Pakistan opposition leaders urge Musharraf to resign
Updated Thu. Jan. 3 2008 7:30 AM ET
The Associated Press
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- Pakistan's U.S.-allied president must resign before next month's elections or the country could risk slipping into civil war, opposition leaders and a leading independent research institute said Thursday.
The calls came after the government pushed back polls to Feb. 18 from the planned Jan. 8 date due to unrest following the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.
Bhutto's death in a suicide bomb and gun attack plunged already volatile Pakistan deeper into crisis and stoked fears of political meltdown as the nation struggled to contain an explosion of Islamic militant violence.
The government -- which had initially ruled out the need for foreign involvement in the assassination probe -- has been criticized over its security arrangements for Bhutto, who had claimed elements in the ruling party were trying to kill her. The party vehemently denies such a plot.
tomahawk6 said:Musharraf leaving office is not good for the West nor is it good for Pakistan - unless you want an islamic takeover.
NL_engineer said:I can think of a couple countries that may want that, Iran being on the top of the list
TCBF said:- Nothing would drive Iran to develop nukes faster than an Al Quaeda influenced government in Pakistan. Iran has 70,000,000 people and most are under thirty. They surf the web. They blog. They are literate. They do NOT want to return to the dark ages of yesteryear. They will wait out their current tormentors, then there will be no holding them back.
IN HOC SIGNO said:If they are so intelligent and wordly why are they allowing themselves to be governed by the mental midgets who currently call the shots there?
IN HOC SIGNO said:If they are so intelligent and wordly why are they allowing themselves to be governed by the mental midgets who currently call the shots there?
TCBF said:- For the same reason we did?
Continues at above link (but is not the whole article)US, NATO poised to move against Al Qaeda and Taliban in Pakistan
Dated 30/01/2008
(Strategic Intelligence Estimates.com) Our intelligence analysts have observed several trends and occurrences that indicate the United States and its NATO allies may be preparing to take significant action against the Pakistan-based al Qaeda Central (AQC) and Taliban in 2008 and beyond. In the following estimate, we have outlined these trends and occurrences, along with the US and NATO’s likely courses of action.
II. The following attitudes among American and NATO leadership lead our analysts to conclude that the allies will be more aggressive in targeting AQC and the Taliban within Pakistan’s borders:
A) Many in Washington have become increasingly impatient with the Musharraf government because of: a) its lack of progress in battling these Islamist terrorists; and b) its increasing unpopularity among pro-democracy moderates; both of which have lead to increased instability in the nuclear state. Musharraf will soon travel to meet with the leaders and representatives of the leading NATO powers such as the United States, Britain, and France. These NATO leaders will likely pressure Musharraf to allow a greater NATO presence in his country, and to more aggressively pursue democratic reforms.
B) Many NATO policymakers have also become increasingly concerned about the threat posed by AQC, the Taliban, and other Salafi terrorists that are using Pakistan as a base of operations. All of the major terrorist attacks against the US and Europe starting with the 9/11 can be traced back to Pakistan. Almost all the recently foiled plots in the West can also be traced back to Pakistan, including the British Airline Plot, the shoe-bomb plot, the attacks on US military bases in Germany, and several other recently thwarted attacks. Pakistan also serves as a launching point for the Taliban’s insurgency in Afghanistan.
C) Many American politicians, including several the Presidential candidates from both major parties, have called for a greater US presence in Pakistan's tribal areas. These comments almost certainly reflect the advice these politicians are receiving from their foreign-policy and national-security advisors, thus indicating many American policymakers view the current situation in Pakistan as a major strategic concern.
III. These following events indicate the US and NATO are preparing to take more aggressive in Pakistan.
.....
tdr_aust said:(Not sure if I have put this in the correct thread)
Add to this the various comments that presidential hopeful, Obama has placed in his Speech on Counter-Terrorism Strategy in August 2007. Here he did suggest US forces enter Pakistan ‘when the Pakistan Army was not able to deal with the situation’. The speech does put this in a better way but it comes to the same point.
