State of Pakistan

“Egotism is the anesthetic that dulls the pain of stupidity.” “Ink of the scholar is holier than the blood of the martyr.”

September 6th, 2010

Al Qaeda is not a deadly threat: Newsweek

From Newsweek 

September 4, 2010

What America Has Lost

By Fareed Zakaria

Nine years after 9/11, can anyone doubt that Al Qaeda is simply not that deadly a threat? Since that gruesome day in 2001, once governments everywhere began serious countermeasures, Osama bin Laden’s terror network has been unable to launch a single major attack on high-value targets in the United States and Europe. While it has inspired a few much smaller attacks by local jihadis, it has been unable to execute a single one itself. Today, Al Qaeda’s best hope is to find a troubled young man who has been radicalized over the Internet, and teach him to stuff his underwear with explosives. Read more »

August 11th, 2010

Pakistan floods: disaster of epic proportions raises the spectre of systemic collapse

3.5 millon children at risk , economy and exports to contract as losses could exceed $15bn

Pakistan seeks restructuring of $10bn IMF loan as the United Nations urges help and raises $500 million

Click to enlarge

By Yousuf Nazar

On Aug. 21, around 150,000 Pakistanis in Sindh province were evacuated to higher ground because of the swollen Indus River, a government spokesman said. Officials expect the floodwaters to recede nationwide in the next few days as the last river torrents empty into the Arabian Sea. But survivors may find little left when they return home - the waters have washed away houses, roads, bridges and crops, and leaving millions homeless and penniless. In Sindh, there are already 600,000 people in relief camps set up during the flooding. Read more »

May 31st, 2010

A Lullaby of Lies

From Antiwar.com, San Francisco

May 30, 2010

By Justin Raimondo 

While most Americans were sitting out on their decks barbecuing over the Memorial Day weekend, our leaders were planning to barbecue a few Pakistanis, as the Washington Post reported:

“The U.S. military is reviewing options for a unilateral strike in Pakistan in the event that a successful attack on American soil is traced to the country’s tribal areas, according to senior military officials.”

Hey, wait a minute: I thought Attorney General Eric Holder has supposedly already established that the Pakistani Taliban were directly involved in the Times Square bombing attempt – which, although not successful, did succeed in generating shockwaves from Washington to Islamabad.

Read more »

May 30th, 2010

The Truth About Drones

Newsweek 

They are inspiring homegrown terror.

How explosives have ignited insurgencies and superpowers

Read more »

May 30th, 2010

The Massacre in Lahore

By Yousuf Nazar

Reproduced by the Business Recorder on June 1, 2010

It is difficult to find words to express my sadness, anger, and horror over the mayhem in Lahore which resulted in the deaths of scores of innocent Pakistanis and human beings.  The bigoted barbarians - nurtured, fed, trained, and financed for years by the security establishment - are destroying the society and the response of the powers that be - in this case - Army and the Punjab government - seems to be no more than the usual; “we will investigate and punish the culprits.” We as a Nation have not just lost it but are unable to comprehend why this is happening?  It is not just extremists. Read more »

May 22nd, 2010

Hamid Mir saga: the buck stops at General Parvez Kayani

May 22, 2010 

By Yousuf Nazar

[Reproduced by the Business Recorder, Karachi on May 25, 2010]

My take on the whole Hamid Mir’s saga is not [assuming of course the tape is authentic] just that he could have contributed to the killing of former Squadron Leader and ISI official Khalid Khawaja by telling that unknown person (who sounded like he was somewhere in the tribal areas and involved with a terrorist group) that Khalid worked for the CIA among other allegations but the fact people like Hamid Mir with known links with Al Qaeda are also alleged to be the intelligence agencies men and work for the biggest media group in the country. No wonder, no newspaper or TV channel took even notice of the story till the Daily Times broke it on its first page. And yet the media has the audacity to make claims about its independence, integrity, objectivity..etc. Read more »

May 9th, 2010

A mosque in Munich

The Wall Street Journal

Book Review by Matthew Kaminski

A Mosque in Munich (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 318 pages, $27)  By Ian Johnson

As we know too well by now, sometime in the past century the religion of Muhammad was weaponized—that is, there was a coupling of terrorism and Islam among its militant believers. This development didn’t take place in isolation, however. Islamism, as we now call a radical version of the faith, emerged in close contact with the West. In the decades before 9/11 Western governments often turned a blind eye to Islamist agitation or, in a few cases, naïvely nurtured the very people who today inspire or lead terrorist attacks in Pakistan, Yemen and other parts of the world—even, as we were reminded by last week’s attempted bombing in Times Square, in the U.S.

