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The phoney war on terror
The Sunday Times ^ | September 24, 2006 | Christina Lamb

Posted on 09/24/2006 8:21:48 AM PDT by MadIvan

So President Musharraf is military dictator turned tease, making us wait for his book launch in New York tomorrow for more details of the Bush administration’s crudely worded threat against Pakistan if it did not support the war on terror.

“Be prepared to be bombed. Be prepared to go back to the Stone Age,” was the graphic warning from deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage, though admittedly it came one day after September 11. Armitage has disputed the wording but the fact that such a threat had to be made (followed by a nice little package of $5 billion of aid) raises the question of whose side Pakistan is really on.

Pakistan’s chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Lieutenant-General Ehsan-ul-Haq, was in London last week talking about how no other nation has suffered so much in the service of the war on terror.

His forces deployed in the badlands that border Afghanistan have lost more than 500 soldiers — “more than the whole of the coalition combined”. Musharraf himself has narrowly escaped three assassination attempts.

Pakistan’s military intelligence, the Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI), last month helped foil the alleged Heathrow plot to blow up transatlantic flights and the six most senior Al-Qaeda officials to be caught so far, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11, were all arrested in Pakistan.

So far, so impressive. On the other hand, how come those Al-Qaeda leaders were living in Pakistan not in caves but in residential areas, even a military cantonment in Khalid’s case? American special forces searching for Osama Bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri are convinced the ISI tipped off al-Zawahiri on two occasions when they got near.

Why do most would-be suicide bombers regard Pakistan as a finishing school? And while military planners in Washington focus on Tehran’s nuclear programme, remember where the Iranians acquired their uranium enrichment capability.

No country has done more for nuclear proliferation to rogue states than Pakistan through Abdul Qadeer Khan, the godfather of its own bomb. Khan was even using army planes to transport the parts.

In 2003 I spent a week with American troops from the 10th Mountain Division in Afghanistan at a godforsaken firebase called Shkin on the border with Pakistan. Every day fighters would come and take potshots at the Americans then run back across the invisible border. The soldiers could do nothing because Pakistan refused to allow hot pursuit.

For those of us who have followed Pakistan for some time, it’s a familiar story. Remember General Zia ul-Haq, the short military dictator with the big teeth who seized power in 1977? He, like Musharraf, spent two years as an international pariah. When the Soviet army crossed the Oxus into Afghanistan in 1979, he suddenly became the West’s most crucial ally.

Because US support to the Afghans was a covert operation, it was channelled through the ISI. But what the West ignored then, and again after 9/11, was that the ISI had its own agenda. Under Zia the army had been Islamicised and the ISI made sure most aid and arms went to its favourite fundamentalist warlord, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, even though he openly preached anti-Americanism.

It was the ISI’s idea in the mid-1980s to ship in young Arabs, including Mr Bin Laden, and train them to fight. When the Russians left, and the West overnight abandoned Afghanistan (and slashed aid to Pakistan), the ISI supported the creation of the Taliban.

After 9/11, Musharraf had little option but to join the war on terror. Even if the Pakistani leader was genuinely committed, the ISI saw no reason to stop supporting those same Afghans they had been helping for more than two decades.

Besides, these training camps had become useful for providing militants to fight in Indian-held Kashmir, Pakistan’s single most important policy objective. So whenever Musharraf has come under pressure from Washington, he has banned jihadi groups and watched them reform under new names. Or he has agreed to regulate madrasahs, the Islamist schools, then done nothing.

In almost five years since the fall of the Taliban in Kabul, not a single Taliban leader or commander has been arrested in Pakistan. Yet they operate openly from there, particularly around the town of Quetta, long known as Taliban Central.

“Is Pakistan playing a malevolent role by supplying training?” asked a diplomat involved in drawing up our Afghan policy. “Well, we haven’t found a smoking gun. It seems Musharraf is guilty of the sin of omission.” He pointed out that with 2.5m Afghan refugees still in camps in Pakistan, there is a plentiful source of fighters, and with 650 crossing points, the border is impossible to monitor.

Whether Islamabad is simply turning a blind eye to training and recruitment inside its own borders or actively involved, the West’s failure to see Pakistan as the real battleground of the war on terror is undoubtedly one of the reasons the Taliban have re-emerged as such a threat.

For obvious reasons, most leaders wait till they are no longer in office to release their memoirs. Musharraf’s choice of title is intriguing. In the Line of Fire was a Hollywood movie starring Clint Eastwood as a veteran secret service agent haunted by his failure many years earlier to save President John F Kennedy from assassination.

Is the general trying to tell us something?


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: musharraf; pakistan; terrorism; treasonmedia
I don't trust Pakistan.

Regards, Ivan

1 posted on 09/24/2006 8:21:49 AM PDT by MadIvan
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To: DCPatriot; Deetes; Barset; fanfan; LadyofShalott; Tolik; mtngrl@vrwc; pax_et_bonum; Alkhin; ...

Ping!


2 posted on 09/24/2006 8:22:03 AM PDT by MadIvan (I aim to misbehave.)
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To: MadIvan

I don't trust Pakistan either but it's a touchy situation. The last thing we need is to tip the scale and bring the Taliban to power in a nuclear armed country.


