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Saturday, January 31, 2009

PAKISTANI Current Affairs Programs Ratings - January 2009 BY PKPOLITICS.COM

Current Affairs Programs Ratings - January 2009

PKPolitics RatingsWe conducted a survey earlier this month (January 2009) through our visitors about the current affairs programs on different TV Channels. Results of the survey has been compiled and we would like to share them with you beginning with some of our own comments:
Live with Talat continues to rock at number 1 in terms of popularity and even gets a 4.65% boost in its ratings since August 2008. Talat Hussain is no doubt the most articulate anchorperson with the strong analytical abilities. He covers diversified topics and also works hard for preparation of programme theme. He dared to present programs focused solely on Research and Analysis, specifically after Mumbai attacks, which required a lots of efforts in contrast to traditional Masala Talk Shows. Talat sometimes gets into exaggeration and gets carried away in his comments and opinions that are often misfit for his otherwise cool but assertive personality.
Off the Record made a huge leap from 4th to 2nd position with 33.10% increase in ratings. Kashif Abbasi is the boldest anchorperson in Pakistani media at the moment. He recently covered very unconventional but very important topics. He is the only anchorperson who can dare to discuss the 'No Go Area' topics. The recent threats to Kashif by the officials also proved the impact of his talk shows on general public. His programmes and initiatives to discuss and the basic questions regarding constitution, rule of law, democracy in political parties, etc. were highly appreciated by audience, specifically by educated community. Kashif sometimes goes off track from the main topic where "Time Pass" becomes the main objective of the program. His other drawback seems to be his affiliation with ARY, a channel that has recently taken a clear U-Turn against the movement for Rule of Law, which is evident from their relatively low coverage of the movement in favour of least important issues, personalities and parties.
Capital Talk slid down from 2nd to 3rd position with 10.19% drop in popularity due to monotonous programmes, but it is still liked by masses due to simple format, simple questions, cunning and sharp personality of Hamid Mir with a good show of his PR as evident by the guests in his shows. Also, sometimes he goes out of studio in search of new topics of public interest. Apart from that massive number of audience for GEO, his columns in Daily Jang are a big plus point for him. He often gets involved in non-objective discussion in attempt to attract more audience by adding spicy questions.
Kal Tak of Express News gained the most and massive ratings of 51.21% in just 5 months and now stands at number 4, gaining a single position from previous number 5. Kal Tak, has recently picked up quite considerably mainly due to success of monologue by Javed Chaudhry in the beginning and at the end of programme. Javed Chaudhry is rated as the most popular Urdu Columnist at the moment and this has become the main strength for success of his programme Kal Tak. Due to his good PR, he often attracts a good panel of guests. Due to less experience in electronic media, he often finds it difficult to moderate the programme properly and the discussions sometimes go out of control. His monologues, though popular in masses, are many times inaccurate and sensational. For Express TV, his programme without any doubt is the brand they can sell as current affairs program.
Meray Mutabiq is at number 5, which makes it a huge comeback for Dr. Shahid Masood since he was not hosting this program until just a few months ago. Dr. Shahid Masood is the most controversial and debated personality of current affairs. Due to his recent job with Government, whatever he say and how true that might be, his personal credibility will take quite some time before it is full recovered. He faced a lot of anger from public at the restart of Meray Mutabiq after the Dry Cleaning drama under the name of Jawab Deyh by Iftikhar Ahmed. But after few weeks of humiliating low ratings, the Gaza crisis put Dr. Shahid Masood on the front foot again as he covered the issue with great depth. The Gaza episodes along with the last episode with attacks focused on Zardari gave his programme a real boost and helped him claim back territory. In short, he is gaining his popularity again if not the respect. After his come back, there has been a mysterious link of all his discussions going to lead a possible Military Takeover in future. Also after his come back, mysteriously it were the pro- establishment circles (supporting otherwise, anti-politician, pro-army, anti- judicial stance) that came to rescue him and were the only voice for him in the beginning.
Bolta Pakistan dropped its ratings 15.43% and slid from number 3 to number 6. Bolta Pakistan was once a top rated popular programme due to its different and unique format, boldness of anchors (when Musharraf was a common target) and finally despite being a Right and Left wing combination, the EXCELLENT synchronisation of both anchors, like top football forwards. But it seems that the COD of anchors of Bolta Pakistan is meeting the same fate as the COD between PMLN and PPP. Nusrat has been the main target of angry audience due to his tilt towards Zardari and Mushtaq also has been obviously looking compromised frequently, as if the only purpose for him is to some how continue the programme even if it is at the cost of popularity of programme. Direct phone calls was and is still a distinct feature of the programme, but recently, the frequency of calls has been reduced that is another factor in the declining popularity of this programme. Often due to some mysterious limitations, they end up discussing topics, not of interest to masses and it raises questions why more important topics were ignored. Their episodes to interview different top politicians were also failure, as in most of the cases, the audience could not get answers to the real questions asked or even to the questions asked by anchors, which leads to the suspicion that this program is just a PR campaign.
Islamabad Tonight with Nadeem Malik makes its space in top 10 programs at number 7, despite being a new presentation from AAJ TV beating many programmes of different channels that were in the market for a long time. Good preparation, presentation and unique way to put pinching questions to the guests using his strong analytical abilities and up-to-date knowledge of Local & Global news and developments are the main strengths of Nadeem Malik. He moderates the programme well and tries his best not to leave the questions go unanswered or diverted to usual fairytales. However, Nadeem needs to change his body language to be more assertive and a bit aggressive in order to get attention of audience at opening of the shows. AAJ TV should also consider rescheduling the programme to cover weekends (Saturday and Sunday) when not many programmes are available. It should create a good opportunity to attract new audience market, at least for next 4-5 months. Making this from 5 episodes per week to 4 would also not be a bad idea, considering the competition within AAJ TV, and due to the fact that not many unique topics are available in the market and redundancy may decrease the overall ratings of programme.
________________________________________________________
Summary of Results:
A total of 1,000 votes were allowed, where every user was asked to tell us the top 10 programs of his choice, out of which the first 5 were mandatory. The ratings were calculated by using weights for each position of the choice in descending order.
For instance, we counted the number of times Live with Talat was voted in top position, 2nd position and so on. We used 10 as weight for the top choice position, 9 for second and so on until "1″ weight for last position.
The ratings for the top programs are fairly accurate as per the choice of visitors of PKPolitics. The ratings for lower programs are not so accurate due to the fact that the last 5 options were optional, as well as PKPolitics does not publish most of these programs regularly.
The ratings of TV channels were generated by calculating the sum of all their programs:
AAJ TV Ratings = Live with Talat + Bolta Pakistan + Islamabad Tonight + 4 Man Show + Control Line
Geo Ratings = Capital Talk + Hum Sab Umeed + Meray Mutabiq + Kamran Khan + 50 Minutes + Left Right + Jawab Deyh + Choraha + Crises Cell + Nadia
Express Ratings = Kal Tak + Column Kaar + Siyasi Log
ARY OneWorld Ratings = Off the Record + Insight with Javed Malik + Second Opinion + Focus with Faeza + Deadline + QA with PJ Mir + Swal Yeh Hay
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Note: You might want to look at the ratings that were conducted in August 2008 by going to this post. The first and only ratings for Urdu Columnists can be found here.
If you are related to any Media Group and would like to get comparative ratings of your programs, then please feel free to contact us at "media at pkpolitics dot com".
Ratings of All Programs:
Live with Talat: 7101
Off the Record: 6341
Capital Talk: 5651
Kal Tak: 5435
Meray Mutabiq: 4900
Bolta Pakistan: 4753
Islamabad Tonight: 2330
Siyasi Log: 1818
Second Opinion: 1627
Column Kaar: 1367
Jawab Deyh: 400
Kamran Khan: 162
Brass Tacks: 105
Choraha: 34
4 Man Show: 29
50 Minutes: 29
Lucman Show: 28
Hum Sab Umeed Say Hain: 27
Siyasat Aur Pakistan: 18
Focus With Faeza: 15
Control Line: 13
Crises Cell: 10
Left Right: 10
Pulse with Jasmine: 10
Imran Khan: 9
Meidi Sarkar - Rohi TV: 9
Nadia Khan: 9
News Eye - Dawn TV: 9
Newsweekly - Dawn TV: 9
Insight with Javed Malik: 8
Policy Matters with Naseem Zehra: 8
Sana Tariq: 8
Deadline: 7
Dr. Shaista Wahidi: 7
Siyasat Aur Hum: 7
Bachhay Man Ke Sachchay: 7
QA with Mir Jafer: 6
Siyah Safaid: 6
Haroon Rasheed: 4
Ankahi Samaa TV: 3
Sawal Yeh Hai: 3
Apnay Andaz Say: 2
Sajjad Mir News One: 2
Aftab Iqbal Duniya TV: 1
Barwaqt: 1
Dr. Danish: 1
Kiran and George: 1
Liarry King Live: 1
Mujahid Barilvi - CNBC: 1
PTV News: 1
QA with PJ Mir: 1



 
 
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N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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Friday, January 30, 2009

Hizb ut Tahrir Digest 30 Jan - Gaza Campaign - Undeclared War on Pakistan

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30th January 2009

Assalamu alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatu

This digest from Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain, the Global Islamic Political Party, comes in the week the new President of the USA, Barack Obama, ordered the bombing of villages in Afghanistan and Pakistan directly causing the killing of many innocents including women and children. Earlier there was deafening silence from Obama during Israel’s three-week murderous military campaign, which conveniently ended on the eve of his inauguration, with over 1300 people martyred in Gaza, 100 times the number of Israelis killed over the same period. Barely a week into his presidency Barack Obama thus appears to be seamlessly continuing major planks of the Bush foreign policy legacy.

Deconstructing the rhetoric we challenge Obama mania in the west where desperation and despair under capitalism has left people frantically looking for any hope.

During the weeks that Israel bombed Gaza from land, sea and air the Muslim community in Britain were moblised by Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain in a series of national demonstrations, with tens of thousands marching to the embassies of Muslim countries in central London over three consecutive weekends. In the last week Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain’s Gaza Campaign has focused on local community activities with a strong procession in East London and a women’s only seminar in west London. These events were supported by direct action in the form of letters, emails and telephone calls to Muslims embassies in order to account and challenge officials for Arab and Muslim rulers’ inaction in defending the people of Gaza.

Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain also comments on the BBC’s decision not to give airtime to a Gaza humanitarian appeal.

We hope you find this digest useful. Please forward the digest to friends, family and acquaintances and help spread the call for Islam and revival.

Action for Gaza Campaign in the Community

Upcoming Events

Action for Gaza: Gaza Massacre, East London

Saturday 31 Jan 2009 at 18.15. Shalom Centre – 395 High Street North, London E12 6PG Read More

Action for Gaza: Muslim Armies must defend Gaza, Manchester

Sunday 1 Feb 2009 at 11:00am. Pakistani Community Association - 481 Stockport Road, Longsight, Manchester M12 4NN Read More

Action for Gaza: Gaza Massacre, Walthamstow

Sunday 1 Feb 2009 at 18.00. Asian Centre – 18a Orford Road, Walthamstow London E17 9LN.Read More

Action for Gaza: Gaza Massacre, Whitechapel

Wednesday 4 Feb 2009 at 19.30. Berner TA Hall – Ponler Street, London E1 1QN Read More

SPEECHES: ACTION FOR GAZA - Muslim Armies must defend Gaza, West London

Sultanah Parvin, Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain’s women’s deputy media representative and other speakers outlined how the collusion of the Arab-Muslim rulers was the main reason why Muslims in Gaza can be so easily bombed, killed and maimed. Despite having armies of close to 2 million soldiers surrounding Palestine, they stood by and watched as Israel carried out the Gaza genocide. Read More

VIDEO: ACTION FOR GAZA - Whitechapel Procession - Remember the Dead & those who Betrayed

Angered by the Israeli onslaught on Gaza hundreds of Muslims marched through the streets of Whitechapel including Brick Lane and Canon Street to highlight the plight of the Muslims in Palestine and called on the Arab armies to rise up, remove their rulers and defend the people of Gaza.Read More

Community Campaign Pictures: Action for Gaza - Emergency meeting to address Gaza crisis in Reading

Over 120 members of Reading's Muslim community gathered on 1.1.09 at an emergency meeting arranged to address and discuss the ongoing crisis in Gaza. The emergency meeting was attended by a broad cross section of the community including young professionals, businessmen and Mosque representatives.Read More

Campaign Pictures: Action for Gaza - Gaza Attacked, Deceived and Abandoned, Slough

Nearly one hundred people gathered on Thursday 15 January at an event about the crisis in Gaza organised by members of Hizb ut-Tahrir in Slough, at the Slough Tennis Centre. Men and women of all ages, and Imams from the local mosques attended the meeting which began with a video showing the true nature of the suffering afflicting the people in Gaza. The video revealed the horrific realities that much of the western media chooses not to reveal to the public. Read More

Weekly central London public address: Being Steadfast on the Truth on the issue of Palestine

Every Saturday afternoon, in central London, members of Hizb ut Tahrir discuss issues affecting Muslims. The audio link below presents Hizb ut- Tahrir's address on being steadfast on the Truth on the issue of Palestine. Read More

Video: A Cry To The Muslim Armies

A video presentation showing the plight of the Muslims around the world including the recent conflict in Gaza, highlighting the unified response of Muslims around the world calling upon the armies in the Muslim World to rise up, unify the Ummah and defend the people of Palestine.Read More

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Obama and America’s Undeclared war on Pakistan

Obama continues undeclared war on Pakistan with another US missile strike

In his inaugural address,President Obama said “to the Muslimworld, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect”, yet his opening salvo has been to kill more innocent civilians in missile strikes in Pakistan. This continuation of the Bush policy shows Obama is more a change of style than a change of substance. Read More

Obama will be more of a 'makeover' than a 'remaking' of the US

Commenting on Obama’s inauguration, Taji Mustafa, media representative of Hizb ut-Tahrir Britain said, “America is not one man. America is its institutions, which have compromised the very principles they claim to uphold. America has its capitalist system whose weaknesses lie exposed. One man can never change those problems that are systemic in a state, no matter how eloquently he pledges to do so. Read More

Obama’s Presidency: Symbolism is not enough

Obama’s rhetoric and speeches have raised countless hopes of fundamental change among the most desperate and disenfranchised in American society yet Obama knows that he needs the continued backing of the status quo which will in turn constrain his ability to deliver any real change. While there is clearly symbolism in his Presidency hundreds of millions are longing for a lot more than that and would be quite insulted and angered if that’s all they got!Read More

Weekly central London public address: Barack Obama

Every Saturday afternoon, in central London, members of Hizb ut Tahrir discuss issues affecting Muslims. Shortly following his inauguration this audio link below presents Hizb ut- Tahrir's address on Barack Obama.Read More

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Hizb ut-Tahrir Comments

The BBC’s insistence on impartiality exposes its hardline Israeli bias

TThe BBC hides behind the facade of impartiality in denying airtime for a Gaza charitable appeal given that nothing about Israeli’s murderous three-week bombing campaign was fair or balanced. Read More

BBC's political bias over the Gaza Charity scandal follows that of the British Government

The BBC's current stance is entirely consistent with both its coverage of the Gaza massacre and the government's stance on the massacre. Both chose to portray it as some even handed military conflict rather than what it actually was - a massacre of 1300 men women and children - mostly unarmed. Read More

Capitalism is ideologically bankrupt and in denial

The deepening economic crisis is fundamentally due to the failure to acknowledge and accept flaws in Capitalism. A dogmatic attachment to the capitalist creed has led to an incorrect assessment of systemic problems and with the wrong diagnosis, the ‘solutions’ have obviously not brought an end to the crisis. In fact, it’s worsening by the day with ever more panicked and desperate measures being proposed and implemented. Read More

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In the Media

Gaza Massacre

Egypt's Mubarak: Hamas invited Israeli offensive

Turkey offers to ship oil, gas to India via Israel

Ritual murder in Gaza

Israel admits to use of phosphorous after initial denial

More evidence of Gaza child deaths

Gaza Crisis: Arab Regimes React with Routine Repression

BBC says no to airing of Gaza Disaster Appeal

Impotent Arab leaders fail to agree on plan to assist Gaza

Livni makes light of Gaza civilian casualty

Gaza: 'I watched an Israeli soldier shoot dead my two little girls'

Obama and America’s Undeclared war on Pakistan

Obama the imperialist

US cuts Pakistan’s aid for fighting terrorism

Obama's torture ban that doesn’t ban torture

Oil, Obama, Pakistan

'Obama gave green light to Pak attacks'

Obama calls Pakistan, Afghanistan 'the central front' in terror war

Obama orders air strikes on villages in tribal area

US kills 15 civilians in Afghanistan

Society

Britain is 'Increasingly at Ease With Racial Diversity Than Religion': Survey

British Jews attacked for pro-Gaza solidarity

Burglaries up as recession starts to take its toll

Prince Al-Waleed reviewing portfolio after losing $8.26Bn in Citigroup

Unless we are decisive Britain faces bankruptcy

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Ho gay jawan bachay borhi ho rahi ha maa

Ho gay jawan bachay borhi ho rahi ha maa

 

Ho gay jawan bachay borhi ho rahi ha maa,
Be chirag ankhon main khawab bo rahe ha maa,
Roti apnay hissay ki de kar apnay bachon ko,
Sabr ki rida orhay bhooki so rahi ha maa,
Saans ki mariza ha phr b thanday pani se kitni sardi main kapray dho rahi hai maa,
Ghair ki shikayat pr phr kisi shararat pr,
Maar kr mujhay khud he ro rahi ha ma,
Khelnay se jo mujh ko rokti thi mitti main,
Orh kr usi miti ko aj so rahi ha maa !


