.

This is what India, US & Israel don`t like at all that any Muslim country will have such kind of power.

Pakistan roll in Afghanistan is what we all know. Some are totally not agree with me at all even my own country men as well.

Maybe they got more info than me, or try to seek more sympathi from those Afghan people here?

Anyway, I am talking about 1980`s. And what we did that time what we paying back? Already this has been discussions on 2 different Pakistan channels "Aaj" & "Hum"
 
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