Read more »

May 4th, 2010

Nine years into War on Terror: All militant leaders alive and kicking?

VIEW: Get the militant leadership — By Daud Khattak

From the Daily Times, May 04, 2010

In wars, the death of a leader means half the war is won. But, interestingly enough, in the anti-terror war in this region, the leadership is intact despite the use of all air, ground and intelligence resources against them Read more »

May 2nd, 2010
May 2nd, 2010

Was it just General Nadeem Ijaz?

From The News 

Sunday, May 02, 2010
Gibran Peshimam

The past week ought to be celebrated – and enthusiastically so – in Pakistan. Not just by the common man, but also by political and armed forces. After all, we apparently stand on the threshold of solving many mysteries – ones that we thought we would never get to the bottom of. Read more »

April 19th, 2010

Bombing your own people; the use of air power in South Asia

Reuters

Apr 19, 2010

(U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt jets, also known as the Warthog. File photo)

(U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt jets, also known as the Warthog. File photo)

Pakistani army chief of staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani offered a rare apology at the weekend for a deadly air strike in the Khyber region in the northwest  in which residents and local officials say at least 63 civilians were killed. Read more »

April 18th, 2010

Pakistan army chief apologises over civilian deaths

April 17, 2010

Military and political officials initially said at least 42 militants were killed in a gunfight and air strike in the Tirah valley of northwest Khyber district, where Pakistani jets targeted local Islamist militants last Saturday. Read more »

April 15th, 2010

Why the Supreme Court has not taken any interest in Benazir Bhutto’s assassination investigation?

By Yousuf Nazar

It will be late night or early morning in Pakistan when the much awaited United Nations report on Benazir Bhutto’s assassination is released by the UN.  There is a litmus test that will determine, for me at least, whether the report has any relevance or meaning. I will come to that later in this article. The United Nations commission was charged with examining the facts and circumstances behind the December 2007 assassination. The Commission is headed by Ambassador Heraldo Muñoz of Chile, and its other members are Marzuki Darusman, the former attorney-general of Indonesia, and Peter Fitzgerald, a veteran of the Irish National Police who has also served the UN in a number of capacities.

The UN fact-finders were asked to probe Ms. Bhutto’s assassination in a gun and bomb suicide attack in the closing days of Pakistan’s 2007 elections, as well as her narrow escape from a similar bombing two months earlier, when she paraded triumphantly through Karachi after returning home from eight years in exile.

Given that it was a fact finding mission with limited access to some of the key officials, the report is unlikely to go much further than to catalogue prior assessments (including that dubious report of the Scotland Yard which was full of qualifications), but it is expected to criticize Pakistan’s security establishment for failing to protect Ms. Bhutto and the crime scene. The UN findings also come at a sensitive time for Asif Zardari who has been trying to improve relations with the security services. It has never suited either Zardari or Nawaz Sharif to push for a real investigation because many top retired and serving generals would have come under criticism and neither of the two wants to displease the khakis. But what about Iftikhar Chaudhry? Isn’t he supposed to restore the rule of law because nobody is above law. But maybe, the past president enjoys immunity whereas the incumbent does not. Who knows? I am not an expert in constitutional law.

Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry has taken suo moto notices of all kinds of cases including big money contracts, government appointments, flogging of a girl in Swat as shown in a video report, alleged rape of a 8th class student from district Narowal, by her male teacher, etc.  Just a day before Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s last death anniversary, Justice Chaudhry paid a surprise visit to Tando Adam Prison and directed Chief Justice Sindh High Court to take notice of Superintendent Prison’s not knowing of the number of inmates. How well meaning and considerate!

Their Lordship(s) demonstrated undue and indecent haste in blocking the government’s move to elevate Punjab High Court’s Justice Khawaja Sharif to the Supreme Court. They were swift to punish an-FIA official who happened to be a friend of Asif Zardari. But Benazir Bhutto’s murder investigation and snail-paced trial by a lower court has not attracted any attention from their Lordship(s). Maybe, they think the government is doing its job properly. Or perhaps their view is Mohatarma allah ko piyari ho gein, banda ab kiya kar sakta hey? Or  their Lordship(s) think Benazir’s murder did not violate anyone’s fundamental rights under Article 184 of the constitution, so it is therefore a subject that does not deserve their attention. Or none of the above?