 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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Saturday, January 24, 2009

The Economic Way forward---- The issue of author

Just to clarify that the Article was originally written by a high ranking government official and contents were discussed and agreed with former Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz before its publication--Mr. Aziz fully agreed with all the details, but he said it was written by someone else.
This is for confirmation and clarification regarding questions that many people sent me that who wrote this article..  If you want to quote a source, you can quote this blog. Nadeem Malik
 
 

The Economic Way forward



When I was asked to write a piece on the economic way forward, I hesitated at first because I felt that with a new government in place it is better that we leave the way forward to the new economic managers rather than play the role of back seat drivers and provide unsolicited advise.
 
But the mountain of criticism of the previous government policies from all sorts of armchair critics, ranging from retired bureaucrats and economists of the cold war era who still believe in the supremacy of state management of the economy and for whom Venezuela and Bolivia are the new role models, to islamists who feel that the entire western global economic system is doomed and we need to chalk out a new paradigm, convinced me that perhaps the time had come to analyze the past and set the record straight, assess the current situation and contribute to the debate on the way forward.

Now that we have the political parties of the nineties back in power it can be instructive to examine a few economic indicators of the nineties with the past eight years and draw inferences. Since the economic growth numbers have been challenged by the critics.  I will use numbers that are not subject to disagreement. So for example, if the GDP growth numbers are being challenged other growth indicators that the public can understand can show the reality. The official GDP growth from around US $ 65 billion in 1999-2000 to US$ 165 billion in 2007-08 (a factor of 2.5 times) is challenged as being fudged but growth of credit to the private sector over the same time period from Rs one trillion to Rs 2.5 trillion, again a factor of 2.5 times, cannot be challenged.

The data shows that while electricity consumption grew by 1300 Gwh per year in the decade of the nineties it grew by 3750 Gwh per year from 2000 to 2008 a factor of 2.8 times. Gas consumption grew by 20 billion cft per year in the nineties compared with 80 billion cft per year from 2000 to 2007 a factor of four times. The revenue collection by FBR increased from Rs 300 billion in 1999 to over one trillion in 2008 Foreign investment that averaged around $ 500 million per year in the nineties touched over $ 8 billion in 2008 alone. Remittances that were around one billion in 1999 have crossed six billion in 2008.
 
Development spending that was US$ 1.5 billion in 1999 touched $7.5 billion in 2007. Exports that were $7.5 billion in 1999 reached $18 billion in 2007. Foreign exchange reserves that were around a billion dollars in 1999 reached over 16 billion in 2007. Stock market index that was around 1300 in 1999 touched its highest level of 15,700 in April 2008 a factor of 12 times that placed the KSE as one of the best performing stock markets of the world. The exchange rate showed remarkable stability over the past eight years. Credit rating improved from selective default in 1999 to B+ and B1 by 2007.

Since the February elections and the advent of the new government economic indicators have sharply deteriorated. The Currency has fallen by 25 percent against the Dollar, the stock market index has fallen by 6700 points from its peak in April leading to an asset value loss of 43 percent amounting to loss of market capitalization of around US $ 40 billion; the largest loss in the history of Pakistan. This loss of confidence in the economy of Pakistan has been unprecedented

We can trace the loss of confidence by the foreign investor by examining the spread on the US dollar global bonds that we issued in May 2007. These bonds were issued at the start of the lawyers movement and its associated turmoil. The bond was a huge success with over subscription  of seven times amounting to $ 3.5 billion while we were seeking only $500 million. The spread was 180 basis points above US government ten year securities. As the lawyers movement continued to gain strength in mid 2007, the spread on the bonds jumped to 300 basis points in July and 400 basis points by November when the emergency was imposed.
 
In December when BB was assassinated the spread jumped to 600 basis points. However, after the elections, the investor community welcomed the peaceful transition by pushing the spread down to 500 points. The stock market also reacted favorably and reached its highest point of 15700 in our history in April, 2008. Since then our chaotic politics and lack of focus on economic issues has led to the collapse of the stock market to 9000 points and the spread has jumped to almost a 1000 points. So what events produced these results, between April and now.

In the previous government we had been highly successful in crafting a very positive brand image of Pakistan as one of the fastest growing emerging economies in Asia. After our exit from the IMF program and a successful reforms.  Investors favorably compared Pakistan to India, China and Vietnam. Every time we did a road show we were highly successful in our endeavors whether it was the OGDC flotation or UBL GDR or Euro bonds or large privatizations, investors flocked to our offerings. We were a success story in the international financial markets and most of our issues became benchmark issues. Unfortunately, this Government has not been able to maintain Pakistan Brand rather it has eroded considerably.

In this erosion the first stone was foolishly cast by our erstwhile finance minister Mr. Ishaq Dar who displayed incredible irresponsibility and immaturity in lambasting the Pakistani economy in front of the global media; at a time when the global investment community was looking towards the new government for its economic vision and future strategy the new finance minister harangued them on how bad the Pakistan economy was. In spite of this onslaught the rating agencies maintained their ratings until as in their words the new government comes up with its economic game plan. The new government was at this time caught up in utter confusion on the economic direction of the country with rapid changes in the finance setup and revolving finance ministers.

This lack of focus was disastrous for us as against this back ground, our financing plan included a number of financial market transactions totaling around $ 4 billion that were ready for the road shows. These included the National Bank, Habib Bank, and KAPCO. The exchangeable bond issue of OGDC, and the strategic sale of PSO shares along with management control. With the stock market at an all time high the transactions would have been a great success and the road shows would have generated tremendous good will for the new government and would have highlighted the smooth transition that happened in Pakistan. It would have been a great opportunity to showcase Pakistan in front of the international investment community.

Instead in an inexplicable move the Government cancelled all the transactions. Pakistan directly lost desperately needed inflows of $ 4 billion and with the rising oil import bill this loss placed a huge pressure on the reserves and the currency. Indirectly the loss was probably twice as much as foreign investors withdrew to the sidelines and domestic investors moved their investments overseas. It might be mentioned that while the government failed to take advantage of the window of opportunity, The MCB bank taking advantage of the great valuations on the stock market in April 2008 privately placed some 20% of their equity with a Malaysian bank for a cool sum of $ 850 million.
 
If the Government had acted similarly, it could have generated sufficient flows to prevent the meltdown which ensued. Reserves drawdown would have been avoided, the spread on our international bonds would have narrowed down to May 2007 levels, borrowing from the State Bank would have been halved and the government would have had a stable environment for tackling the oil import bill and food inflation. Our current predicament is clearly a creation of our current economic miss-management. A few heads should have rolled because of this incredible lapse

What could have been done in April/May 2008 with the market at 15700 points cannot be done in September/ October 2008 with the market at 9100 points.  The international markets are closed to us. We have to wait until our markets get back to their historical levels and investor confidence is restored. How will this be achieved? The biggest challenge for President Zardari is to restore the eroded &;Pakistan Brand; back to its original luster and in the process revive the investment flows that can sustain our growth going forward.

First, while we should be on the right side of the world in the war on terror, the world should seriously help us in our endeavor to build a better economic  future for our people. The new president has to focus on the economic issues facing the country. His international trips to China, Saudi Arabia, Gulf, USA, UK should promote Pakistan economic interests as a pivotal objective. He should not only promote government to government economic cooperation but also promote private sector to private sector interaction with these countries. We need strong, immediate and implement able commitments of around $5 billion balance of payment support from these countries.
 
In addition their leadership at the highest levels should support international moves to promote our economic growth and stability. Better and preferential access to EU and USA markets, greater quotas for labor and deferred payments for oil in Saudi Arabia and Gulf region. A full calendar of investment conferences and single country exhibitions need to be carried out under the direction of the president. The promotion of exports and investments has to be the major focus and objective of the President. If we can generate  foreign investments greater than last year level of $ 8 billion and export growth is revived to healthy double digit levels we would start coming out of the current malaise.

Second, it is clear that Pakistan  growing trade and current account deficit is being driven by ever escalating oil prices. With the oil bill crossing $12 billion a year there is no option other than passing the full prices to the consumers and eliminate the burden on the budget. This will also help in promoting conservation and improving energy efficiency. Unfortunately the transition to a new government took place at a time of unprecedented increase in global fuel prices. For example at the time of elections oil prices were around $80 a bbl whereas by July 2008 it had reached $140 a bbl.
 
While we had planned to limit the fiscal deficit  to be under 6 percent and largely financing it from non state bank sources, including commercial bank borrowing and non debt sources. The new government ended up with a much higher deficit level and financed it totally from the state bank. We have now reached a stage where the issue is no longer energy availability rather it is energy affordability. We have almost 20000 MW of power generation capacity but we are only using 12000 MW because the Furnace oil used for thermal generation has become extremely expensive and beyond the ability of Pepco to pay for.
 
As a result available capacity is not being used leading to load shedding. The exorbitant power price increase can only be avoided in the short run if transmission and distribution losses are dramatically curtailed and in the medium term we substitute imported fuel with domestic sources. Thermal power based on imported oil costs around Rs 16 per unit (Kwh) whereas hydel power from Kalabagh would cost Rs 2 per unit. The power from Thar coal will cost around Rs 8 per unit. While Kalabagh can be completed in five years, Technical problems with Thar coal can delay its availability indefinitely.
 
If the mega Kalabagh Dam is launched in 2008 it will not only jump start the economy  it will also be seen as President Zardari;s gift of Hydel Power to Pakistan just like PM Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Gift of Nuclear Power to Pakistan thirty five years ago. Third, as far as inflation is concerned it will start coming under control as global oil and food prices filter through the economy. Our Inflation index is heavily weighted in favor of food energy and commodity prices. So it is highly sensitive to these prices. Since global energy and food prices are easing the same should be felt in Pakistan in the days to come.
 
Pakistan's inflation is a supply side and cost push phenomenon and further monetary tightening would not help. Instead a tighter fiscal policy with a lower deficit target and phasing out of borrowing from the state bank will help. At the same time in this period of great change we should ensure that the poor of the poorest are able to cope with the changes particularly higher food prices and social safety nets are made fool proof so that nobody in Pakistan stays hungry.

Fourth, for the first time after 2nd world war agriculture commodity prices have moved in favor of the farmers. We have to ensure that we pass on this benefit of higher global prices to our farmers by deregulating agriculture prices. The only other incentive our farmers need is predictable water supply. This can be ensured by building more water reservoirs and better water management so that farmers can move from unpredictable subsistence agriculture to commercial agriculture. Study after study in the sub-continent has shown that large multi purpose dams are the quickest way out of poverty.
 
With oil prices at $100 per barrel and destined to double over the next decade there is no way, other than developing our full hydel potential quickly to usher in a new green revolution and providing sustainable global advantage to our economy of cheap hydel power. Fifth, we should stop cribbing about the Consumer economy. Pakistan is a large country with 160 million people and 100 million under the age of 25. With dependency ratios going down we can reap a demographic dividend over the next several decades.
 
While these youngster have to be prepared for the work force they are already becoming a huge engine of growth for our markets that are growing at fabulous rates to meet the demands of these Pakistani baby boomers, Just like in Europe and South Korea after the 2nd world war, our baby boomers will be the back bone of our middle class and will determine the growth of our economy over the next 40 years until they start to retire

This gives our businesses an historic opportunity to grow and produce the goods and services the population needs. In an era when world is facing a crisis of aging populations we are blessed with opportunities of a young and dynamic population. In this regard consumer financing which has become a butt of criticism has just scratched the surface. In our country consumer finance is around 5 % of GDP whereas in the developed world it is over 100% of GDP. Consumer financing has a long way to go and along the way it will continue to be one of the engines of growth for us. Any ill founded moves to curtail the consumer economy will hamper the growth of our businesses.
 
We are now going beyond textiles into engineering, electronics, chemicals, food processing, construction materials, real estate and many other sectors based on our domestic markets as these markets continue to expand we will reach economies of scale that will make our producers and the large associated vendor industry competitive on a global scale and the same producers will be the base for diversifying our exports into more sophisticated and fast growing sectors of the world. Ultimately if our law and order permits and our national psyche adopts rules of globalization, and globalization as our road to prosperity we will become one of the workshops of the world along with India and China.
 
Sixth, there are hundreds of infrastructure projects at various stages of implementation including the National trade corridor, Neelum Jhelum hydro power project, KKH upgradation, Urban renewal in Karachi and Lahore, mass transport projects, airports, Baluchistan road network ,Gawadar port, industrial parks etc., these projects have to be completed on time and scope. The last government also created an Infrastructure project development facility (IPDF) that needs to be fully utilized so that we can bump up (almost double ) our expenditure on infrastructure particularly hydel projects through public private partnerships.

Seventh, The FBR has to continue generating revenues for the government to carry out the nation building programs. Last year a target of over 4 trillion rupees was set for FBR within the next ten years, four times the current levels reaching about 16 % of GDP. Along with a target of 4 percent of GDP for education expenditures with 1.5 % allocated to university education. The education strategy was based on providing universal access to primary education, retaining enrollments into secondary education and technical and vocational training and improving standards at the college and university levels.
 
Nine new engineering universities in collaboration with European, Korean and Chinese universities were in the pipeline. Going forward we should focus on quality improvement through a big push forward in teacher training, curriculum development and public private partnerships at the primary and secondary schools level and continued efforts to upgrade the universities and hopefully achieving the setup of the new engineering schools. The national vocational and technical education commission (NAVTEC) has gone through its learning curve and can now be used to upscale its programs to give technical and vocational training a quantum jump.

Eighth, in the financial sector we have created a world class banking system with our banks featuring amongst the leaders in Asia. The Quality of our bankers is second to none and can work in any global setting. The challenge is to further increase the reach and competitiveness of the financial sector with Microfinance playing a much greater role. Our microfinance frameworks are the best in the world and a strong base has been established which can grow manifold to bring financial services to the masses. The growth of the financial sector will continue at a sizzling rate as the financial sector expands into consumer and housing finance, rural and agriculture finance and development of debt and bond markets, growth of mutual funds, pension funds and other savings instruments.

Ninth, in the competitiveness area we must continue to deregulate and privatize the economy to create a vibrant and competitive economy. Second generation reforms in economic management have to be continued. An essential pillar of a private sector led market economy, the Competition Commission has to be given financial independence and allowed to work unhindered. The competitiveness support fund, business support fund, agriculture support fund, Khushal Pakistan fund, Smeda etc. have to be used to implement reforms that help the market economy become more productive and competitive from the grass roots level up to the corporate level.

Finally Pakistan needs to continue to grow at 7 to 8 percent to create the 3 to 4 million new jobs per year needed to accommodate our youth and create a dent in poverty in our lifetime. We cannot embrace isolationism, jihadism or any other form of global confrontationist movements. Instead we have to build on our successes, unleash the potential of our people, exploit our competitive advantages, take advantage of global finance, integrate with global markets, and continue building a dynamic market economy with world class infrastructure to achieve our growth objectives This is the recipe for the future and the way forward for Pakistan.


 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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KERRY: Pakistan needs our support


Washington Times

Friday, January 23, 2009

KERRY: Pakistan needs our support

John Kerry

OP-ED:

 

As America's second post-9/11 President takes office, a single country has become ground zero for the terrorist threat we face. The consensus among our intelligence agencies is that top Al Qaeda leaders are plotting their next attack from Pakistan, where the prevalence of religious extremists and nuclear weapons make that country the central, crucial front in our struggle to protect America from terrorism. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, has called the border region the "site of planning for the next attack" on the United States.

 

Pakistan is under enormous pressure from all sides, from tensions with India to a ferocious insurgency in the tribal belt to a financial crisis that threatens the solvency of the Pakistani state. And all of this is being held together by a fledgling civilian government not even a year old. For our sake and theirs, America must do more to help Pakistan.

 

Crucial to this effort will be finding a winning regional strategy that recognizes the centrality of Pakistan's relationships with neighbors such as Afghanistan and India.

 

It has become conventional wisdom that the war in Afghanistan can be lost in Pakistan, whose tribal belt offers a sanctuary from which Taliban insurgents launch cross-border raids against us and our Afghan allies. What is often overlooked, however, is that the opposite is true as well: Violent instability in Afghanistan can undercut essential counterinsurgency efforts in Pakistan.

 

We saw brutal evidence of this in the recent attack on the Pakistani Frontier Corps by militants operating from clandestine bases across the border inside Afghanistan. Pakistan's success in exerting control over its tribal areas depends on U.S. and NATO forces getting the resources they need to accomplish their mission on the Afghan side of the border.

 

Similarly, as the aftermath of the November terror attacks in Mumbai reminded us, getting Pakistan to focus its military on extremist sanctuaries that endanger American troops also depends on lowering tensions with India. We must work assiduously to help Pakistan and India to find a path back to the bilateral peace talks which were disrupted by the Mumbai attacks.

 

I recently returned from South Asia, and my conversations there left me with some observations that may be helpful in explaining how and why we must support Pakistan and its people.

 

While there is an increasingly broad consensus that Pakistan is the strategic center of gravity for defeating insurgents in Afghanistan, a military strategy alone cannot prevail on either side of the border. An effective counter-insurgency must address longer-term political, economic, and development challenges, especially in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas and the Northwest Frontier Province on the Afghan border.

 

This is why I will seek swift passage of the Enhanced Partnership with Pakistan Act, which would triple non-military assistance to Pakistan through projects that will directly support the Pakistani people, strengthen democratic institutions, promote economic freedoms, and encourage investment in the agriculture, education and infrastructure sectors.

