Posted on 11/28/2008 8:06:05 PM PST by kristinn
Mumbai: Acting swiftly and decisively, Indian commandos launched a clinical operation on Saturday to eliminate two militants holed up in the iconic Taj hotel in Mumbai to end a 59-hour terror drama, the country's longest, which claimed 148 lives and soured ties with Pakistan.
The militants had attempted to create a diversion by torching two ground floor shops in the hotel's northern wing, hoping the thick black smoke would conceal their movements but this didn't work as the security forces required just over 20 minutes to eliminate them.
"The operation is over," an extremely pleased Mumbai Police Commissioner Hasan Gafoor told reporters at the hotel, even as cleanup operations were underway.
Good post, thanks for all of your clarification. I really don’t like to get mean spirited. By the way, I’ve read verses, bits and pieces - online, ususally as a means of referencing. I’ve never read the entire book and honestly, I’m not that interested in doing so. I remember as a teen, my father came very close to moving us to SA. Life as a teen girl in SA would have been difficult. I’m glad we didn’t go, although I know why he wanted to go - big bucks were being made there at the time.
Yes, I know it can be hard to be civil on these forums. And, I know where both of you are coming from — people are at heart people and decent no matter where they come from. Philosophies can be evil, not people. I’ve learnt through reading through the histories of the ME, Iran, India, the Balkans etc. that the only way is conversion. The “religion” is incompatible with living with other folks. Just wikipedia “Moghals” — you’ll read about how the 3rd Mughal Emperor, Akbar was beloved of both his Hindu and M subjects and how he was a fair, just ruler who ended jaziya. His son Jehangir and grandson Shah Jehan too were secular largely, but his great-grandson, Aurangzeb was a fanatic who went on a rampage against Hindus and inevitably turned them against him. What does that tell us? That Akbar and Jehangir would probably have been the decent sort that your friends probably are, but the philosophy twists people down the line. Ditto for the lot that conquered Coptic Egypt
Al Queda was probably not involved directly. It merely provided the assassins. I suspect it was a dissident Indian group and/or a Paki group that used them. I do not believe, given the available info, that Paki government was involved.
President-Elect.
You’re right — AlQ would be indirectly involved, but they were involved int he planning and training that is there, no other group is capable of this. The assasins however, were from Pakistan, that’s pretty much proven. And quite definitely recruited by Lashkar e Toiba. They were not Indians and not even from Pakistan occupied Kashmir — they seem to have been from Pakistani punjab
Now, wait a minute, and don’t flame me yet — that’s a lot of very pertinent information. BUT, Islam has NOT given the world “every single terrorist attack this century”. (Unless you are starting in 2000?) You have forgotten the IRA, among others. Radical Islam is the largest present source of this evil, but it is certainly not the ONLY source of the last 100 years.
I disagree with your statement: “Islam must have its reformation as well if the West is to survive another 100 years.”
For one thing, I suspect Islam (or at least part of Islam) is planning on “taking down” the West over a longer period.
More to the point, though, the more radicalized factions want to do it faster, and, yes, they might be able to do it, but if they go too fast, the West (possibly with aid from India) will still have overwhelming technology and arms, and pushed too hard / damaged too painfully, will react by destroying most of Islam. Yes, I am talking about a nuclear WW3, and, perhaps it is the most likely scenario.
I think Bush’s long term intent has been to both try to avoid an eventual capitulation of the West AND try to avoid WW3, by sewing seeds for a hoped for something of that reformation you speak of.
Actually, I think just giving them jobs would be enough. I don't mean a jobs welfare or anything, but free countries generally do now war with each other.
Radical ideology seems to suit those that are resentful and jobless. What is it about idle hands being the devil's playthings? Jeremiah Wright is doing the same thing in this country: preaching Marxism in the guise of Christianity.
I haven't read the Koran, but I've got to believe that not all Muslims want to kill us. My wife was stationed over the Middle East (Bahrain), and most people she met were very nice to her. That said, if 23% of European Muslims sympathize with the 9/11 terrorists, that's saying that those are a minority, but certainly not a fringe group.
I believe that the long term strategy has to freedom. The only other alternative is creating a glass parking lot, something nobody wants. Like Christianity, I think the way the religion is practiced will adapt to the conditions on the ground. The way that Christianity has been practiced has changed throughout the centuries, and even now, Christianity is practiced differently depending on the locality. Of course, the good news is that most of our "radical" Christians are dead now. They've been dead for centuries. The bad news is that radical Muslims are heads of state.
Actually, our “radical” Christians are still alive — the Rev. Jeremiah for example and many of the fringe evangelical groups. Radicals like the Puritans and many of the Church burning Calvinists etc are dead thankfully. However, our modern radicals have eschewed violence mostly (exceptions like the Waco guys remain of course). M reformers are the Wahabbis and the Deobandi schools which preach violence and a return to 7th century norms
Also the rather small Ah-Mahdiah sect is of the same sort. However, all of those groups whom you have mentioned are fiercely persecuted in Pakistan - they are victims of constant sectarian violence, largely unnoticed by the outside world. It is not the Pakistani govt but the Deobandi radicals, etc., but they operate with impunity.
I’ve never heard of the Al-Mahdiah’s. Are you referring to the Ahmadiyyas? however, Ahmadiyyas are in a way similar to Bahai’s in the common point that both had prophets who say they superseded Mohammed just like M superseded others. And, since Izz says that M was the last prophets, hence these are blasphemous words and so they need to be killled
Yes, that is who I meant, thank you for the clarrification.
As you say, they have some features in common with the Bahai - they are also have pacifist beliefs. They do count themselves as part of the official Islamic faith, although this is not a claim recognised by the mainstream - in that sense, they are similar to the Mormon's relationship to Christianity. They have some shocking times in Pakistan, with attacks and persecutions.
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