The real reasons are simple. Any meaningful investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s assassination cannot be completed without interviewing not only some foreign leaders (like UAE’s Sheikh Maktoom, Condi Rice, Karzai) but also interrograting some key Generals including Pervez Musharraf, former ISI Chief Nadeem Taj and MI Head Nadeem Ijaz and of course Pervez Kayani.  But not the least, former head of the Intelligence Bureau - Brig (rtd.) Ejaz Shah who was probably the most critical link in the conspiracy to assassinate Benazir Bhutto. Any investigation without a detailed examination of the activities of Ejaz Shah and Nadeem Ijaz, particularly their phone call records, would be worthless.  Why?

On Nov. 2, 2007, Benazir Bhutto, clearly referred to Ejaz Shah as a suspect in her interview to Al-Jazeera with David Frost. For those of you who have not seen this before, here is the link.

 

This was not a spur of the moment remark. And let me share what I know first hand.  A couple of days after BB’s welcome procession was bombed on October 18, 2007, a friend of mine who was a correspondent of a major Western newspaper dropped by to see me. After some coffee, he said he wanted to unload something off his chest. He explained that the whole thing was off the record ( as he had given his word and he wanted to honour a journalist’s pledge to keep it off the record). He then told me something rather astonishing. He was sitting in the office of  Lt. Gen. Ahsan Azhar Hayat - then Corp. Commander of Sind and presently serving in the GHQ- when BB’s procession was making its way through Share-e-Faisal. According to the correspondent, it so happened that Musharraf called at the same time and expressed his annoyance at the coverage that was being given to her home coming. From what this correspondent told me [and he had no reason to invent or make up this story for my amusement if for argument’s sake some one might quibble], it transpired that Musharraf wanted the procession to be off the TV screens even it meant the street lights had to be turned off. The correspondent did not tell me who Musharraf ordered to do this. But the information was obviously very sensitive and explosive.

I communicated this to BB immediately through a contact [BB narrated this reported incident to many influential persons including the US Ambassador Anne Patterson] and requested me to prepare a dossier on Ijaz Shah. I prepared this and delivered the dossier on October 22, 2007. She asked one of her Islamabad-based party members to deliver a copy of the dossier to Ann Patterson as well.

Benazir’s meeting with Ann Patterson after the imposition of emergency by Musharraf was explosive. The meeting took place on the 19th November, 2007 at Bilawal House, Karachi. Ann was pressing her to cooperate with Musharraf despite the imposition of the emergency. BB’s view was the elections under the circumstances would be a sham. When Ann Patterson continued to press her, BB - in the presence of her aide Zafar Hilaly - shot back:

 ” Do you want me to cooperate with some one who wants to kill me?” The meeting ended on this rather tense note.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist Ron Suskind describes what went on in his book, The Way of the World (pp. 358). The US intelligence agencies taped Benazir Bhutto`s phone calls, prior to her arrival in Pakistan, in a bid to “play under-the-table, cut-throat games more effectively”, the book revealed.  According to the tapes to which Ron had access to,  Musharraf warned Bhutto, ”You should understand something, your security is based on the state of our relationship”. Suskind writes that Benazir Bhutto`s case of returning to Pakistan was strongly backed by Condoleezza Rice-led State Department and equally opposed by Vice President Dick Cheney who considered Bhutto “complicated and unpredictable”. His conclusion on what happend:

The United States should have done whatever was necessary - including sending over a few hundred Secret Service agents or pulling together a small security team - to make sure Bhutto lived to see Election day. It was matter of will. Cheney never made the call Bhutto was hoping for. He and the president, once again, trusted illegitimate power over stated principles. They went with Musharraf.”

Cheney’s link was also a subject of a report by Russian TV (RT) on July 14, 2010. According to RT , Washington is caught up in a political scandal centering on former Vice President Dick Cheney. It follows a move by the new CIA director Leon Panetta to cancel a secret plan to find and kill Al-Qaeda leaders. He says that, while in office, Cheney ordered the agency to withhold information about the anti-terror program from Congress.

RT interviewed investigative journalist and RT contributor Wayne Madsen, “This assassination team may have targeted politicians in other countries. One name mentioned was former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who may have been a victim of this program. The other name is Jonas Savimbi, the former Angolan UNITA leader, who may have outlived his usefulness as far as Mr Cheney is concerned.”

 It is not difficult to reach the organisers of BB’s murder but who will bell the cat? Would their Lordship(s) take suo moto notice and ask the interior minister to apprise the Supreme Court about the investigation and also President Zardari to tell the Court who killed BB if Mr. Zardari knows the killers?

March 31st, 2010
March 21st, 2010

America’s “Islamists” Go Where Oilmen Fear to Tread

From The Atlantic Free Press

by Peter Chamberlin

By following the trail of militant terrorists US forces and American interests have gained access deep in Central Asia, where oil companies have had little luck gaining a foothold on their own. Read more »