 

In my recent travels, I met with the leadership. While I believe President Asif Ali Zardari, Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Lt. General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the intelligence chief, are credible in their commitment to defeating the militant factions threatening their country, as always it will be the follow-through that counts.

 

As vital as civilian aid will be in Pakistan's success, we also need to provide the tools to fight the extremists. The list ranges from electronic detection and communications equipment to helicopters that can move swiftly in the inhospitable terrain of the tribal belt. We can do this and still demand greater accountability from Pakistan's military.

 

Pakistan is experiencing a dire and crippling financial crisis. In just one year, the country's reserves have declined 75 percent to $3.45 billion, forcing Pakistan to turn to the International Monetary Fund for a rescue package.

 

America must lead an international effort to protect Pakistan from financial collapse. Pakistan's leaders will have to act responsibly in the months ahead - but by necessity they will also look increasingly to the international community for support. Passage of the partnership act will be a good start, but not enough to stave off the risk that Pakistan's fragile civilian government will be shaken by severe economic unrest. Future international aid packages should include verifiable guarantees that the money will be spent on economic development that helps the Pakistani people. And as we do, we should leverage our assistance to restore belief in the legitimacy of our mission.

 

While our support is crucial, key to the success of all of these efforts will be the Pakistani leadership's ability to resolve outstanding political issues so it can focus on the difficult challenges of governing.

 

For all its challenges, Pakistan remains a vital partner in our efforts against Al Qaeda's global insurgency. My recent visits have convinced me that success in Afghanistan demands that we help build a stable and moderate Pakistan. That means our relationship with Pakistan cannot begin and end with helping its military - we must also speak directly to its people and its civilian government. Pakistan's prosperity and its security - as well as our own - depend on it.

 

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., his party's presidential nominee in 2004, is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.


 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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Friday, January 23, 2009

Swift justice of Taliban by Dr Ghayur Ayub

Swift justice of Taliban

Dr Ghayur Ayub


It was during a visit to Peshawar that I met a senior police officer. He narrated a story which was brow-raising. He told of a person from Bannu who lent Rs 40,000/ to a man he knew, who promised that he would return it within a specified time. He told the borrower that he had saved up the said amount to help pay for his children's education. When the agreed time lapsed, he asked him to return the amount. The borrower started making excuses and after a few months he flatly refused and challenged the lender to do what ever he could. There is a Pukhtu word for it 'Laas Da Azaad De'

 

 

The man went from pillar to post to seek justice but with no result. The police proved incapable as the borrower was a powerful man with strong connections. When he tried to knock on the door of the court for justice he was dismayed to hear that it would take months for the case to come to a hearing and years to reach a final judgment. After all that, the chances were that the verdict would go against him as he was up against powerful people. To top it off, he was told he had to pay Rs 1000/ upfront every time he wanted to put his case forward for a hearing. This amount did not include the amount he was going to pay the lawyers. When he calculated it, the approximate amount turned out to be more than the actual amount he was going to seek justice for.

 

 

At the end of every day, he would go back home heart broken; cursing his luck to be living in a country where there was no justice for the middle or poor classes. He tried to persuade the borrower by pleading with him, explaining how desperately he needed the money for his children's education. He even offered a discount or to split the amount into instalments, but all in vain. It was like hitting a brick wall. He felt dejected, helpless and powerless to see his children suffering just because he came from a strata of a society pushed against the wall.  

 

 

One evening, he heard a knock on the door. He opened it and saw two strangers with bushy beards standing outside. Thinking they were there to collect 'Chanda', he asked with irritation what they wanted. They told him that they saw him crying in the mosque and on enquiry they were told that someone was refusing to pay his money back. With a surprised look on his face, he asked them who they were.

 

 

"We are local Taliban" Then they asked if he would let them have his side of story. He saw a ray of hope and ushered them in. After listening to his story, the Taliban told him that the borrower had committed an un-Islamic act, and if he wanted they could persuade him to return the said money. "We want your permission". His heart jumped with flickering optimism and immense joy and without any hesitation, he gave them his consent. Before they left the premises they asked for 72 hours.

 

 

According to the police officer, the Taliban went to the influential man and told him it was un-Islamic not to pay the amount he had borrowed from the man. They threatened that if he did not pay the debt back within 48 hours; he would bear the consequences. They also told him how Taliban had previously dealt with people like him. Shivers went through the spine of the 'powerful' man as he knew what their threat meant. With a dry mouth, frightened face and shaking body he nodded his head in agreement, promising he would return the amount. The next day, he went to the house of the lender and paid back the full amount he had refused up until then. He apologised for the delay and requested him to tell the Taliban not to harm him or his family and to let them know that he had returned the money. The Taliban never went back to ask whether he got the money back, but they must had been watching the development. From that day on, according to the police officer, that man became a strong supporter of Taliban. Could anyone blame him?

 

 

Another related story about quick and effective justice comes from the Bugti tribe of Baluchistan. According to electronic media, a man named Nazim Ali was refused his share in a dispute. According to him, he spent a lot of money to get justice from the court but failed because of corrupt practices. So he went to the tribal chief who referred him to the Jirga. The Jirga decided that he should walk on fire and if he was telling the truth he would not be burnt. Nazim Ali agreed to it and in front of onlookers he walked on red hot coal. After the walk, people saw that his soles were not burnt. The chief decided in his favour and he was given his due share.

 

There are countless other stories of parallel justice systems running in Pakistan in the present day. These systems seem to be nippy and effective satisfying their poor clients. Some are Taliban style, others tribal style sharing one commonality; they are swift, just and not stained with corruption. The question is; do we see fair and quick justice provided to the poor clients in our judicial systems? I am not a legal expert but from what I read in the print media and saw on the electronic media, the case of Farah Dogar is a glaring example of lopsided justice. Justice plays important part in the building of a nation to prosperity. A nation can only grow if its judicial system carries justice independently with desired honesty. Both these qualities seem to be missing in our present justice system. It is not only sad but painful too. In my discussions with different walks of people living in the troubled parts of FATA and NWFP (Pakhtunkhwa) the vast majority agreed that the justice provided by Taliban is fair and quick. They might not agree with other activities related to Talibanisation such as discouraging western education, burning of schools, gender discrimination etc; but they do appreciate the provision of justice served at the doorsteps with efficiency, audacity and honesty. Swift justice is the major achievement which attracts the poor people of Pakistan to Taliban.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Barack Obama's Family Tree

http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1834628_1754227,00.html   21-Jan-2009
 
Barack Obama's Family Tree
 
 
 
 
Supreme Court Justice
Obama's distant cousin, Gabriel Duvall, was a member of the US House of Representatives, from the second district of Maryland. In 1811, he was appointed to the Supreme Court, where he sat until 1834. He was also a friend of Thomas Jefferson and the owner of 37 slaves.
 

 
 
 
Farmers
Louisa Eliza Stroup Dunham and Jacob Mackey Dunham are the candidate's great-great-great grandparents. A farmer in Tipton, County, Indiana in the 1870s, Jacob Dunham later owned restaurants and a confectionary in the Oklahoma Territory. He died in 1907.
 

 

 
Grandparents
Stanley and Madelyn Dunham pose with Obama's mother Ann in a photograph probably taken in the 1950s. Born in Kansas, Obama's maternal grandparents lived in four states before settling in Hawaii.

 
 
 

 
Mother
Though she has signed this sophomore yearbook photograph of herself "Stanley" — her parents named her Stanley Ann at birth — Obama's mother was known as Ann for most of her life. After attending Mercer Island High School in Washington, she enrolled at the University of Hawaii, where she met Barack Obama, Sr.
 
 

 

 
Father
Born in Kenya, Barack Obama Sr. came to the University of Hawaii in order to study for a degree in economics. This photograph hangs on the wall of his stepmother's house in Kogelo, Kenya.
 
 

 

 
Parents
Barack Sr. and Ann Dunham married in February, 1961 and Barack was born six months later. Their union did not last long, however. The marriage ended in divorce in early 1964.
 
 

 

 
The Young Obama
For the first six years of his life, Barack lived in Hawaii. In 1967, his mother remarried and the family moved to Indonesia.
 
 

 

 
Reunion
After the divorce, Barack Jr. only saw his father one more time, in Hawaii, in 1972, when this photograph was taken. The senior Barack then returned to Kenya, where he worked for a US oil company and the Kenyan government. He died in a car accident in 1982, at the age of 46.
 
 

 

 
Half Sister
Maya Soetoro, the daughter of Barack's mother and her second husband, Lolo Soetoro, sits beside the young Barack, Ann and grandfather Stanley Dunham in this photograph taken in Hawaii the early 1970s. Ann came back to Hawaii to attend graduate school in 1974 and remained until 1977, when she returned to Indonesia.
  
 

 

 
Family Ties
When Ann returned to Indonesia, the young Barack remained behind in Hawaii, where he was raised by his maternal grandparents. He eventually attended Columbia University in New York, where this photo was taken in the 1980s.
 

 

 
Extended Family
On his father's side, Obama has numerous relatives. He has made several visits to the home of his step grandmother, Sarah Obama, front row, second from right. He also has four half brothers through his father.
 

 

 
Kenya
Sarah Obama, now 86, still resides in Kogelo. In this photo, she and Obama pose together outside her home in 1995.
 

 

 
Michelle
Barack met his wife in the late 1980s, when the two worked at the prestigious Chicago law firm Sidley & Austin. They were married in 1992. Shortly thereafter, they spent a Christmas in Hawaii, where this photo was taken.
 

 

 
The Next Generation
Barack and Michelle have two children, Malia, now 10, and Sasha, 7.
 
 
 
 


 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Re: As respected member of AIRRA, I would like to know your kind comments, expert advice and candid opinion regarding few of my articles/write ups attached with this email.

Farhat Taj
The News
 
Dear Madam

My family basically hails from KOONI GURAM (Wana) but settled in Lucky Marvat. I am married presently in Karachi, a city of more than 16 million helpless and directionless souls. I have spent most of my life away from home in loneliness, while in various boarding schools. I have done BE Electronics, MBA HR (SZABIST Khi) and presently working in MNC.
 
Hailing from tribal and Pathan, I am regular reader of your and Mr Sartaj Khan articles in The News. 
 
I emailed you earlier some of corncern and veiws on Taliban, US War for Terror and our ruling elites. However I am still waiting for your kind comments and opinion. As I said earlier you can't imagine the feeling of helplessness when we common Pakistan masses in general and tribal area people in particular feel when we read/tolerate writers/so called think tanks and governing elite of Pakistan who are puppets of the West. These so called scholars, academics, experts never try to exactly locate the center of gravity of that issue. Their reasoning, and intended solutions are shallow and mostly in mars/space because they always try to avoid the context and history of the issue.
 
I read your articles again and again, and tried to digest your prescribed pill for already dead Pathans, however I was unable to tolerate.
 
It is therefore I am writing to you, expecting to hear from you telling me that I am wrong.

Thank you and best regards.

FM Shah Marvat
Karachi
0334-957-0997
021-2062141

-------------------------
 

THE PAKHTUN, THE TALIBAN AND IGNORANT INSIDERS PATHANS

 

            Pakistanis just like most of the former British colonies and Muslim country, is a society composed of deprived/exploited people ruled and governed by few elite coordinating in form of pressure groups. These are privileged in all walks of life whether Politics, Business, Bureaucracy, Uniform name any institution. These pressure groups backed by US/UK have hijacked the whole country for their own interest. These elite were ruling once Capitalist's and Business Minded GORA were here and now also when we are free. It is excellent convergence of interest of our ruling elite and the greatest exploiter of the world known history i.e. Capitalist West. The capitalist system uses two tools for 3rd world countries i.e. first deprivation and then Exploitation. Most importantly our Society has been deprived and exploited in name of Islam continuously, both before and after Indo Pak Partition. When we are ill we go to Doctor, when we want to construct home we go to architecture when we have to deal with law we go to lawyer, why because they all are specialist and they have devoted most of their lives for their specialty. But when we deal with Islam/ Quran then all of us think that we are the experts and Mullah the one who has devoted his whole life for Islam/Quran is desperate, terrorist and backward.

I am not fan neither my ideals are Mullah Umer, Osma bin Laden, Qazi Hussain Ahmed or Mulana Fazal-Ur-Rehman. My point is if we do not like Mullah then some one respectable and mindful (if there is any among us, which I doubt) should devote his life for Quran/Islam and he should define Islam for the society. Meaning thereby that just like Doctor, Lawyers, Engineers, Businessmen and all other professionals which our society needs exactly in the same manner our society also need someone who should be specialist in Islam/Quran. It's very simple if we do not have any better alternative than Mullah then we have to accept whatever Islam he tells. At this stage please do not consider that we should make it a state responsibility. If you want to screw some thing royally, hand it over to Pakistan state just like health, Police, Land & Revenue, Law & order etc etc. For past 150 years, we've waited for "somebody from our western style Schools, Colleges, Universities, SO-CALLED SEAT OF LEARNING" to do a miracle. But alas it is DISGUSTING TOTAL FAILURE for more than 100 years in all fields and it will be failure for next 1000 years.

Very few among our ruling elite dare to speak the truth. Fewer dare to listen to the truth. Much fewer who accept truth and much smaller in number who act on truth? Lies and deceptions of our ruling elite since colonial era (1800 AD) have converted our people to reactive mob. As reactive mob, we do not hate fire but the ONE who shout FIRE. We are not afraid of failure rather afraid only to accept ourselves as failure even if we are failing. We as a nation are failed in all fields. Starting from education, medicine, engineering, banking, politics, and science. You name any field and we are total failure. Our ruling elite inspite of having iron grip over all national resources have always fallacies for their total failures. These fabricated excuses and fallacies of total failure of ruling elite (of which I consider myself) varies from  Education, Sectarianism, India, Taliban and Al-Qaeda etc. One is really disgusted and disappointed by all such western backed experts (including many inside ignorant Pakhtuns) when they give their juicy commentaries on Quran, Islam, Sharia and Pakhtunwali based western social science concept, which are most of the time irrelevant and inapplicable in our societies. We do not have any systematic or analytical power, because we all are groomed through skewed wisdom/vision therefore for us Islam, Quran, Sunnah and Sharia becomes irrelevant in all our problems. Just like West, our ruling elite and their experts will never attack or refute Quran/Sunnah, however they will attack all those who in one way or other way represent Quran and Sunnah. They will try to make Islam, Quran, Sunnah and Sharia a fuss and controversy.

Normally it is considered that Shariah Movement popped out after Zia Marshal law Regime. However Shariah Movement was active in Tribal area especially Swat before Soviet Afghan War. US War for terror acted as catalyst for alienating masses from the Westernized puppet ruling elite of Muslim countries and aggravating political grievances already stoked by Western backed/imposed policies/values/cultures. The religious fervor among the masses is swelling support for Shariah to play a greater role in political life. It is not local phenomena in Swat/Tribal rather global phenomena. That in turn has increased political repression, because many inept Muslim ruling elite see Islamic/Shariah political movements as a threat to their own rule. Swat was a small independent state which opted for Pakistan, at the time of partition, on guarantee of independent state from Mr. Jinnah. The state was governed by Shariah law which had a fine blend of Pathan culture. Swat state laws and governance was a natural, efficient and effective law which suited local tradition and Pathan culture. Justice was quick, simple and cheap. Shariah movement dates back to Bhutto regime in seventies when Swat state was annexed to Pakistan contrary to Jinnah commitment to Wal-e-Swat. Prior to that, Swat state had very efficient and effective local administration, Qazi courts and Police System under patronage of Wali-e-Swat based on local tradition and mostly Shariah laws. Earlier Qazi Courts, local administration and police was replaced by existing corrupt Pakistani Police, inefficient/ineffective civil bureaucracy (DCs/ACs) and normal court system, which are colonial legacies and skewed state structure designed for colonial brute regimes. Shariah movement was hijacked/exploited by Zia-ul-Haq (greatest hypocrite of our history)on his false promises of Shariah based Government in order to legitimize his eleven year draconian rule for US interest in the region. Zia did nothing for Islam, except making Jihad, Sharia and Islam controversial. Just like Sharia Movement many other uprising for change (namely labor and student movement) against colonial state structure and establishment were first made controversial and when possible dealt by iron hand and crushed by the agents of status-qou and colonial remnants i.e. Pakistan ruling establishment. 

Some of my enlighten fellows might find comparing TABLEEGHI JAMAAT as NGO with Southwest Airlines as out of context. If I am wrong, please correct me by identifying any NGO in the whole world which every year mobilize more than 3 Million people in different parts of world for its annual gathering and having presence across the globe in every city. TABLEEGHI JAMAAT (only 30/40 years old phenomenon) as NGO and Southwest as Airlines are organizations wherein members/employees are productive and efficient. TABLEEGHI JAMAAT and Southwest Airlines both are similar with each other from culture point of view however very different from rest of NGOs and Airlines. Instead of the blue sport coats worn by other airlines, a uniform of short pants and polo shirts is a summer standard for Southwest Airlines employees. The pilots and flight attendants might sing or tell jokes to passengers, but they are serious about customer service and efficient operations. TABLEEGHI successes do not depend on Western schools. They do not use modern rocket technology, social science concept, IT, technology, or HRM but still they are best in networking. So far no western educated Muslim (those including know all type clowns from LUMS/IBA/Oxford/Harvard graduates) have not given us any such high performance NGO, organization, product or brand. The glory is not serving in Shell, BP, BC, Microsoft, Google, Coke, Unilever but making such giants. The similar working style of Southwest Airlines and TABLEEGHI JAMAAT implies a relaxed environment, their levity indicates a certain degree of openness, and shared responsibilities of the front line and management solidify the importance of—above all—getting the job done. It is no wonder that Southwest Airlines have been the most consistently profitable airline over the past decade. At the same time TABLEEGHI JAMAAT is wonderful growing NGO over past 3 decades.

