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Published on 26-03-2008 In World
Viewed 2642 times | Written by Sreeram Chaulia
Terror remains beyond control of Pakistani state
The disclosure by Chinese authorities that the hijackers of a domestic airplane who were thwarted in March came from Pakistan confirms terrorism to be the prime export item of the volatile country. It is the latest shred of evidence in an unsavoury track record for which Pakistan has gained international notoriety as the cradle of extremist jehad.

If one performed a word count from the list of reports about failed and successful terrorist attacks around the world in the last decade, the term 'Pakistan' makes a ubiquitous appearance.

In January 2008, Spain revealed that it had foiled a terrorist plot to blow up Barcelona's public transport system and jailed 10 suspects, nine of whom were Pakistanis and one an Indian Muslim. All three suspects of a terror cell nabbed by German investigators in September 2007 had been trained in Pakistan and were launched on "direct orders to act from Pakistan".

The botched 'Trans-Atlantic Air Plot' of August 2006, which aimed to detonate liquid explosives on board several aircraft flying from Britain to the US, involved many people of Pakistani descent and training.


Two of the 15 suspects in the 'Toronto Case' of June 2006, arrested by Canadian police before they could launch major terrorist attacks in southern Ontario, were migrants from Pakistan. Three of the four suicide bombers who killed 52 people in the 2005 London terror strikes were of Pakistani origin and the trail of their mission went back unmistakably to Al Qaeda camps in Karachi and Lahore.

Last but not least, the Sep 11 terror attacks in the US in 2001 were masterminded and financed from Pakistan by individuals of Pakistani descent -- Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Sheikh Omar Saeed.

The dossier is incomplete without mentioning the scores of successful and forestalled terrorist attacks across India for more than half a century that have credible provenance in Pakistan.

While Pakistan's jehadi activities in India carry the imprint of the former's state apparatus, the waves of Pakistan-linked terror plots and attacks in Europe and North America lack the official hand of the government in Islamabad. They are free expressions from militarised segments of Pakistani society rather than a premeditated foreign policy strategy of the Pakistani state.

Islamabad has no strategic motive or benefit for abetting carnage on the streets of London or Berlin. To the extent that the jehad paraphernalia within Pakistan has grown mighty with state connivance and encouragement, one can argue an indirect culpability of the Pakistani state in exporting terror to far-flung parts of the world. But the linkages forged by terrorist cells in Europe and North America with Pakistan-based Islamist seminaries and training camps have more to do with the amount of jehadi human capital that has accumulated in Pakistani society.





The manpower, money and technological inputs Pakistani society has pumped into Islamist terrorism worldwide are second to none, even outdistancing Saudi Arabia. Pakistan's 20,000 madrassas educate an estimated 1.5 million students per annum. The vast majority of social institutions programming future jehadis are beyond the control of the Pakistani state. They are financed through voluntary charity of Pakistani businessmen who believe in earning Islamic piety. A network of Saudi Arabian and Iranian donors also bankrolls Pakistan's jehad factories in the guise of humanitarian service.

International terrorist plots with the invariable Pakistani hand draw upon this rich resource base for jehad that has taken roots in the social system of Pakistan. It is in recognition of this reality that Newsweek magazine commented: "No other country on earth is arguably more dangerous than Pakistan, where militancy is woven into the fabric of society."

Following Pakistan's parliamentary elections in February 2008, attention was devoted to the defeat of radical parties that espoused an Islamist worldview. Many commentators in India and the West toasted the results as vindication of the basic moderation in Pakistani society and a rejection of violent jehad. Nothing can be more erroneous than to conclude that an electoral defeat of rightwing Islamists implies that fundamentalism is on its way out. Hardly 30 percent of Pakistan's electorate exercised its franchise in the recent elections, a figure that does not justify using poll results as barometers of moderation of the whole society.