3 posted on 09/24/2006 8:25:11 AM PDT by cripplecreek (If stupidity got us into this mess, then why can't it get us out?)
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To: MadIvan

I trust no Muslim, especially with nukes.


4 posted on 09/24/2006 8:27:39 AM PDT by o_zarkman44 (ELECT SOME WORKERS AND REMOVE THE JERKERS!.)
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To: MadIvan

Musharraf is on Musharraf's side.


5 posted on 09/24/2006 8:28:41 AM PDT by Knitting A Conundrum (Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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To: Knitting A Conundrum
Musharraf is on Musharraf's side

A mirror image of Hillary don'cha'think?

Seriously, Musharraf is in a real pickle.............

6 posted on 09/24/2006 8:36:23 AM PDT by yoe
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To: Knitting A Conundrum

Why are we selling him our F-16's?


7 posted on 09/24/2006 8:37:22 AM PDT by jamese777
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To: MadIvan

Indian newspaper reports that Musharaff has a $100,000 advance from Simon and Schuster.

OpEd article here:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2015426.cms


8 posted on 09/24/2006 8:37:36 AM PDT by bwteim (bwteim = Begin With The End In Mind : First time Reader, Long time Poster)
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To: MadIvan

But what you have to consider is that Musharraf did decide to be on our side, but he has a lot of anti-US and anti-Musharraf people in the Pakistani Intel Services, who were the ones who created the Taliban in the first place.

Don't forget, there were several attempts on Musharraf's life.

I read somewhere that the accusation of what Armitage may have said ( I doubt it), was told to Mush by his intel services, who have a vested interest in breaking up the US-Pakistani cooperation.

I think the purpose by anti-US elements in the world is to peel off our allies -- note the way they got leftists elected in Spain and Italy, who used to be our friends and aren't anymore.

Now they set their sight on Pakistan next, who has been a great ally in the War on Terror.


9 posted on 09/24/2006 8:39:42 AM PDT by FairOpinion (Dem Foreign Policy: SURRENDER to our enemies. Real conservatives don't help Dems get elected.)
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To: MadIvan

The author is forgetting the Saudi money that paid Pakistan to build the Majahadeen networks against the Soviets and that continues to fund most schools for most poor young Pakistani boys in the same radical Wahabi Islam that educated Osama.


10 posted on 09/24/2006 8:45:09 AM PDT by Wuli
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To: MadIvan

You've got a point about not trusting them but I wouldn't want to be in Musharraf's shoes.

He's got India on one side of him and Afghanistan and the Taliban on the other with us beating him over the head to help us while having a huge Muslim population.

If there was ever someone between a rock and a hard place I think it's him and he has been very helpful.


11 posted on 09/24/2006 8:45:48 AM PDT by jazusamo (DIANA IREY for Congress, PA 12th District: Retire murtha.)
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To: MadIvan
“Be prepared to be bombed. Be prepared to go back to the Stone Age,”

What's wrong with that?

12 posted on 09/24/2006 8:45:58 AM PDT by nonliberal (Graduate: Curtis E. LeMay School of International Relations)
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To: nonliberal
"...back to the Stone Age...?"
13 posted on 09/24/2006 9:28:17 AM PDT by onedoug
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To: FairOpinion

9/11 happened becuase of pakistan. The 100,000 was wired from pakistan to Atta. Why the heck do I even bother with the Pakistan bed buddies...


14 posted on 09/24/2006 9:34:17 AM PDT by USMMA_83 (Tantra is my fetish ;))
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To: MadIvan

"...was the graphic warning from deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage..."



I stopped reading at this point of the article.


15 posted on 09/24/2006 9:50:17 AM PDT by sully777 (You have flies in your eyes--Catch-22)
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To: cripplecreek

This could not be allowed-we need to face the fact that pre-emtive nuclear strikes against terrorist countries may have to be considered rather than allowing them to get nuclear weapons in the case of Iran or allow demented fanatics to use weapons in the case of Pakistan somehow ending up with a Taliban style government.


16 posted on 09/24/2006 10:21:16 AM PDT by nyconse
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To: sully777

<< "...was the graphic warning from deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage..."


I stopped reading at this point of the article. >>

Exactly. And that Mr Aritage has categorically, credibly and convincingly denied the British-Subject-born Pakistani dictator's allegation of having second or third hand heard something or other from someone or other doesn't rate a mention by this Bush Derangement Syndrome suffering and automatically-anti-American Limey Murdoch-rag scribbler.


17 posted on 09/24/2006 1:03:48 PM PDT by Brian Allen ("Moral issues are always terribly complex, for someone without principles." - G K Chesterton)
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To: jazusamo
You've got a point about not trusting them but I wouldn't want to be in Musharraf's shoes. He's got India on one side of him and Afghanistan and the Taliban on the other with us beating him over the head to help us while having a huge Muslim population. If there was ever someone between a rock and a hard place I think it's him and he has been very helpful.

Musharraf doesn't have to be in his shoes, but his shoes are being filled with money from all sides... so why not keep playing all sides against the middle? Soon enough it will catch up to him and his shoes will be filled with cement.

18 posted on 09/24/2006 5:59:01 PM PDT by WellsFargo94
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