I am not preaching to join TABLEEGHI JAMAAT or judging them as absolute RIGHT/WRONG but trying to highlight the essence of building giants in TABLEEGHI JAMAAT. Just imagine a Muslim MNC or Muslim business or public institution which has similar productive culture and exponential growth like TABLEEGHI JAMAAT. AT SAME TIME I AM ALSO NOT TRYING UNDERMINING MY SHIITE BROTHER'S FAITH. My Shiite brothers can identify/explain their own version of glories and wonders to us from our own soil. What I am trying to prove that wonders/miracles will be done only with REJECTION (INKAR). Western Style Schools, Colleges, Universities will always invent law of necessities. The GUTS for rejection will not come from will only come through Quran and Islam. Any version of Islam (i.e. Shiaism, Wahabism, and Sunnism etc) may work for this rejection (INKAR).

Another example to which some of my fellows may object is comparison of US Marines with Taliban in Afghanistan. Dr Lee in his Book "Performance Conversation" has mentioned US Marines Corps as world's finest military organization. According to Author Dr Lee it has been in battle for well over two centuries and its reputation has become synonymous with success. Marine Corps is unique in its success, weapons and technology. Despite the fact that US Marines weapons, tactics, and resources are much more/advanced than Taliban, the Corps has a very low performance in Afghanistan if compared with Taliban. Taliban unrelenting pursuit of success is evident in all resistance to US in past eight years without any resources. I am not saying that Taliban are absolute RIGHT and US Marine wrong or vice versa. What I want to highlight is uniqueness in the Taliban culture, their morale and commitment to hard work..

The anti Sharia Establishment spin machine in Pakistan is locked and loaded to promote the notion that Taliban are "flip flopper." For past 200 years it is their principal line of attack for status quo and against any resistance, change, movement for masses in Pakistan and whole region. It can not concluded about Taliban exactly? Who are Taliban and from where they popped out?  Whether they represent Islam or Sharia? However history will record that Taliban one critically important contribution to our country -- and to the entire region and the world, that they have shaken the local/international establishment and agents of status-qou from its core. Taliban uprising against US and then puppet regimes in Islamabad have provided the masses unquestionable proof of the bankruptcy of our ruling elite ideology. It is a dangerous preposition, however it is from here that we steer our destiny for a qualitatively different world for our future generations. Taliban have emerged in fits and haunting the ruling elite establishment like a volcano, their pressures gradually built over years and have erupted with enormous power against all anti Islam and anti Sharia Forces of privilege, inequality and selfishness in Pakistan. I have got serious reservations about Taliban and TABLEEGH overall philosophy but at the same I have to acknowledge following the reason for their success as an entity and organization if compared with our rest of colonial institutions like Army, Police, Judiciary, Education,

1.      Their leaders have ensured that their culture supports individual performance.

2.      Work/Processes have been designed to keep their members engaged.

3.      Their superiors are partner with members in a way that allows them to do their best work.

4.      Each system within the Taliban and TABLEEGH are aligned and coordinated to achieve optimal performance.

I pray for all of your legitimate dreams to come true. Always think positive and try to spend valuable life not only for you but for others also.

 

Only Urs

FM Shah

People will forget what you said…

People will forget what you did…

But people will never forget how you made them feel…

 

"It's not my purpose to shock you - but the simplest way I can summarize is to say that there are in the world, humans that peep, that gossip and that discuss freely even the greatest taboos you could find around. Moreover their ability to do these things has what made them damned in the eyes of many who are acclaimed as chosen ones - the range of issues they can handle is coexistent with the nature of their ability to speak openly without any boundaries, limits or constraints."

Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn Musa Al-Khwarizmi

 

"I've tried to create a culture of caring for people in the totality of their lives, not just at work. There's no magic formula. It's like building a giant mosaic–it takes thousands of little pieces….The intangibles are more important than the tangibles. Someone can go out and buy airplanes from Boeing and ticket counters, but they can't buy our culture, our esprit de corps."

Herb Kelleher CEO Southwest Wall Street

 

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ANTI-THESIS TO FARHAT (THE NEWS)

THE PAKHTUN, THE TALIBAN AND IGNORANT OUTSIDERS

 

It has been a Fashion for corrupt ruling westernized intelligencia of the various Muslim societies (MACAULAY'S CHILDREN/BROWN GORAS) to label poor Taliban/Mullah (who demand implementation of Shariah by hook or crook) as a source of all ills in our societies in order to cover their ineptness, failures, misdeeds and corruption spanning over decades. While our past/present ruling westernized intelligencia is force of status quo and external state imposed on our societies through violence, deprivation and exploitations. This ruling lot represent statues-quo for their unquestioned control over all resources/authority of the various Muslim societies/states. Talibans/Mullahs are mostly from poor masses and represent a reactive force and agent of change through Shariah against status quo, violence, deprivation and exploitation.

 

It is always difficult for me to write an essay to counter someone else essay. However in following paragraphs, I have tried my best to analyze and look differently on the views of our learned writer Farht Taj (The News).

 

Uphill security challenges to Pakistan and whole region due to US WAR FOR TERROR are basic motivation for this critical piece of study. I would like to highlight that my family basically hails from KOONI GURAM (Wana/South Waziristan) but now days settled in Lucky Marvat. I am married presently residing in Karachi, a city of more than 18 million directionless and helpless souls. I have done BE Electronics and MBA HR and presently working in MNC.

 

This may soon force the Pakhtun to be open to help from any where in order to survive. Thus tens of people of Swat told me they pray after every namaz for the US drones to fall on the headquarters of the Swat Taliban.

 

Being Pathan, it is hard to believe for me to think of any one among Pathan or Muslim, who pray for US drone attack on his soil. Pathan might sell his mother but he can't think like this. Without any question Army initially under Musharaf and now under PPP/ANP have committed a lot atrocities and excesses for US blood dollars, however it can't make any Pathan love US drone attack on its soil. Bush war mongers also told him same before Afghanistan attack and Iraq invasion.  

 

Pathan are culturally, historically and geographically a homogeneous group of people.

Pathan is a mix race; it is not homogeneous group of people. Orientals and European scholars mostly try to portray Pathan homogeneity. The Pashto from Kabul to Peshawar till DI Khan is totally different. Their traditions, ways of living are different than each other. Add to it those who feel proud to consider themselves as Niazi Pathan and Sindhi Pathans. Once on Dinner in Karachi, at Budu Khan Restaurant, I happened to listen the old/white beard owner of the Budu Khan Chain, that though he does not speak Pashtoo, but he consider himself to be proud Pathan. Pathan is not pure rather mix race from various other central Asian tribes and after Islam they emerge in the history. Pakhtun wali an true/new application of Islamic tents was a best code for diversity management and peaceful co-existence.

 

The Taliban generate their revenue by relentlessly kidnapping affluent Pakhtun for ransom.

Mujahideen (Taliban predecessors) were in the region for last thirty years. It has been never ever known that Mujahideen have been involved any kidnapping or immoral activities. Maliks/Khan who were on payroll of the Political agents, intelligence agencies have been involved in narcotics trade, rental killing, fugitive/criminal covers and kidnapping even before 9/11. PPP MNA from DI Khan, Deputy speaker Faisal Karim Kundi uncle Amanullah Khan Kundi (ex-MNA) remained a fugitive for several years in South Waziristan as his International warrants were issued by Interpol due to his involvement in narcotics trade in Germany.

Various criminal elements in tribal area have been mobilized for vested criminal interests mainly drug trade on backing of local totalitarian ruling elite, various local/foreign Intelligence agencies and imperialist neo-cons. Their objectives are loot/plunder masses for their own kitty, while at the same time they defame/malign and make controversial the cause/name of Taliban who are resisting imperialist neo-cons in Afghanistan. They use various tools of terror, violence and disinformation. These elements have nothing to do with Islam or Taliban and they are simply using the name of Taliban. US and India trained them in Khurasan and Hirat provinces of Afghanistan. These trained elements were injected into tribal areas of Pakistan in order to spread chaos and crisis. Chaos and crisis is one of the reason due to which President Musharraf justified his clinging to Power while now PPP consider this war as Pakistan war. These foreign elements in the garb of Taliban are involved in the acts of terrorism in different cities of Pakistan like Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi. Their violence and chaos justifies excessive use of fire power by state agencies for various incidents like Red mosque, Nov-03 and May-12. Their acts of violence also hijack various peace initiates, therefore whenever there will be a peace talks, either US will directly attack or some suicide bomber will hit inside Pakistan on the name of Taliban or Pakistani Ambassador issue will pop out.  

 

The Taliban have no respect for the law of Pakistan.

Pakistan laws are made to be broken by all those who make these laws. Moreover most of Pakistan state rules/laws/ traditions/norms are decades old and date back to colonial era therefore mostly irrelevant and inapplicable. It includes Police, Justice, Land, Revenue, Political, Army Act etc. Army Act enact today in Islamic Republic of Pakistan under democratic leadership is more less same as made by East India Company in 1847. This army act is intact in almost all former British colonies (prostitute states) like India, Bangla Desh, Nigeria, Sri Lanka. This inhumane army act has never been applied in UK.

 

They Taliban have imposed a savage social order, completely different from the Pakhtun social order.

Colonials were the one, who imposed a savage social order, completely different from the Pakhtun social order. Same order was carried by petty Babus left over by colonials for last fifty years for various omission and commission. First victim of this order was silk route. The disruption of silk route made whole region economically, politically and socially unstable. The imperial and colonial power turned Pakhtun area into never-ending war zone. During last century for more than seventy years, it has remained active war zone. Pakhtun were mostly traders and nomads like Pawandihs. This area was self sustaining and independent. However disruption of silk route and dependence on the hostile forces has led the region to continuous tension. The disintegration and deterioration of the social structures of the Pakhtuns belt is not recent phenomena after Taliban rather it is continuous since colonial era. Taliban are the reactive forces and reactive effects of that order. Silk route has been replaced with Karachi and Bombay ports connected through British Railways, which not only drain our resources but also our brain. Moreover from such metropolis all western models and thoughts are imported and imposed on masses by the 0.01 % ruling elite of whole Pakistan. The one man show of the Qissa Khawani Bazars were better than Shakspear Drama of the same era. Pawindahs and Pathans were mostly nomads and traders of the silk route and they were the custodians of silk route. Bannu, Peshawar was the heart of silk heart. For centuries Silk route has remained business, economic, political, academic, culture and leadership life line of the whole region including India, Pakistan, Bangla Desh, Sri Lanka. Whole region is in constant flux due to disruption of the silk route. India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, two of them nuclear states, will likely decide the future of whole region if they could reinvent the silk route and turned around the cycle of business, economics, trade, academic away from British era metropolis like Karachi and Bambay to silk route. Since 47 Pakistan and India had maintained British Raaj colonial view of rugged, under-developed Tribal Areas, and Afghanistan as their "backyard and buffer space," and an important strategic asset or liability in the event of war. Silk route is umbilical cord for the whole region.

 

People of FATA had always seen the most oppressive and cruel face of the state of Pakistan

It is applicable in whole region and greater extent to tribal area. Indo-Pak region (Pakistan, India and Afghanistan), as whole, is ruled by corruption and poverty fifty-six years after independence in the twenty first century. Our rulers and leaders are almost never free from the pressures of west and transfer/consumption of resources right from the start has been anything but fair. What accounts for this? What is so inherently wrong in our system or psyche that does not allow our system to deliver good for poor? The failure of state to deliver good for poor is an old question but well worth revisiting. No doubt FATA is in pathetic and terrible state for past fifty due to Khans, Maliks, Political Agents and last of all US WAR FOR TERROR. As whole it is dilemma of the whole Indopak region where quality of life ranges from poor to poorest. In our occupied Lands, there are 0.001 % people (fat & well connected to the US/West) in Politics, Business, Judiciary, Uniform, Bureaucracy, TV, Press, and Newspaper, who counts and who are in control. They are STATE and they are supposed to heard because it is their fight for their share along with their US/Western Masters. Rest 99.99 % are non-state actors and intolerable masses/spams. So therefore they are not counted anywhere.

 

A dialogue with the Taliban can only be successful if it stands on mutually respected ground between the two parties. In this case the common ground can be the law of Pakistan, the Code of Pakhtunwali and Islam. The Taliban respect neither of the three. 

Call Taliban and their partisans what you will. Call them barbarians and cutthroats. But at least give them credit for being resolute fighters. American military might has not cowed them. The Pakistan army has not made them run. Taliban may be the most barbarous set of people on the entire planet but they have self-respect. Somewhere during the course of our journey we lost self-respect due to addiction to our love with West and US blood dollars. Taliban have spirit and doughtiness and believe in their cause which is more than can be said of the forces they are fighting against – the United States, its increasingly befuddled NATO allies and the redoubtable military of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Losses or reverses suffered by Pakistan for US WAR FOR TERROR can't be a matter of pride for anyone. But when will we learn the difference between right and wrong? There are just wars and mercenaries wars but we seem to have a talent for marching every time, for global, colonial and imperial powers since 1857. The difference is that whereas in the past we scripted our own disasters, this time our American friends are doing the job for us by selling/depicting their war as our war. The Americans have made a hash of Iraq. They are getting stuck, well and truly, in Afghanistan. And whereas we should be thinking for ourselves, our ruling elite is holding on to American coattails, being sucked into a conflict for which most of masses have neither stomach nor motivation. This is not to disparage the masses but only to point out the obvious circumstance that the will to fight does not come when you act at the behest of others.

 

The Taliban have destroyed down, or forced the closure of, petty businesses like barber shops and small kiosks selling music DVDs and CDs. This is part of the Taliban's agenda to impose on the Pakhtun a narrow social order that stifles every kind of free choice and entertainments in the name of Islam.

CNBC and Sama TV head offices are situated in Techno city plaza on II Chundrigar road. Just in front of these head offices, across the road, various open air road stalls sell porno graphic CDs/DVDs to all and sundry without any hindrance. Geo TV, Hum TV, Jang Press and Capital Police Chief offices on II Chudrigar road are almost fifteen minutes away from these CD/DVD stalls on walk. Forget about Rainbow center in Sadder heart of Karachi, almost all CD/DVD shops in every corner of Pakistan carry every type of pornographic and blue print CD/DVD. Even minor kids have easy access to these porno graphic CDs/DVDs by paying mere Rs 20 to Rs 25. It is absolutely wrong to bomb anyone property, however I wish all those who make fuss over these CD/DVD kiosks blasts, watch any such CD/DVD with their families. Then they will also feel like bombing these DVD/CD kiosks. Similarly Miss Farhat Taj should try to find these CD/DVDs in Karkhanoo Market in Peshawar. I always wonder why these experts become so deaf and blind to highlight such social evils while day and night they will depict Taliban as barbarians.

 

They are sick and tired of the Taliban. The Taliban have killed innocent people--men, women, children--they have destroyed the educational institutions in the area, devastated businesses and shattered the peace there. The Taliban even exhume and humiliate the dead bodies.

It is debatable issue. However whole world and whole Muslim Ummah particularly Pathans are sick and tired of the US, NATO and their puppets in respective countries. These international and local establishment mafias have killed innocent people--men, women, children--they have destroyed every thing, devastated businesses and shattered the peace of the whole region. War on terror quite often appears to be an enigma wrapped in a riddle. Efforts to understand war on terror and its consequences on whole region and globe, ranging from socio-economic, political fiber to security, prove this. The complex consequence of war on terror on societal mosaic and resultant state behavior of USA and regional actors like Pakistan, Afghanistan and India thereof often denotes more confusion than clarity. Terrorism is the over growth and extension of efforts of CIA for last fifty years. The Pakistan ruling elite policies over past six decades mostly revolve around their own and US interests instead of its people. To stop the slide into lawlessness, extremism, anarchy, chaos, poverty and hunger, the restoration of genuine pro-masses policy on war on terror is a matter of life and death for Pakistan. Perhaps one conclusion to be drawn is that Pakistan government and state must follow a certain minimum standard of political morality, democratic tolerance and pluralism and social justice if the scourge of terrorism is to be exorcised.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
--------------------------------------------
-If I look weird, it is because I am thinking while I am not suppose to think.

-Nations rise and fall and are history. Nations that rise again become
civilizations. My land is the oldest civilization. I have trekked the
summit of its highest mountains, sand dunes, its very high bogs and
marshes in sub zero temperatures.

Like my country I am lost between my ideals and the realities. My
country still craves for its identity. I too lie unrecognized to
myself. I am a POWINDA and diversity is my name.

-A Nameless, Helpless, Hopeless Poor Muslim and Pakistani trying to
save himself, Muslims and his countrymen by his emails from US WAR FOR
TERROR, US WWW III and US WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION.

It is not if we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists will we be?
-       Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.

"In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the
silence of our friends".
-       Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.

"Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could
not hear the music."
- Angela Monet

"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains."
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau

"Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do."
- Voltaire

"The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values
or religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized
violence. Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
- Samuel P. Huntington (The Clash of Civilizations)
-----------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Fwd: FW: unbelievable but true!!!!!!!!! (L)



Hafeezullah.