I used Obama here as I suspect he has a better chance of getting the hot seat compared to his rival based on current voting.
The article is long and some points raised seem to be in place at present. US forces providing training to Pakistan SF.
Obama Attacks Pakistan; Pakistan Retaliates
This week saw the unusual spectacle of a foreign government criticizing a U.S. presidential candidate. The government is Pakistan and the candidate is Sen. Barack Obama -- and while such criticism is rare, Obama's remarks were pretty strange, too.
Speaking at Woodrow Wilson Center on Wednesday, Obama said that, as president, he would not hesitate to order unilateral military action against al-Qaeda inside Pakistan if he had intelligence information that warranted a strike. Pakistani Foreign Minister Khusheed Kasuri called his remarks "very irresponsible." Sher Afgan, minister for parliamentary affairs, said it was a matter of "grave concern that U.S. presidential candidates are using unethical and immoral tactics against Islam and Pakistan to win their election."
The relevant portion of Obama's speech is as follows:
"There are terrorists holed up in those mountains who murdered 3,000 Americans. They are plotting to strike again. It was a terrible mistake to fail to act when we had a chance to take out an al Qaeda leadership meeting in 2005. If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and President Musharraf won't act, we will."
Obama focused on Pakistan and the war in Afghanistan, and generally his position is that withdrawal from Iraq will facilitate a shift in counterterrorism to this part of the world and a refocus on al-Qaeda central. The United States should not "repeat the mistake of the past, when we turned our back on Afghanistan following Soviet withdrawal."
It's an interesting reading of history -- and a strange view of U.S. foreign policy, especially for someone who is essentially arguing that America should turn its back on Iraq.
First, some history: When Mikhail Gorbachev decided to give up the Soviet fight in Afghanistan, the U.S. government was quick to abandon its efforts there. Of course one of the reasons it could walk away was that Pakistan had actually done most of the work on the ground to organize the mujahadeen to fight the Soviets. Pakistan subsequently supported the Taliban, which in the mid-1990s welcomed Osama bin Laden and his Arab fighters back to the country. Afghanistan by then had returned to being a backwater in American foreign policy, as so many countries are.
I'm not defending anything about the George H.W. Bush's or Bill Clinton's priorities, but come on, Obama: Would you really have stayed in Afghanistan in 1989? Al Qaeda didn't even exist then. After Desert Storm, Bin Laden returned to his native Saudi Arabia (where he became aghast at the U.S. military presence in the center of Islam).
So, historically speaking, it is a strange statement. The United States turns its back on countries all the time. Another way of putting it is that it sets other priorities and moves on. In fact, Obama himself is now arguing we should do the same in Iraq today. Whether he is right or wrong, the point is that right now, Iraq is just as important as Afghanistan was in 1989. We've created a mess, and turning our back on it (as much as I support an orderly withdrawal) would be foolish.
Obama says that "Pakistan must make substantial progress in closing down the training camps, evicting foreign fighters, and preventing the Taliban from using Pakistan as a staging area for attacks in Afghanistan." He also says the United States must not "hesitate to use military force to take out terrorists who pose a direct threat to America." The U.S. must "recruit, train, and equip our armed forces to better target terrorists, and to help foreign militaries to do the same."
"Substantial progress"? The phrase sounds familiar. It will just prompt a debate about whether the progress is substantial enough. That's Washington in a nutshell. In the end, Obama's perspective is a confused muddle that sounds to me a lot like the policies of the Bush administration -- and is no different than the "Bush-Cheney Lite" Obama has accused Sen. Hillary Clinton of pursuing.
I know, I know, Obama will bomb the world with American values and slay the planet with his eloquence. But as long as he fails to challenge the basic premise of U.S. national security today -- that the threat of terrorism is the only threat, and that it is so grave it demands preemptive and unilateral American action -- he is just sewing his own straitjacket.
By William M. Arkin | August 3, 2007; 8:12 AM ET