Even the minority that did come out to vote overwhelmingly for centrist parties can be seen as delivering a verdict against President Pervez Musharraf's misrule rather than against fundamentalism per se. It is easy to get confused about an electorate that was responding with brickbats for a detested military dictator and with sympathy for centrism after the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.

In a World Public Opinion Poll conducted in September 2007 (three months before Benazir's assassination), between 60 and 76 percent of Pakistanis favoured expansion of the role of Sharia in the country's legal system. Is it logical to maintain that the same Pakistani society was somehow transformed overnight in barely four months to favour moderation and secularism in the elections?

If the election of February is a beacon that extremism is on the wane in Pakistani society, there should be a concomitant decline in terrorist attacks within the country. If moderates have prevailed in Pakistan, the uncovering of ever more international terrorist plots with 'Made in Pakistan' logos should become passé. Neither of these logical next steps has transpired. Lacking deep transformation, Pakistan continues to be the world's leading exporter of Islamist terror.
 
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Let’s first analyze similarities between the Nazis and the CCP.

1) Nazis were national socialists - CCP is a national socialist.

2) Nazis considered Germans to be the master race - CCP considers Han Chinese to be the master Race.

3) Nazi torch bearers were athletic, strong examples of the “master race” - CCP torch bearers are athletic, strong examples of the “master race”.

4) Nazis glorified the Olympic flame with a mythical, pagan, semi-spiritual status - CCP glorifies the Olympic flame with a mythical, pagan, semi-spiritual status. The men in blue suits are called “The Olympic Holy Flame Protection Unit” and one of them watches the flame while others sleep.

5) Nazis used the games to promote national socialism - CCP uses the games to promote national socialism.

6) Nazi torch bearers loved the Fatherland and gave their life if necessary for the Fuhrer - CCP torch bearers must love the Motherland and give their life if necessary for the CCP.

7) Nazi oath of allegience is to the Fuhrer and to acknowledge The Fuhrer as the savior of Germany - The Chinese oath of allegience is to the CCP and to acknowledge the CCP head as a “Living Buddha”.

8) Nazis had live shooting ranges where they would hunt down civilians and kill them as practice for troops - Chinese have live shooting ranges where they would hunt down civilians and kill them as practice for troops.

9) The Nazi torch bearers actually went back and invaded every country they went through even murdering the gypsies in Bulgaria - The Chinese have already invaded Tibet and other areas and murdered millions of people.

10) The Nazi torch bearers were fanatical national socialists - The Chinese torch bearers were fanatical national socialists.

11) Nazis performed medical experiments and murdered prisoners for medical research and body parts - Chinese murder prisoners to order for body parts and medical research.

The CCP has a clear agenda - “expansionism” at all costs under the guise of peaceful liberation. Once a territory is gone, it’s gone. There will be 1.3 billion brainwashed fools who will come here and defend war crimes of the CCP and brag about Xinhua as free press. If the West remains complacent, South-East, Australia, New Zealand, Pacific would be occupied or rather “liberated” territories in a few decades. Don’t come back and ask us “Why they hated China” or all we had to do is give the Chinese more time to think about the nicety of Western Liberalism.

China’s human rights abuses are “staggering”: the detention of hundreds of thousands of people, including political activists, for “reeducation” programs, and forced labor camps; and the liberal use of the death penalty in China — including for political prisoners — which makes China the site of 8 of every 10 government administered executions carried out in the world!

CCP is full of deceit and has figured out how to play the West. They can’t be trusted at all and they have a bag full of tricks to fool not only Tibetans but the whole world with a state-controlled press. The best solution is a free Tibet. There is no doubt that a sovereign Tibet would be a savior state not only for Tibetans but for all ethnic groups of China who have nowhere to go if they disagree with the CCP. A free Tibet would be such a free democratic heaven and a safe haven.

 
Chrisna - Comments as on 13-04-2008

 
vikramkhatana - Comments as on 30-11-2008

Endhiran










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