--- On Tue, 1/20/09, yasmeenali62 <yasmeenali62@gmail.com> wrote:

From: yasmeenali62 <yasmeenali62@gmail.com>
Subject: Fwd: FW: unbelievable but true!!!!!!!!! (L)
To: "pakpotpourri" <pakpotpourri@googlegroups.com>
Date: Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 7:22 AM



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: NADEEM MALIK <nadeem.malik@hotmail.com>
Date: Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 12:15 PM
Subject: FW: unbelievable but true!!!!!!!!! (L)
To: nadeemmalik@googlegroups.com, islamabadtonight.nmalik1@spaces.live.com, pakistannews.nadeem@blogger.com, pakistannews.islamabad@spaces.msn.com, pakistannews@googlegroups.com, islamabadtonight@groups.live.com, pakistannews@groups.msn.com, pakistannews.biz7/nadeemmalik@blog.angelfire.com, islamabadtonight@islamabadtonight.multiply..com, pakistannews@yahoogroups.com, pakistannews1.newsguru@blogger.com, nadeemmalik@groups.msn.com, nadeemmalik.islamabad@spaces.msn.com, pakistannews@pakistannews.multiply..com, nadeemmalik@yahoogroups.com, southasia@googlegroups.com







 
Once you send the message, press F6 and you will see what appear .... unbelievable but true .....

cid:004901c8a9bd$80efa040$559710ac@localbasic.com.my


Send this
to at least 15 people , and then press F6 ; the name of the person you love will appear...
 


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Sardar Aseff Ahmed Ali For Barak Obama


For Barak Obama

 

  From Sardar Aseff Ahmed Ali

 

 

 

Twas a day unique on November fifth

when of hope there was no thrift.

 

A people spoke loud and clear

Bereft of racial slur or fear.

 

A man in ebony was heard by all:

composed, elegant, with dignity tall.

 

Walls of prejudice came tumbling down,

when he became ebony and ivory's own.

 

Spirits of Lincoln and Luther King

would with humanity's soul sing,

 

the song of hope and light

to end hate and war's dark night.

 

While your people rejoice, so do we.

Four corners of earth prayed for thee.

 

Thou must redress eight years of insanity.

Bring compassion to replace inanity.

 

At war with world and itself

America hopefully will rediscover itself.

 

Not to drift in arrogance apart.

But with all peoples be a part.

 

 

We pray for you Obama Barak.

Yearn we peace in Afgania and Iraq .

 

Kashmir and Palastine burn in fire:

both your fair council do require.

 

Iran and Cuba you'll engage

and bring détente in this age.

 

 

Poor of world need a new deal,

to harsh markets give compassionate feel

 

Earth too needs your heeling touch,

deadly degradation it has reached such.

 

 

 

     Change we need, will get anon,

  The world awaits amity's new canon.

 

Yes you can, we do agree.

Will we a better world see?

 

Your dreams we too have drempt.

With cautious hope we are tempt.

 

Make history with honour replete

so an epic tale complete.

 

Let you and us renewal seek

for human enterprise now so weak.

 

Obama rise higher than Liberty Statue,

History'll give you its honourable due.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Sardar Aseff Ahmad Ali. (0321 8555355)


 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




Get news, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Check it out!

Growing Optimism That Obama Will Improve US Relations


Growing Optimism That Obama Will Improve US Relations: Global Poll

January 20, 2009

As Barack Obama prepares to be sworn in as the 44th president of the United States, a new 17-nation poll conducted for the BBC World Service finds widespread and growing optimism that his presidency will lead to improved relations between the United States and the rest of the world.

The poll also shows people around the world are looking to President Obama to put highest priority on dealing with the current global financial crisis.

In 15 of the 17 countries polled, majorities think that the election of Barack Obama will lead to improved relations with the rest of the world. On average 67 per cent express this upbeat view, while 19 per cent think relations will stay the same and just 5 per cent that relations will worsen.

This is up sharply - by 21 points among tracking countries - from polling done for the BBC World Service six months ago, before Obama was elected. At that time just 47 per cent expressed optimism that an Obama presidency would lead to improved relations with the rest of the world. The number of people giving no answer to the question is also down sharply.

This optimism does not necessarily mean, however that views of the United States itself have changed. BBC World Service is currently completing its annual poll assessing views of major countries' influence in the world, which will be released within the next few weeks and will show whether views of US influence are improving.

Asked to rate six possible priorities for the Obama Administration, the top priority in all countries polled was the global financial crisis. On average 72 per cent said that it should be a top priority.

This was followed by withdrawing US troops from Iraq - with 50 per cent saying this should be a top priority - then addressing climate change (46%), improving America's relationship with the respondent's country (46%), brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (43%), and supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (29%).

Polling was completed prior to the current Gaza conflict in all countries except Egypt and India. In Egypt, 75 per cent said brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians should be a top priority.

The results are drawn from a survey of 17,356 adult citizens across 17 countries conducted for the BBC World Service by the international polling firm GlobeScan together with the Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University of Maryland. GlobeScan coordinated fieldwork between 24 November 2008 and 5 January 2009.

"Familiarity with Obama seems to be breeding hope," commented Steven Kull, director of the Program on International Policy Attitudes. "But then again," he added, "he is starting from a low baseline, following eight years of an unpopular US president. Maintaining this enthusiasm will be a challenge given the complexities he now faces."

Participating Countries

Additional Highlights

Even nations that last summer had few people expressing optimism have come to have hope in an Obama presidency. Those predicting better US relations with the rest of the world have jumped from 11 to 51 per cent in Turkey, 11 to 47 per cent in Russia, 29 to 58 per cent in Egypt, and 39 to 68 per cent in China.

Interestingly, two of these countries showing the largest improvement are majority Muslim countries (Egypt and Turkey). Indonesians are also optimistic (64%) and have shown an 18-point increase in optimism from last summer.

The most optimistic views are expressed in Ghana (87%) and in Europe--in Italy (79%), Germany (78%), Spain (78%) and France (76%)--followed by Mexico (74%) and Niger(74%). Americans are also quite optimistic, with 65 per cent expressing hope that America's international relations will improve.

The only two countries where less than a majority express optimism are Japan and Russia. In Japan 48 per cent express optimism, while 37 per cent think relations will stay the same 2

and 8 per cent think they will get worse. In Russia, 47 per cent expect improvement, 26 per cent no change and 5 per cent a worsening.

All of the foreign policy goals tested in the poll were seen as at least an important priority by clear majorities in virtuaevery country, highlighting the many serious challenges facing the incoming president.

Europeans, in particular, are looking to the new US president to prioritise tackling climate change, with 58 per cent of French, 63 per cent of British, 65 per cent of Spanish and 68 per cent of Italians seeing it as a top priority.

There are marked differences of opinion on the priority of brokering peace in the Middle East, with 75 per cent of Egyptians but only 17 per cent of Russians seeing it as a top priority for the Obama administration. However, polling was completed in all countries except Egypt and India prior to the current Gaza conflict began.

Americans' priorities are somewhat different from the world as a whole. While they agree with the highest priority being the global financial crisis (75% say top priority), they are higher than any other country in placing a top priority (46%) on supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban. They also show substantial concern for improving America's relations with the world - 60 per cent say it should be a top priority; this is substantially higher than the global average (46%) saying that it should be top priority for the US to improve its relations with their region.

In total 17,356 citizens in Chile, China, Egypt, France, Germany, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Nigeria, Russia, Spain, Turkey, the UK and the USA were interviewed face-to-face or by telephone mainly in November and December 2008. Polling was conducted for the BBC World Service by the international polling firm GlobeScan and its research partners in each country. In 5 of the 17 countries, the sample was limited to major urban areas. The margin of error per country ranges from +/-2.4 to 4.4 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

Polling from last summer was conducted in the same countries from 8 July to 15 September 2008.

For more details, please visit www.globescan.com or www.worldpublicopinion.org.

For media interviews with the participating pollsters, please contact:

Sam Mountford, Research Director

GlobeScan Incorporated, London

+44 20 7253 1447

(Mobile: +44 7854 132625)

Sam.mountford@GlobeScan.com

Steven Kull, Director

Program on International Policy Attitudes, Washington

3 4

+1 202 232 7500

(Mobile: +1 301 254 7500)

Skull@pipa.org

GlobeScan Incorporated is a global public opinion and stakeholder research consultancy with offices in Toronto, London, and Washington. GlobeScan conducts custom research and annual tracking studies on global issues. With a research network spanning 50+ countries, GlobeScan works with global companies, multilateral agencies, national governments, and non-government organizations to deliver research-based insights for successful strategies.

The Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) is a joint program of the Center on Policy Attitudes and the Center for International and Security Studies at the University of Maryland. PIPA undertakes research on attitudes in publics around the world on a variety of international issues and publishes the website/webzine WorldPublicOpinion.org.

The BBC exists to enrich people's lives with great programmes and services on television, radio and online that inform, educate and entertain. Its vision is to be the most creative, trusted organization in the world. BBC reporters and correspondents at home and abroad can be called on for expert coverage across a huge range of subject areas. With over sixty foreign bureaux, the BBC has the largest newsgathering operation in the world. BBC World Service provides international news, analysis and information in English and 31 other languages. 5

Questionnaire

Q2t With the election of Barack Obama as US President, do you think America's relations with the rest of the world will become a lot better, somewhat better, stay about the same, become somewhat worse, or a lot worse?

01 Become a lot better
02 Become somewhat better
03 Stay about the same
04 Become somewhat worse
05 Become a lot worse
 

VOLUNTEERED (DO NOT READ)

99 DK/NA

Q3 I would now like you to think about what you would like the new US president to focus on in terms of foreign policy.

Please tell me whether you consider each of the following possible US actions should be top priority, important but not a top priority or a low priority for the new president, or should the US not do it at all?

ROTATE

A Addressing climate change

B Brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians

C Supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban

D Dealing with the current global financial crisis

E Withdrawing US troops from Iraq

F Improving America's relationship with [region of respondent]

(In the United States: Improving American's relationship with the rest of the world)

01 Top priority
02 Important, but not top priority
03 Low priority
04 Should not do it at all

VOLUNTEERED (DO NOT READ)

99 DK/NA 6

Country-by-Country Results

THE AMERICAS

Chile

Chile has the largest majority (along with Italy) among all countries polled that says addressing climate change should be a top priority for the new US government. Chileans also demonstrate significantly higher support than the global average for the US focusing on improving relations with their country, brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians, and dealing with the global financial crisis as top priorities.

  1. Four in five Chileans (81%) think that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority.
  1. Chileans also say the US should give priority to addressing climate change (68% top priority, 18% important); withdrawing troops from Iraq (60% top priority, 23% important); improving US relations with their country (59% top priority, 29% important); and brokering peace between Israel and Palestinians (55% top priority, 24% important).
  1. Thirty-four per cent of Chileans believe the US should give top priority to supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban, while 24 per cent say it should be important.

Mexico

A large majority of Mexicans now say US relations with the rest of the world will improve under the Obama administration, showing one of the largest increases in optimism from last summer. Support for the US making the withdrawal of its troops from Iraq a top priority is second-highest in Mexico (after Egypt) among all countries polled.

  1. Three-quarters of Mexicans (74%) think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up 21 points from last summer.
  1. Three in four (76%) see dealing with the global financial crisis as a top priority for the United States, with another 19 per cent thinking it important. A similar number say attention should go to withdrawing US troops from Iraq, with 71 per cent calling it a top priority and 25 per cent an important priority.
  1. On other issues of possible US action, 61 per cent of Mexicans say improving America's relations with their country should be a top priority (27% important); 51 per cent say brokering an Israeli-Palestinian peace accord should be a top priority (29% important); and 44 per cent believe addressing climate change should be a top priority (36% important).
  1. Thirty-six per cent of Mexicans say supporting Afghanistan's government against the Taliban should be a top priority while another 36 per cent say it should be important.

United States

American optimism that US relations with the rest of the world will improve under an Obama presidency has increased dramatically since last summer, as is the case with most other countries polled. The United States is among the countries putting the most emphasis on support for the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban as a top priority, even though less than a majority holds this view. 7

  1. A majority (65%) of Americans believes US relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama, up from just 46 per cent that held this view last summer.
  1. Three in four Americans (75%) say dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top priority for the US, with 18 per cent that saying it should be important.
  1. Sixty per cent say that the US should make improving America's relations with the rest of the world a top priority, along with 30 per cent that say it should be important.
  1. On other issues where the US government could take action, Americans say emphasis should be given to supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (46% top priority, 37% important); withdrawing US troops from Iraq (44% top priority, 32% important); addressing climate change (41% top priority, 33% important); and brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (37% top priority, 41% important).

EUROPE

France

The French are significantly above the average of countries polled in expressing optimism that relations between the US and the rest of the world will improve with the new Obama administration. They are also above average in their majority view that climate change should be a top US priority.

  1. Three-quarters of the French (76%) think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up from 62 per cent last summer.
  1. Three in five French (60%) see dealing with the global financial crisis as a top priority for the United States, while 29 per cent see it as important. Nearly the same number say the US should put emphasis on addressing climate change (58% a top priority, 30% important).
  1. Forty-seven per cent of the French say the US should make withdrawing US troops from Iraq a top priority (35% important) and 45 per cent say a top priority should be brokering an Israeli-Palestinian peace accord (36% important).
  1. On other issues, the French say the US should give emphasis to supporting Afghanistan's government against the Taliban (23% top priority, 40% important) and to improving America's relationship with their country (20% top priority, 49% important).

Germany

Almost four in five Germans now think America's relations with the rest of the world will get better with the Obama administration. Of all countries polled worldwide, Germany puts the lowest emphasis on supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban as a top US priority, although a significant number say it should be important.

  1. Three-quarters (78%) of Germans think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up from 61 per cent last summer.
  1. More than four in five Germans (83%) see dealing with the global financial crisis as a top priority for the United States, with another 15 per cent saying that it is important.
8
  1. On other issues for US action, 49 per cent of Germans think climate change should be a top US priority (46% important) and 34 per cent think withdrawing US troops from Iraq should be a top priority (58% important).
  1. Twenty per cent of Germans think that brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians and improving US relations with their country should be a top priority, while around two-thirds (57% and 66% respectively) say these are important.
  1. Thirteen per cent of Germans say supporting Afghanistan's government against the Taliban should be a top US priority, while 62 per cent of Germans see this as important.

Italy

Among all countries polled, Italians express the highest amount of optimism that relations between the US and the rest of the world will improve with the new Obama administration. Compared to other countries polled, Italy (along with Chile) is most concerned to see climate change become a top US priority.

  1. Nearly eight in ten (79%) Italians think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up from 64 per cent last summer.
  1. Seventy-eight per cent of Italians see dealing with the global financial crisis as a top priority for the United States, with another 17 per cent saying that it is important. Sixty-eight per cent of Italians say that addressing climate change should be a top US priority (important 20%).
  1. A majority of Italians want brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians to be a top US priority (25% important); and likewise for withdrawing US troops from Iraq (52% top priority, 28% important).
  1. Thirty-two per cent want the US to hold supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban as a top priority (33% important). Twenty-five per cent feel the same way about America improving its relationship with their country (38% important).

Russia

Russia has seen the second-largest increase (after Turkey) in optimism that America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under an Obama presidency, although less than one-half hold this view. Support in Russia is significantly lower than the average of countries polled for the US making the issues of climate change, peace between Israel and the Palestinians, and support for the Afghanistan government against the Taliban top priorities.

  1. Nearly one-half of Russians (47%) think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up 36 points from last summer.
  1. Three in four (74%) Russians think that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority. Fifty-nine per cent see improving US relations with their own country as a top priority, while an additional 30 per cent say it is important.
  1. Nearly one-half (49%) of Russians say that withdrawing US troops from Iraq should be a top priority (29% important).
  1. On other issues where the US could take action, only 18 per cent of Russians say a top priority should be addressing climate change (43% important), 17 per cent say a
9
top priority should be brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (39% important), and 17 per cent say a top priority should be supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (35% important).

Spain

Among countries polled, Spain is one of the three countries most optimistic (with Italy and Germany) that US relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama. Among Europeans polled, Spaniards are the most in favour of brokering peace between Israel and Palestine becoming a top US priority.

  1. Seventy-eight per cent of Spaniards think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama.
  1. Three-quarters (74%) of Spaniards think that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority. Sixty-five per cent see addressing climate change as a top priority and 28 per cent see it as important.
  1. Sixty per cent of Spaniards want brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians to be a top priority (29% important); 55 per cent feel the same way about withdrawing US troops from Iraq (30% important).
  1. Thirty-six per cent of Spaniards want improving America's relationship with Spain to be a top US priority (48% important). Thirty-five per cent say this about supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (37% important).

United Kingdom

Seven in ten Britons are now optimistic that America's relations with the world will get better during the Obama administration, while in the summer a modest majority were optimistic. The British are well above the average of countries polled in wanting to see climate change become a top US priority under the Obama administration. On making US making support for Afghanistan's government against the Taliban a top priority, the British are the highest among all European countries polled.

  1. Seventy per cent of Britons think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up from 54 per cent last summer.
  1. Three-quarters (74%) in the UK say that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority, with another 19 per cent thinking it should be important. Sixty-three per cent of Britons put addressing climate change as a top priority (26% important).
  1. A majority of Britons (54%) say brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians should be a top US priority (28% important). A majority also thinks this about withdrawing US troops from Iraq (52% top, 32% important). Forty-two per cent see it as a top US priority to support the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (33% important).
  1. Thirty per cent of Britons want the US to make a top priority of improving its relationship with their country (45% important).

MIDDLE EAST

Egypt

A majority now thinks that US relations with the world will improve under President Obama—twice as many Egyptians as thought this last summer. Among all countries polled, Egyptians 10

have the largest majorities in favour of the US making top priorities of the withdrawal of its troops from Iraq and the brokering of peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians.

