Fusion
Global Moderator
Cute articles SJS, but completely devoid of ground realities and facts. The articles fail to mention that outside of the US, no other country has lost more of its soldiers in the war on terror than Pakistan. No other country has deployed as many troops to battle the terrorists than Pakistan. No other country has chosen to engage in almost a civil war type warfare to rid the militants from its soil. The situation in the Pakistani border is a complicated one. It wasn’t created overnight and it won’t be fixed overnight. Pakistan certainly is to blame for a lot of it, but so are other countries, chief among them being the United States. If you are trying to prove that Pakistanis need to confront terrorism, then you can stop lecturing now. We get it, thank you very much. We get it each time a brave soldier dies confronting those terrorist. We get it each time an innocent bystander is blown apart by those terrorist. And we get it when even the mundane things in life (relatively speaking) like playing cricket are no longer possible because of the havoc created by those terrorist. It’s very easy to say (whether by outsiders or insiders) that “Pakistan is not doing enough”. There’s no freaking magic wand here. Winning this war will take time and a lot more sacrifice by Pakistanis. We get it. Do you?more
ACCORDING to a press release, Gen Ashfaq Kayani has declared the army’s intention to fight any intrusion across our borders at “any cost”, and “against all odds”. This should reassure all Pakistanis who have been paying enormous amounts for the army to do just that.
But I would like to ask Gen Kayani why the army has not demonstrated the same degree of vigilance and sense of duty where the Taliban and Al Qaeda are concerned. After all, militants, extremists, terrorists, drug smugglers and gunrunners have been crossing the Durand Line that notionally divides Pakistan from Afghanistan for years without being challenged or hindered. Had the army been doing its job these last few years, Pakistan’s survival might not have been under threat as it is today.
However, when a squad of American Navy Seal commandos entered Pakistan to engage suspected militants recently, hawks in Pakistan went into paroxysms of patriotism. Don’t get me wrong: I am not arguing that the Americans are justified in attacking targets on Pakistani soil. But I am questioning the selective defence of our sovereignty. If we denounce the American cross-border attacks, should we not ask why the Taliban are allowed free access to our territory to target us and conduct raids into Afghanistan?
Cute articles SJS, but completely devoid of ground realities and facts. The articles fail to mention that outside of the US, no other country has lost more of its soldiers in the war on terror than Pakistan. No other country has deployed as many troops to battle the terrorists than Pakistan. No other country has chosen to engage in almost a civil war type warfare to rid the militants from its soil. The situation in the Pakistani border is a complicated one. It wasn’t created overnight and it won’t be fixed overnight. Pakistan certainly is to blame for a lot of it, but so are other countries, chief among them being the United States. If you are trying to prove that Pakistanis need to confront terrorism, then you can stop lecturing now. We get it, thank you very much. We get it each time a brave soldier dies confronting those terrorist. We get it each time an innocent bystander is blown apart by those terrorist. And we get it when even the mundane things in life (relatively speaking) like playing cricket are no longer possible because of the havoc created by those terrorist. It’s very easy to say (whether by outsiders or insiders) that “Pakistan is not doing enough”. There’s no freaking magic wand here. Winning this war will take time and a lot more sacrifice by Pakistanis. We get it. Do you?
source
.Dawn, a leading daily English newspaper of Pakistan