  1. Nearly six in ten (58%) Egyptians expect America's relations with the rest of the world to improve under the Obama administration—29 per cent higher than last summer.
  1. More than eight in ten Egyptians (82%) believe withdrawing US troops from Iraq should be a top US priority, while nearly the same number (81%) say dealing with the global financial crisis should be top priority.
  1. A significant majority sees brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians as a top priority (75% top priority, 18% important), along with improving America's relationship with their country (63% top priority, 31% important).
  1. Thirty-five per cent of Egyptians want supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban to be a top US priority (28% important). Twenty-three per cent want addressing climate change to be a top US priority (37% important).

Turkey

Turks have shown the greatest increase in optimism about improved world relations with the US of all countries worldwide that were asked the same question last summer. Despite Turkey's proximity to fallout from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the number of Turks who want to see brokering peace there become a top US priority is actually less than the average of countries polled.

  1. One-half of Turks (51%) think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up 40 points from only 11 per cent last summer.
  1. Three in four Turks (72%) think that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority.
  1. About one-half of Turks see the following issues as top priorities: withdrawing US troops from Iraq (49% top priority, 30% important); improving America's relationship with their country (47% top priority, 32% important); and addressing climate change (45% top priority, 31% important).
  1. Thirty-three per cent say brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians should be a top US priority (40% important). Thirty-one per cent say the same about supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (37% important).

AFRICA

Ghana

Ghana has one of the largest majorities saying that the US should make improving America's relationship with its country a top priority. Ghana also has the largest majority that thinks US relations with the world will improve under President Obama.

  1. Majorities of Ghanaians say the US should emphasize improving America's relationship with their country (66% top priority, 19% important) and dealing with the current global financial crisis (66% top priority, 18% important).
  1. On other issues the US could address, Ghanaians believe priority should be given to withdrawing US troops from Iraq (49% top priority, 25% important), addressing climate change (41% top priority, 30% important), and brokering peace between the Israel and the Palestinians (38% top priority, 29% important).
11
  1. Twenty-two per cent of Ghanaians say the US should make supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban a top priority, while 25 per cent believe it should be important.

Nigeria

Nigerians have expressed the most consistent widespread optimism that US relations with the rest of the world will improve under an Obama presidency. Nigeria shows the second-lowest amount of support (after India) among all countries polled for the global financial crisis to be made a top priority by the US, even though most Nigerians say this issue should be given top priority compared to the others.

  1. Nearly three in four (74%) Nigerians say that America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama, though nearly the same number (71%) held this optimistic view last summer.
  1. Nigerians place the highest priority on resolving the global financial crisis (49% top priority, 27% important) and improving US relations with their country (39% top priority, 38% important).
  1. Nigerians say the US should give priority to the issues of brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (32% top priority, 26% important) and withdrawing US troops from Iraq (31% top priority, 35% important).
  1. Twenty-one per cent of Nigerians say the US should make addressing climate change a top priority (38% important) and 21 per cent also say supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban should be a top priority (32% important).

ASIA

China

China has seen one of the largest increases between now and last summer in optimism that the Obama presidency will improve America's relations with the rest of the world. China has the largest majorities that believe the US should make dealing with the global financial crisis and improving its relations with their region top priorities, more than 20 points higher than the average of countries polled in each case. China also has one of the largest majorities in favour of the US addressing climate change as a top priority.

  1. Two-thirds (68%) of the Chinese think America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama—up from 39 per cent last summer.
  1. An overwhelming 93 per cent say that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority. A large majority of Chinese say the US should put emphasis on improving its relations with their country (78% top priority).
  1. On other issues the US could address, the Chinese believe emphasis should be given to withdrawing US troops from Iraq (66% top priority, 19% important); addressing climate change (65% top priority, 21% important); and brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (58% top priority, 25% important).
  1. On supporting Afghanistan's government against the Taliban, 36 per cent say the US should make this a top priority, while 25 per cent say it should be important.

India 12

Indians have seen a large increase in optimism that US relations with the rest of the world will improve under an Obama administration since last summer, along with most other countries polled. Although Indians agree with most other publics that the US should make dealing with the global financial crisis a top priority, the number holding this view is less than one-half and lower than all other countries polled.

  1. Sixty-three per cent in India see US relations with the rest of the world improving under President Obama, up from 45 per cent last summer.
  1. Indians believe the US should put emphasis on dealing with the global financial crisis (47% top priority, 21% important) and improving America's relationship with their country (42% top priority, 22% important).
  1. Thirty-five per cent of Indians says addressing climate change should receive top priority from the US, while 33 per cent believe it should be important.
  1. On other issues where the US could take action, Indians say attention should go to brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (28% top priority, 27% important), withdrawing US troops from Iraq (27% top priority, 28% important), and supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (26% top priority, 32% important).

Indonesia

Among Islamic countries polled, Indonesia has the largest majority that thinks America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama. Indonesia is below the average of countries polled in its numbers who want to see brokering Israeli-Palestinian peace and withdrawing troops from Iraq become top US priorities.

  1. Sixty-four per cent of Indonesians expect that America's relations with the rest of the world will improve under the Obama administration—18 points higher than last summer.
  1. A large majority of Indonesians (70% top priority, 20% important) say dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority. Forty-six per cent think it should be a top priority for America to improve its relationship with their country (41% important).
  1. More than one-third of Indonesians (36%) say withdrawing US troops from Iraq should be a top priority (39% important). Nearly one in three feel this way about addressing climate change (30% top priority, 36% important) and brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians (29% top priority, 42% important).
  1. Fifteen per cent of Indonesians think that supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban should be a top US priority (15% top priority, 37% important).

Japan

Japan is one of only two countries polled (along with Russia) where less than one-half believe that Barack Obama's election will improve America's relations with the rest of the world. The Japanese are higher than the average of countries polled in their concern that the US should address climate change as a top priority.

  1. Slightly less than one-half (48%) of Japanese believe that US relations with the rest of the world will improve under President Obama, while 37 per cent believe they will stay about the same.
 
  1. More than three in four (77%) in Japan say that dealing with the global financial crisis should be a top US priority.
  1. Fifty-seven per cent of Japanese say that a top priority should be to address climate change (29% important). One-half think this about withdrawing US troops from Iraq (27% important).
  1. Thirty-nine per cent want brokering peace between Israel and the Palestinians to be a top US priority (31% important). Thirty-five per cent feel this way about the US improving its relationship with their region (36% important); 24 per cent feel this way about supporting the government of Afghanistan against the Taliban (34% important).
13 14 15 16 17

Research Partners Country

Research Institute

Location

Contact

Chile

MORI Chile

Santiago

Marta Lagos

mlagos@rdc.cl

+ 562 334 4544

China

GlobeScan

Toronto

Susan Hlady

susan.hlady@globescan.com

+1 416 969 3082

Egypt

Attitude Market Research

Cairo

Mohamed Al Gendy mgendy@attitude-eg.com +202 22711262

France

Efficience 3

Paris and Reims

Christian de Thieulloy

christian.t@efficience3.com

+33 3 2679 7589

Germany

Ri*QUESTA GmbH

Teningen

Bernhard Rieder

riquesta.rieder@t-online.de

+49 (0)7641 934336

Ghana

Business Interactive Consulting Limited

Accra

Razaaque Animashaun

info@bigghana.com

233 21 783 140

India

Team CVoter

New Delhi

Yashwant Deshmukh

yashwant@teamcvoter.com

+91 11 65791638

Indonesia

Deka Marketing Research

Jakarta

Irma Malibari Putranto

irma.putranto@deka-research.co.id

+62 21 723 6901

Italy

GfK Eurisko s.r.l.

Milan and Rome

Paolo Anselmi

paolo.anselmi@eurisko.it

+39 02 4380 9 1

Japan

The Yomiuri Shimbun

Tokyo

Junichi Yamamoto

mamo2091@yomiuri.com

+81 3-3217-1963

Mexico

The Mund Group

Mexico City

Daniel M. Lund

dlund@mungroup.com

+5255 5584 3020

Nigeria

Market Trends Research International, Nigeria

Lagos

J.O. Ebhomenye

Mtrinigeria@research-intng.com

+234 1 774 0386 / 234 1 775 0753

Russia

CESSI Institute for Comparative Social Research

Moscow

Vladimir Andreenkov

vladimir.andreenkov@cessi.ru

+7495 629 15 06

Spain

Sigma Dos Internacional

Madrid

Gines Garrido

josefinef@sigmados.com

+34 91 360 04 74

Turkey

Yontem Research & Consultancy

Istanbul

Bülent Gündogmu

info@yontemresearch.com

+90 212 278 12 19

United Kingdom

GlobeScan

London

Sam Mountford

sam.mountford@globescan.com

+011 44 20 7253 1447

USA

GlobeScan

Toronto

Susan Hlady

susan.hlady@globescan.com

+1 416 969 3082


 
 
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Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




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Monday, January 19, 2009

The Lessons of Mumbai- RAND CORPORATION

 

The Lessons of Mumbai

Angel Rabasa, Robert D. Blackwill,

Peter Chalk, Kim Cragin, C. Christine Fair,

Brian A. Jackson, Brian Michael Jenkins,

Seth G. Jones, Nathaniel Shestak,

Ashley J. Tellis

This paper results from the RAND Corporation's continuing program of self-initiated

independent research. Support for such research is provided, in part, by donors and by the

independent research and development provisions of RAND's contracts for the operation of

its U.S. Department of Defense federally funded research and development centers.

iii

Preface

This study of the Mumbai terrorist attack of November 2008 is part of the RAND Corporation

Occasional Papers series. The research for this report was completed in December 2008

and updated as of January 9, 2009. Much of the information available for this necessarily preliminary

analysis comes from reporting by the news media, which in such circumstances is

often inaccurate, and from information provided by well-placed Indian and U.S. government

sources, which sometimes is incomplete. For a thorough, and hopefully accurate reconstruction

of events, we must await an official inquiry or government-sponsored independent investigation.

With these caveats, this paper

identifies the operational and tactical features and technical capabilities ???? displayed by the

terrorists—the extent to which the means employed in the attack were innovations or

built on previous experiences

???? evaluates the response of the Indian security forces

???? draws out the implications of the incident for India, Pakistan, and the international

community

???? derives the lessons learned from the attack and the Indian response.

The goal of the study is to develop findings that may be helpful to counterterrorism

authorities in India and elsewhere in preparing for or countering future terrorist attacks on

urban centers.

This paper results from the RAND Corporation's continuing program of self-initiated

independent research. Support for such research is provided, in part, by donors and by the

independent research and development provisions of RAND's contracts for the operation of its

U.S. Department of Defense federally funded research and development centers.

This research was conducted within the RAND National Security Research Division

(NSRD) of the RAND Corporation. NSRD conducts research and analysis for the Office

of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the Unified Combatant Commands, the defense

agencies, the Department of the Navy, the Marine Corps, the U.S. Coast Guard, the U.S.

Intelligence Community, allied foreign governments, and foundations.

For more information on the RAND National Security Research Division, contact the

Director of Operations, Nurith Berstein. She can be reached by email at Nurith_Berstein@

rand.org; by phone at 703-413-1100, extension 5469; or by mail at RAND, 1200 South Hayes

Street, Arlington VA 22202-5050. More information about the RAND Corporation is available

at www.rand.org.

v

Contents

Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii

Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii

Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

The Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

The Indian Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Key Judgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Chronology of the Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

vii

Acknowledgments

The authors are thankful to officials and analysts inside and outside the U.S. and Indian governments

who shared their insights into the attack and its significance. We are also greatly

indebted to the reviewers of this report, Sumit Ganguly, Rabindranath Tagore Chair in Indian

Cultures and Civilizations at Indiana University, and William Rosenau, RAND Corporation

political scientist, for their suggestions, which greatly improved the quality of the paper.

At RAND, Brian Grady, Shivan Sarin, and Phil Kehres provided valuable assistance to the

completion of this project. We also thank our editor, Miriam Polon, and production editor,

Matthew Byrd, for helping to turn the manuscript into a finished product, and Michael Lostumbo

and James Dobbins for their role in quality assurance. Needless to say, any errors and

oversights are the responsibility of the authors.

1

Introduction

The November 26, 2008, terrorist attack in Mumbai, which killed at least 172 people, has been

referred to as "India's 9/11." By most measures, it was not the first significant terrorist attack in

India. After all, the July 2006 Mumbai commuter train bombings yielded 209 deaths. There

was no use of unconventional weapons. And it was not the first time terrorists had landed by

sea in Mumbai. Nevertheless, some aspects of this attack were significant, namely, its audacious

and ambitious scope, the complexity of the operation, and the diversity of its targets. The

prolonged nature of the episode, which went on for 60 hours with the steadily mounting death

toll, made it a slow-motion shoot-out and siege that mesmerized the world's news media.

Given previous terrorist attacks in India, it was not difficult to situate the motives for the

Mumbai attack in the continuing Islamist terrorist campaign. Evidence suggests that Lashkare-

Taiba (LeT), a terrorist group based in Pakistan, was responsible for the attack. Pakistanbased

terrorists see India as part of the "Crusader-Zionist-Hindu" alliance, and therefore the

enemy of Islam. "Muslim" Kashmir ruled by majority "Hindu" India, provides a specific cause,

but LeT has always considered the struggle in Kashmir as part of the global struggle, hence

the specific selection of Americans and Britons as targets for murder, and the inclusion of

the Jewish Chabad center as a principal target. (While most sources allege that the terrorists

deliberately targeted Americans and Britons, others, including Jane's, suggest that the shootings

at the hotel were as indiscriminate as those at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus). LeT

has declared that its objective is not merely liberating Kashmir but breaking up India. More

pragmatically, a terrorist attack on India can exacerbate antagonisms between India's Hindu

and Muslim communities and provoke Hindu reprisals that, in turn, divide India and facilitate

recruiting by Islamist extremists.

Why Mumbai? Mumbai is India's commercial and entertainment center—India's Wall

Street, its Hollywood, its Milan. It is a prosperous symbol of modern India. It is also accessible

by sea. From the terrorist perspective, the Taj Mahal Palace and Trident-Oberoi Hotels

provided ideal venues for killing fields and final bastions. As landmark properties, especially

the historic Taj, they were lucrative targets because of the psychological effect of an attack on

them. They were filled with people—foreigners and the local elite. The attacks on foreigners

guaranteed international media coverage. The message to India was, "Your government cannot

protect you. No place is safe." And the international publicity would inevitably result in travel

to India being cancelled or postponed with consequent damage to India's economy. The selection

of targets—Americans, Britons, and Jews, as well as Indians—suggests that LeT intended

the attack to serve a multiplicity of objectives that extended beyond this terrorist group's previous

focus on Kashmir and India.

The terrorists' attacks have increased tensions between India and Pakistan, which could

have been part of the terrorists' strategic objectives. The prospect of another armed confronta2

The Lessons of Mumbai

tion with India or of India's conducting military attacks on suspected terrorist training bases

in Pakistan, will provoke anger and strengthen Pakistani hardliners. That, in turn, will take

the pressure off of the terrorists based in Pakistan by forcing a redeployment of Pakistani forces

from the frontier tribal areas to the border with India.

LeT's role in the attack raises the issue of Pakistan's own involvement. We do not know

for certain whether LeT carried out this operation without the knowledge or approval of Pakistan's

army or intelligence services, or whether the attack was instigated or encouraged by

sectors of the Pakistani military or intelligence service to change the course of Pakistan's own

government. (The implications of these possibilities are discussed elsewhere.)

Terrorist attacks are intended not only to cause fear and alarm but also to inspire terrorist

constituencies and attract recruits. By succeeding—and here "success" means humiliating

the Indian security services, causing large-scale death and destruction, and garnering global

media coverage for days—terrorists hope to attract both Pakistani and Indian recruits to their

cause.

3

The Attack1

The Mumbai attack reflected precise planning, detailed reconnaissance, and thorough preparation,

both physical and mental. It relied on surprise, creating confusion and overwhelming the

ability of the authorities to respond. And it required determined execution by suicide attackers

who nonetheless were able to operate effectively over an extended period of time.

Terrorist Reconnaissance and Planning

The complexity of the operation demanded careful preparation. Eyewitness accounts from the

Taj Hotel indicate that the terrorists knew their way through hidden doors and back hallways

of the hotel. According to another report, the terrorists had a detailed diagram of the hotel's

layout.

Indian authorities indicate that in February 2008, a suspected terrorist, arrested in northern

India, was found to possess drawings of various sites in Mumbai, some of which were

targets in the November 2008 attack. The targets included the Taj Hotel and the Bombay

Stock Exchange (which had been a terrorist target in 1993). The apprehended suspect indicated

that he had begun his reconnaissance in late 2007. It appears that the planning for the

attack itself began in mid-2007. This is consistent with the time line of other large-scale terrorist

operations.

To achieve success, the terrorists had to have preplanned routes through the city from the

point of their landing to their final objective and had to be very familiar with the terrain they

would traverse at night. Information provided by the surviving terrorist in custody indicates

that their trainers provided them with maps and CD images of their targets.

Landing by Sea

The Mumbai attackers came by sea, sailing from Karachi on a Pakistani cargo vessel. On

November 22 or 23, they hijacked an Indian fishing trawler, murdered its crew except for the

1 This still-preliminary description of the attack is based on media accounts, augmented by private communications

with informed American and Indian officials. Jeremy Binnie and Christian Le Miere, "In the Line of Fire: Could Mumbai

Happen Again?" Jane's Intelligence Review, January 2009, provides a good overview of the sequence of events. An excellent

analysis has been compiled by the Intelligence Division of the New York Police Department, which had three officers on

the scene in Mumbai. See N.Y.P.D. Intelligence Division, Mumbai Attack Analysis, December 4, 2008. In early January,

the Indian government released a dossier that included an analysis of the attack and transcripts of cell phone conversations

between the terrorists and their handlers during the attack.

4 The Lessons of Mumbai

captain, and proceeded to Mumbai. They beheaded the captain as they neared their destination.

Coming by sea allowed the terrorists to avoid Indian security checkpoints at the frontier

or at airports; sailing on an Indian vessel enabled them to avoid arousing the suspicion of the

Indian coast guard. The attackers then boarded two small inflatable boats, which they landed

at two different points in the southern part of the city.

The Terrorists

We still know very little about the terrorists themselves. The ten attackers are all reported to be

Pakistanis in their early 20s. They are believed to have been assisted by an unknown number of

locals, including possibly Indian nationals, who helped with reconnaissance and possibly with

prepositioned supplies. The one surviving member is a modestly educated (fourth grade) young

Pakistani, who reportedly was drifting toward a life of petty crime before being recruited in the

jihadist cause. The terrorists spoke Urdu, Hindi, and some English.

The surviving terrorist may know little about his comrades. He reports that members of

the team were isolated from one another during most of their training for the mission. According

to another unconfirmed report, however, he said that some of the terrorists had come to

Mumbai on a reconnaissance mission some time before the attack disguised as students. Some

accounts say that at least some members of the attack team may have been on site from up to

two months before the attack to conduct reconnaissance and to stockpile ammunition. Official

Indian sources, however, indicate that all ten arrived by boat on the night of the attacks.

The surviving terrorist apparently was able to readily identify one of the key leaders

of LeT, which would seem to indicate a breach of security if LeT intended to disguise its

involvement.

Heavy Firepower

The terrorists came heavily armed. Each carried an AK-56 automatic assault rifle (a Chinese

version of the Russian AK-47) with seven magazines of ammunition (30 rounds each). The

terrorists also used Heckler & Koch MP5 machine guns but may have taken these from dead

or wounded Indian security personnel. The attackers were armed with 9-mm pistols with two

clips of ammunition, and they carried hand grenades (8 to 10 grenades each, according to one

report). They also had improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Each device reportedly contained

the high explosive RDX, ball bearings to create shrapnel, a digital timer, and a 9-volt battery.

Five devices were located. Two were left behind in taxis used by the attackers, and three others

were left at other locations along their route to detonate later, creating greater confusion. The

two devices left in the taxis exploded. The others failed or were rendered safe by Indian bomb

squads.

There are varying reports of supplies having been prepositioned. According to one

account, Indian commandos discovered a backpack at the Taj Hotel containing seven loaded

AK-47 magazines, 400 spare rounds, four hand grenades, and various documents. It is not

clear whether the backpack had been carried there by one of the slain attackers.

The Lessons of Mumbai 5

Tactics

The attack was sequential and highly mobile. Multiple teams attacked several locations at

once—combining armed assaults, carjackings, drive-by shootings, prefabricated IEDs, targeted

killings (policemen and selected foreigners), building takeovers, and barricade and hostage

situations.

While these tactics were a break from the now common suicide bombings associated with

jihadist groups, armed assaults have ample precedent in the annals of terrorism, reaching all the

way back to the 1972 Lod Airport attack in which three members of the Japanese Red Army

opened fire and threw hand grenades at arriving passengers. Barricade and hostage situations

were common throughout the 1970s. What was new here was the combination of tactics.

It was a complicated, multipart operation. By dispersing into separate teams and moving

from target to target, the terrorists were able to sow confusion and create the impression of a

greater number of attackers. The explosive devices that would go off after the terrorists departed

heightened the confusion.

The multiple attacks at different locations prevented the authorities from developing an

overall assessment of the situation. Media reports consistently overestimated what we now

know to be the actual size of the attacking force. The security forces probably had similar difficulties,

complicated further by the inevitable erroneous reports that accompany the response to

any terrorist event. The small size of the individual attack teams—two to four men—limited

their capability in any firefight with security forces. Upon confronting any serious return fire,

as they eventually did at the train station, for example, they broke off contact and moved on

to another target.

Four Teams

The terrorists divided themselves into four attack teams, one with four men and three with two

members each. After landing in Mumbai, one two-man team took a taxi to the Chhatrapati

Shivaji Terminus (CRT), Mumbai's main train station, where they took out their weapons and

opened fire on commuters. Remarkably, the two were able to roam through the station killing

indiscriminately for 90 minutes before better-armed police units arrived, forcing the terrorists

to leave the station. Huge numbers of middle-class commuters use this station on a routine

basis. While the attacks at the other targets were aimed at killing foreigners, the attack at the

train station was aimed at killing ordinary Indian citizens. Killing with apparent impunity

seemed intended to instill fear and dread in the minds of the hundreds of thousands of people

who use the station for their daily commutes.

The terrorist team then headed to the Cama & Albless Hospital, where they renewed

the killing. Escaping again with a police car they had ambushed and hijacked, they headed

toward the Trident-Oberoi Hotel, firing along the way. Forced to turn back, they hijacked

another vehicle but were finally intercepted by police. In the ensuing gun battle, one terrorist

was killed; the second was wounded and captured. This team alone was responsible for a third

of the fatalities.

The second team walked to Nariman House, a commercial-residential complex run by

the Jewish Chabad Lubavich movement. They threw grenades at a gas station across the street

from the complex, opened fire on the building, and then entered the lobby shooting. Taking

6 The Lessons of Mumbai

13 hostages, five of whom they subsequently murdered, the terrorists prepared for the police

assault. This team accounted for eight of the total fatalities.

The third two-man team headed from the landing site to the Trident-Oberoi Hotel,

where they began killing people indiscriminately. In a call to the news media, they claimed

that seven terrorists were in the building and they demanded that India release all Mujahadeen

(Muslim fighters) prisoners in return for the release of the hostages. The siege continued for

approximately 17 hours before the terrorists were killed. By the time they died, they had killed

30 people.

The fourth and largest team moved toward the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel. The terrorists

briefly entered the Leopold Café, spraying its occupants with automatic weapons fire, killing

ten people. Then they moved to the rear entrance of the Taj Hotel only a hundred meters away.

They walked through the grounds and ground floor of the hotel, killing along the way, then

moved to the upper floors, setting fires and moving constantly in order to confuse and delay

government commandos. The siege at the Taj ended 60 hours later, when Indian commandos

killed the last of the four terrorists.

The dispersal of the attackers into separate teams indicates an effort to reduce operational

risk. Once the attack began, the failure or elimination of any single team would not have put

the other teams out of action. The only possible point of failure for the entire attack was while

the terrorists were still at sea on their way to Mumbai. This particular pattern of operation—in

which the attackers assault and penetrate deep into the target, where they then kill as many as

possible—had been seen before in LeT attacks on Indian forces in Kashmir.

Slaughter or Siege?

The attackers' purpose, as indicated by the testimony of the surviving terrorist, was to kill as

many people as possible. However, there is some uncertainty that slaughter alone was the sole

purpose of the operation's planners. If we compare the 2008 Mumbai attack with the 2006

Mumbai train attack, in which seven bombs killed 209 people, or the 1993 Mumbai attack

in which 257 persons died in 13 bomb blasts across the city, it would seem that bombs would

have been more effective if body count were the sole criterion.

Indiscriminate bombings, as in the London and Madrid bombings, have been criticized,

even by some jihadists, as contrary to an Islamic code of warfare. So it is possible that by relying

on shooters, the 2008 attack would appear to be more selective, even though the vast majority

of those killed in Mumbai were ordinary Indians gunned down at random. This pretension of

selectivity was underscored by the terrorists' purported search for Americans and Britons, by

the brutal murders at the Chabad Centre, and by what appear to have been considered decisions

to kill certain hostages. It also enabled the attackers to eventually engage the police and

soldiers in what their supporters could portray as a heroic last stand.

Security may have been another factor. Based on the pattern of previous terrorist attacks,

Indian authorities were focused on truck bombs at hotels. Rail security focused on trying to

keep bombs off trains, not armed assailants out of train stations.

An armed assault might also have been more attractive than suicide bombings to the

attackers themselves. Once they opened fire, their fate was sealed, but the prolonged nature of

the operation enabled them to engage in a sustained slaughter where they could see the results.

The Lessons of Mumbai 7

Still martyrs in their own minds, they could also think of themselves as being more like warriors

than mere button-pushing suicide bombers.

Targets

All the facilities attacked were soft targets. At no point during the attack did the terrorists

attempt to overcome armed guards. For the most part, the terrorists attacked unguarded targets,

and, even in places where they could expect security forces, their reconnaissance informed

them that those forces would be only lightly armed and easily overcome. The main targets

included the central train station, the Cama & Albless Hospital, the Leopold Café, the Chabad

center, the Trident-Oberoi Hotel, and the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel—the latter target assigned

to the only four-man team. Other places attacked along the way were targets of opportunity.

Putting aside the drive-by shootings, the train station and the two hotels provided the

opportunity for achieving a high body count. The Leopold Café (a famous site) and the hotels

were dramatic venues for the attack—providing the "emotional value" sought by terrorists.

The massacre at the Chabad center had its own logic. According to transcripts of phone calls

between the terrorists and their handlers during the attack, terrorists at the Chabad center were

instructed to kill their Jewish hostages in order to "spoil relations between India and Israel."

Communications

The attackers reportedly used cell phones and a satellite phone, both their own and others

taken from their victims. They also carried Blackberries. A thoroughly preplanned attack,

which Mumbai certainly was, would have required no communications between the terrorist

operators and their headquarters. According to a dossier released by Indian authorities, however,

the terrorists were in frequent contact with their handlers, presumably based in Pakistan,

during the attack. In the transcripts of these phone calls, intercepted by Indian authorities

and released in early January, handlers in Pakistan urged the attackers on, exhorting them to

kill, reminding them that the prestige of Islam was at stake, and giving them tactical advice

that, in part, was gleaned from watching live coverage of the event on television. Despite these

exhortations to murder hostages and not to be taken alive, some observers believe—and there

are reports that the surviving terrorist thought—that the attackers felt that somehow they were

going to get out alive. The terrorists called each other during the siege to discuss their routes of

maneuver. They also talked to the news media via cell phones to make demands in return for

the release of their hostages. This led Indian authorities to think that they were dealing with a

hostage situation, which further confounded their tactical response.

A Strategic Terrorist Culture

The Mumbai attack demonstrates that jihadist organizations based in Pakistan are able to plan

and launch ambitious terrorist operations, at least in neighboring countries such as India. Put

in the context of previous terrorist attacks in India by Pakistani-based or local jihadist groups,

it suggests a continuing, perhaps escalating, terrorist campaign in South Asia. Beyond India,

8 The Lessons of Mumbai

the Mumbai attack reveals a strategic terrorist culture that thoughtfully identified strategic

goals and ways to achieve them and that analyzed counterterrorist measures and developed

ways to obviate them to produce a 9/11-quality attack. For 60 hours, the terrorists brought a

city of 20 million people to a standstill while the world looked on.

The attack put into actual practice LeT's previous rhetoric about making the Kashmir

dispute part of the international jihad. In so doing, LeT has emerged, not as a subsidiary of al

Qaeda, but as an independent constellation in the global jihad galaxy. Indeed, with al Qaeda

central operational capabilities reduced, the Mumbai attack makes LeT a global contender on

its own.

9

The Indian Response

The Indian government's response to the Mumbai attacks highlighted several key weaknesses

in the country's general counterterrorism and threat-mitigation structure.

Intelligence Failures. Indian intelligence officials received prior warnings both from their

own sources and from the United States that a major attack was probable, but lack of specificity

and uncertainty about the threat windows seemed to have prevented specific responses.

There appears to have been little coordination between the central security agencies—the

Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) and the Intelligence Bureau (IB)—and the local police

in Bombay. Although the former are known to have intercepted "chatter" about a possible LeT

seaborne attack on Mumbai, it is not clear whether the Mumbai police (or the Indian coast

guard) received the information. At any rate, they did not act upon it. This issue highlights the

universal problem of rapidly disseminating covert intelligence for actionable purposes.1

Gaps in Coastal Surveillance. The attacks highlighted India's inability to effectively monitor

its coastline—a condition that is common to many littoral states in both the developing

and the developed world. Although R&AW had information (apparently secured from intercepts)

about a possible terrorist landing by sea, whatever measures were taken proved insufficient

to monitor maritime traffic in and around Mumbai. This failure would seem to reflect

the coast guard's shortage of equipment for coastal surveillance: fewer than 100 boats for more

than 5,000 miles of shoreline and minimal aviation assets. Although the central government

has set aside funds for the purchase of 26 additional vessels to patrol the country's coastal

states, Maharashtra State (of which Mumbai is the capital) refused them on the grounds that

it lacked the funds necessary for maintenance.2

Inadequate "Target Hardening." The metal detectors at the CRT were of questionable

reliability, and, although the Railway Protection Force (RPF) officers were armed, their weapons

were relatively antiquated and in short supply (one for every two officers). The attack on

the railway terminus also underscored the limitations of the RPF in terms of concerted counterterrorism:

Although the force has the ability to fend off common criminals, it is completely

lacking in training to deal with a well-orchestrated terrorist attack.3

1 Sumit Ganguly, "Delhi's Three Fatal Flaws," Newsweek, December 8, 2008; Ajai Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable

Indian," South Asia Intelligence Review, Vol. 7, No. 21, 2008. It should be noted that these problems are not unique to India

and, indeed, have been identified as a major factor in the United States' own intelligence failures in connection with the

9/11 attacks.

2 Sunita Parikh, "Mumbai Attacks Highlight Shortcomings in Indian Terror Response," The Beacon, December 5, 2008;

Padma Rao Sundarji, "How India Fumbled Response to Mumbai Attack," McClatchy Newspapers, December 3, 2008.

3 Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable Indian," p. 3; Damien McElroy, "Mumbai Attacks: Foreign Governments Criticise

India's Response," The Daily Telegraph (UK), November 28, 2008; Sundarji, "How India Fumbled Response to Mumbai

Attack."

10 The Lessons of Mumbai

Incomplete Execution of Response Protocols. Although local police contingents (including

the Anti-Terrorism Squad, or ATS) responded relatively quickly, they lacked both the

training to set up appropriate command posts and dragnets for sealing off the attack sites. In

particular, they failed to cordon off the attack sites along a wide perimeter to contain the terrorists.

Because the attacks were at multiple locations, police did not have the ability to cordon

the area. It was the terrorists' purpose, based on previous experience, not to give the police a

containable event—a key lesson learned from what the terrorists did.

Response Timing Problems. Local contingents of the army arrived at the scene of the

attacks at 02:50 hours, a full five hours after the first shots had been fired.4 The first "special

response" team, the Marine Commandos (Marcos), arrived a little later, but the unit was

pulled out before engaging any of the terrorists. It was not until 08:50 hours that the elite

National Security Guard (NSG, or "Black Cat Commandos," which are modeled on the pattern

of the British SAS and German GSG-9) arrived. Initial search-and-rescue operations were

mounted some 30 minutes later, and it is only at that point that the terrorists could seriously

be considered engaged.5

The slow response of the NSG is especially noteworthy given its mandate to act as the

country's premier rapid-reaction force. This underscores two main organizational and logistical

problems. First, the unit is headquartered south of Delhi and lacks bases anywhere else in the

country;6 second, the NSG has no aircraft of its own and cannot count on dedicated access to

Indian Air Force aircraft in an emergency. The only plane that was available to transport the

200 commandos to Mumbai was a Russian IL-76 transport carrier; however, it was in Chandigarh,

which is 165 miles south of Delhi. The pilot had to be awakened, a crew assembled,

and the plane fueled. The aircraft did not reach Delhi until 02:00 hours (five hours after the

attacks began and most of the killing had been done) and took roughly 3.5 hours to reach

Mumbai (compared to just two hours for a commercial jet). According to various counterterrorism

experts, any rapid-reaction force must reach the scene of a terrorist incident no later

than 30–60 minutes after it has commenced. In Mumbai, nearly 10 hours elapsed.7

Inadequate Counterterrorism Training and Equipment for the Local Police. To effectively

manage a terrorist incident, first responders need to have appropriate equipment and training

to neutralize or at least contain the terrorists. However, the Mumbai attacks graphically illustrated

how ill prepared the Maharashtra police were to handle a major terrorist incident. Many

police officers remained passive, seemingly because they were outgunned by the terrorists. The

bulletproof vests that were available could not withstand AK-47 or AK-56 rounds (two batches

had failed tests in 2001 and 2004, and the head of the ATS, Chief Karkare, died after bullets

4 This, however, may be less of a response timing problem than an issue of political decisionmaking.

5 Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable Indian," p. 3; Parikh, "Mumbai Attacks Highlight Shortcomings in Indian Terror

Response"; "Major Terrorism Incident: The Mumbai Assault," Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Centre (JTIC) Special Report,

December 1, 2008, pp. 7–8.

6 Following criticism of the time it took the NSG to arrive in Mumbai, the government of India has announced that additional

base units will be set up in Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad. Delhi has also pledged to create

a nationwide agency tasked with counterterrorism duties; to establish a coastal command to secure the country's 7,500 km

of shoreline; to fill vacancies in intelligence agencies; to upgrade technology; to establish new dedicated counterterrorism

commando forces; to build counterinsurgency and counterterrorism training schools; and to strengthen laws relating to the

prevention, investigation, and punishment of terrorist acts. "After Mumbai, India Unveils Anti-Terror Measures," Reuters,

December 11, 2008.

7 Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable Indian," p. 3; Sundarji, "How India Fumbled Response to Mumbai Attack."

The Lessons of Mumbai 11

penetrated the vest he was wearing). Many officers had only been issued 5-mm-thick plastic

protectors that were suitable for riot control but not for engaging terrorists. Helmets were

of World War II vintage and not designed for modern combat, and most of the responding

detachments involved in the incidents were carrying .303 bolt-action rifles of the sort used by

the British Army in the 1950s.8

Limitations of Municipal Fire and Emergency Services. Firemen were slow to respond.

They failed to coordinate their actions with both the local police and national paramilitary

forces and suffered from inadequate equipment. These limitations underscore the poor quality

of India's municipal services even in a major, bustling, economically vibrant city such as

Mumbai.9

Flawed Hostage-Rescue Plan. In several respects, the NSG hostage rescue plans for the

Taj Mahal and Trident-Oberoi Hotels suffered from serious defects. The unit's senior command

failed to set up an operational command center to coordinate the mission, and the storm

teams went in "blind" with no understanding of the basic layout of either of the two buildings.

Both hotels were designated "clear" when terrorists were still alive; room-to-room sweeps were

hampered by insufficient intelligence on the numbers of hostages being held and the profile of

the militants involved; and the possibility for a surprise raid under cover of darkness was effectively

negated by the absence of suitable equipment, such as night-vision goggles and thermal

imaging systems.10

Poor Strategic Communications and Information Management. Throughout the crisis,

the central government and security forces failed to project an image of control, with the words

"chaos" and "paralysis" used repeatedly to describe events as they unfolded.11 So badly did

officials handle communications that an unprecedented public interest lawsuit has been filed

against the government charging that it failed to discharge its constitutional duty to protect the

country's citizenry and uphold their right to life.12 More seriously, breaches of basic information

security protocols provided the terrorists with vital operational intelligence. Major criticism

was directed at a cabinet minister on the first day of the crisis, after he announced that

200 NSG commandos were to be deployed in the area in two hours. Not only did this alert the

terrorists as to when a hostage rescue mission might occur, it also effectively confirmed that no

forward operating units had yet been mobilized.13

Since the attack, the Indian government has announced a number of reforms aimed

at addressing these various shortcomings. On December 11, 2008, India's Home Minister,

P. Chidambaram, announced several efforts to improve India's domestic security, including

the creation of a Coastal Command to secure 4,650 miles of shoreline, establishment of 20

8 Sundarji, "How India Fumbled Response to Mumbai Attack"; Parikh, "Mumbai Attacks Highlight Shortcomings in

Indian Terror Response"; Jeremy Page, "Outgunned Mumbai Police Hampered by First World War Weapons," TimesOnline,

December 3, 2008.

9 Again, it should be noted that these problems are not unique to India. They were also identified in post-9/11 inquiries as

limiting the effectiveness of the U.S. government's response to the September 11 attacks.

10 Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable Indian," p. 4; McElroy, "Mumbai Attacks: Foreign Governments Criticise India's

Response."

11 Sahni, "Mumbai: The Uneducable Indian," p. 3.

12 Somini Sengupta, "Mumbai Attacks Politicize Long-Isolated Elite," The New York Times, December 7, 2008.

13 McElroy, "Mumbai Attacks: Foreign Governments Criticize India's Response."

12 The Lessons of Mumbai

counter-terror schools and standing regional commando units, creation of a national agency to

investigate suspected terror activity, and strengthening of anti-terror laws.14

India's parliament has taken steps to make some of these reforms a reality. On December

17, India's lower house (Lok Sabha) approved new anti-terror legislation; it was approved by

the upper house (Rajya Sabha) the next day. The new Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act provides

new powers to the security services, including the ability to hold suspects for six months

without charges. It also makes provisions to establish a National Investigative Agency that will

be responsible for investigating terrorism and gathering and processing intelligence. Some of

these provisions (such as lengthy detentions without charge) have drawn domestic criticism.15

Following the 1999 incursion by Pakistani paramilitary forces in the Kargil-Dras sectors

of Kashmir, the Indian government vowed to institute reforms intended to make future

incursions less likely. Many of these changes were proposed in the Kargil Review Commission

Report. Since then, few of those enhancements have been implemented. Thus, it remains to be

seen whether India will follow through on efforts to improve domestic security and over what

time horizon.16

On January 5, 2009, India, unsatisfied with Pakistan's response so far, issued a 69-page

dossier detailing the linkages between the Mumbai attackers and Pakistan. The dossier was

given to Pakistan to satisfy Pakistan's demand for evidence of Pakistani involvement. India

hopes that by mounting a comprehensive diplomatic offensive, it can persuade the international

community to act more forcefully to influence Pakistan to shut down LeT, Jaish-e-

Mohammad (JM), and other militant groups operating in and from Pakistan. Following the

release of the dossier, Indian officials asserted that the attack "must have had the support of

some official agencies in Pakistan."17

14 Rama Lakshmi, "Indian Official Unveils Plan to Strengthen Security," Washington Post, December 11, 2008.

15 "UAPA Retains Most of POTA's Stringent Provisions," Times of India, December 17, 2008. http://timesofindia

.indiatimes.com/India/UAPA_retains_most_of_POTAs_stringent_provisions/articleshow/3847843.cms.

16 The recommendations of the Kargil Review Committee can be accessed at http://mod.nic.in/newadditions/annexb

.pdf.

17 A text of the dossier is available at http://www.hindu.com/nic/dossier.htm. Also see Siddharth Varadarajan, "After Evidence

Dossier, Direct Accusation Against Pakistan Strikes Discordant Note," The Hindu, January 8, 2009.

13

Implications

The LeT attacks on Mumbai have serious implications for India, Pakistan, the United States

and, in some measure, the international community. While many of the implications for these

four actors remain the same irrespective of the degree of autonomy with which LeT executed

these attacks, as detailed below, other implications change dramatically if we assume some

degree of state sponsorship.

India

The attack has a number of external and internal implications for India. Both are considered

here. With respect to India's relationship with Pakistan, Indians are convinced that LeT

is sponsored by Pakistani government entities, as recent official statements attest. India will

therefore respond in a way that holds the government of Pakistan responsible. The connections

between LeT and Pakistan's Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) are well known, as

are LeT's various camps and offices in Pakistan.1 Moreover, India has been victimized by a host

of militant groups based in and supported by Pakistan for decades.2 With the possible exception

of the militant groups associated with Jamaat-Islami, the so-called Kashmir tanzeems have

been raised, nurtured, assisted, and trained by the ISI. As such, these groups are not strictly

nonstate actors but rather extensions of the state intelligence apparatus, albeit with some degree

of plausible deniability. After becoming an overt nuclear power, Pakistan has become emboldened

to prosecute conflict at the lower end of the spectrum, confident that nuclear weapons

minimize the likelihood of an Indian military reaction.

In the wake of nuclearization, substate conflict expanded dramatically. In 2001, a RAND

analysis of the aforementioned Kargil crisis found that the Pakistani operation was enabled

by the protective nuclear umbrella ensuring that India's conventional response would be constrained.

Similarly, groups that were previously limited to the Kashmir theater expanded into

the Indian hinterland following the 1998 nuclear tests. Notable attacks included the 2000 LeT

attack on the Red Fort, the 2001 JM attack on the Indian parliament, the 2006 LeT Mumbai

subway attack, and numerous other attacks by LeT or JM throughout India. In addition, in

1 See, for example, the discussion in Husain Haqqani, Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military, Washington D.C.: Carnegie

Endowment for International Peace, 2005; Muhammad Amir Rana, A to Z of Jehadi Organizations in Pakistan, trans.

Saba Ansari, Lahore, Pakistan: Mashal Books, 2004; Amir Mir, True Face of the Jehadis, Lahore, Pakistan: Mashal Books,

2004.

2 Alexander Evan, "The Kashmir Insurgency: As Bad As It Gets," Small Wars & Insurgencies, Vol. 11, No. 1, Spring 2000,

pp. 69–81; Haqqani, Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military.

14 The Lessons of Mumbai

2000, LeT introduced the fidayeen (high-risk commando) operation in Kashmir and has since

used it throughout India.3

For these reasons, India has not (and likely will not) acquiesce to the prevalent Pakistani

position that this attack, like others before it, is the handiwork of nonstate actors that the state

does not control. This attack has refocused Indian policymakers' attention on overhauling

their internal security mechanisms even as it strengthens the Indian military's interest in developing

the means to punish Pakistan for such attacks and to deter future ones.4

Despite some Indian interest in military options, there do not appear to be at present

any military operations that can have strategic-level effects without significant risk of military

response from Pakistan. While air or land strikes across the line of control (LoC) could satisfy

an Indian polity exhausted with Pakistan-based terror, strikes across the LoC would only be

able to target camps in Azad Kashmir. Such strikes would not cripple the wider infrastructure

of terrorism in Pakistan, given that LeT and other militant groups have relocated to the Federally

Administered Tribal Areas and have assets in nearly every province of Pakistan. Striking

across the LOC or the international border will be risky and may precipitate a wider crisis given

Pakistan's ability to respond conventionally and unconventionally.

While India understands the costs of military action, from its point of view there are also

costs to not responding. Since 2001, India has suffered a number of militant attacks that have

involved in varying degrees Pakistan-based and indigenous militants. Indian officials believe

that this terrorism is official Pakistani policy. Given India's beliefs about the origins of the various

attacks perpetrated on its soil, India exhibited exceeding restraint in the aftermath of the

2006 LeT attack on Mumbai's subway system. Pakistan has likely concluded from the events

since the December 2001 attack on the Indian parliament complex and prior, that India is

unable or unwilling to mount a serious effort to punish and deter Pakistan for these attacks.

Accordingly, from India's vantage point, to not respond would signal a lack of Indian resolve

or capability. The pressure to act is likely to remain even if Pakistan takes some form of action

against specific LeT activists. Indian proponents of military action believe that some sort of

military response is required to ensure that Pakistan (or at least those elements of its military

and intelligence leadership that are supportive of the activities of groups like LeT) understands

that terrorism in India is no longer a cost-free option.5

For the foreseeable future, India is likely to remain a target of Pakistan-based terrorism.

This is due, among other things, to India's inability (and indeed that of the international community)

to compel Pakistan to dismantle the terrorist infrastructure comprehensively; to Pakistan's

inherent incapacities to do so even if it had the will; and to the expanding participation of

3 See Ashley J. Tellis, C. Christine Fair, and Jamison Jo Medby, Limited Conflicts Under the Nuclear Umbrella—Indian

and Pakistani Lessons from the Kargil Crisis, Santa Monica: RAND, 2001; S. Paul Kapur, "India and Pakistan's Unstable

Peace: Why Nuclear South Asia Is Not Like Cold War Europe," International Security, Vol. 30, No. 2, Fall 2005, pp.

138–139; Ashley J. Tellis, Pakistan and the War on Terror: Conflicted Goals, Compromised Performance, Washington D.C.:

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2008; Walter C. Ladwig III, "A Cold Start for Hot Wars? The Indian Army's

New Limited War Doctrine," International Security, Vol. 32, No. 3, Winter 2007–2008, pp. 158–190.

4 This has principally taken the form of an emergent limited war doctrine called Cold Start.

5 See, for example, "India's Military Options," The Hindustan Times, December 5, 2008; "Pak Making No Serious Attempt

to Dismantle Terror Camps: Antony," Times of India, January 8, 2008; "India Shouldn't Rule Out Military Option: Former

Army Chief," Thaindian News, December 17, 2008.

The Lessons of Mumbai 15

Indians in Islamist violence with varying degrees of assistance from Pakistan and Bangladesh.6

This attack, building upon a recent history of dozens of attacks in India, also underscores

India's dire need to redress its numerous deficiencies in its internal security arrangements.

There are several likely areas of much-needed attention, many of which have been highlighted

elsewhere in this paper. There is considerable variation in the size, competence, and

capabilities of India's various state police forces. However, few would disagree that India has

too few competent police for its citizenry overall, especially given that at any one time it is

combating several active insurgencies in addition to fending off terrorist attacks launched from

inside and outside the country. Ajai Sahni, a well-known terrorism analyst in Delhi, has long

criticized India's low police-to-population ratio of about 125 per 100,000. (Because policing is

under the control of the individual states, state police forces vary in end-strength.) This figure

is nearly half the U.N.-recommended ratio for peacetime policing, much less a country with

numerous active insurgencies.7

As the footage of the most recent terrorist outrage demonstrates, Indian police are outgunned

by their foes. They are also generally poorly trained and lack the ability to collect,

store, and analyze forensic evidence in accordance with international standards. In addition

to its generally decrepit state of policing, India—like many other countries—has difficulty

moving intelligence from its central intelligence agencies to state-level counterparts. As the

militants' frequent reliance upon the sea route attests, India remains vulnerable to such attacks.

This underscores the urgent need for greater coastal security.

Since most external terrorist groups require some local collaborators for the success of

their missions, all likely targets within India ought to undertake a quiet but urgent review

of their own personnel to minimize the probability of terrorists securing insider access or

information.

Pakistan

It is in many ways too early to assess the full range of ramifications for Pakistan. They will

depend in good measure upon the evolving U.S. and Indian responses, Pakistan's own domestic

actions against the country's myriad militant groups, and the response of the international

community. The consequences for Pakistan are also considerably different depending on the

extent of the linkages between the ISI and LeT in general and the conduct of this operation in

particular. India contends that LeT required the participation of Pakistan's intelligence agencies

to execute the attack. Notably, Prime Minister Singh suggested, "There is enough evidence

to show that, given the sophistication and military precision of the attack, it must have had the

support of some official agencies in Pakistan."8

Indian and American officials by and large believe that Pakistan's civilian government

does not control the military's (or ISI's) policies toward militant groups operating in and from

6 Lisa Curtis, "After Mumbai: Time to Strengthen U.S.–India Counterterrorism Cooperation," Heritage Foundation

Backgrounder #2217, December 9, 2008. For some treatment of the communal violence issue, see Paul R. Brass, The Production

of Hindu-Muslim Violence in Contemporary India, Seattle, Wash.: University of Washington Press, 2003; Ashutosh

Varshney, Ethnic Conflict and Civic Life, New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2002.

7 Ajai Sahni, "The Uneducable Indian" (op-ed), Outlook (Delhi), December 1, 2008.

8 Somini Sengupta, "Dossier Gives Details of Mumbai Attacks," The New York Times, January 6, 2009.

16 The Lessons of Mumbai

Pakistan. Most analysts of Pakistan now believe that Pakistan's best hope is to slowly civilianize

and incrementally exert civilian control over the military and intelligence agencies, but few are

optimistic that this can or will occur. The challenge for the United States, India, and the international

community is how to selectively put pressure on the military and intelligence agencies

in the near term without destabilizing Pakistan's fragile civilian government. No doubt, the

Pakistan security establishment understands this calculus and therefore discounts the likelihood

of significant reprisals. If so, Pakistan is very likely to take the minimal steps needed to

defuse the present crisis while still retaining a capacity to use militants in the future.

If LeT operated with some degree of complicity from the military and intelligence agencies,

the Mumbai attack offers a number of disturbing implications. First, it suggests that

attacking India with the aim of weakening it remains the ambition of at least some key elements

in the Pakistani security establishment. Second, it would have served the purpose of derailing

the government's policies of pursuing rapprochement with India and fighting extremists in the

tribal areas, as well as the efforts of the United States to intervene in the Pakistani Army's doctrine

and training. Thus, the attack may have been calibrated to engender an Indian military

response and to provide some respite from unpopular operations along the Afghanistan border.

Finally and most importantly for the United States, the persistence of ties between Pakistani

intelligence and military entities and groups such as LeT suggests that Pakistan's intelligence

and military establishment may not be a reliable security partner of the United States.

If LeT undertook the attack without military or ISI sanction, LeT will have joined the

ranks of the other militant groups that were once ISI proxies but are now increasingly hostile

to the Pakistani state in some measure. For example, after 2002, Jaish-e-Mohammad split

into two factions, one of which favored targeting the state and its Western allies and one that

favored continued cooperation with the Pakistani state. Pakistan may now be a victim of the

groups it created.

While it is doubtful that LeT has turned its back on its erstwhile handlers, it is not impossible.

9 LeT has significant external sources of funding and is less dependent upon the ISI than

in the past. LeT may have judged that the benefits of working with the ISI and abiding by its

guidelines are not worth the constraints on its operations. No doubt the Mumbai attack will

allow LeT to expand its recruitment and fundraising. Moreover, since LeT has been cooperating

more closely with al Qaeda in Afghanistan, it may have decided to target the "Zionist-

Hindu-Crusader" alliance about which it has long ranted in its various literature and public

addresses.

9 K. Alan Kronstadt of the Congressional Research Service has recently written of ISI-LeT ties (Terrorist Attacks in

Mumbai, India, and Implications for U.S. Interests, Washington D.C.: Congressional Research Service, December 2008,

p. 5),

. . . an unnamed, but ostensibly high-ranking Indian official claimed that his government has "clear and incontrovertible

proof" that the November Mumbai attack was planned by the LeT with training and other support from the ISI. U.S.

officials have to date been more circumspect . . . but many are reported to believe that the LeT's recent growth in strength

and reach has come only with active assistance from ISI elements, either active or "retired." In mid-2008, U.S. intelligence

officials apparently concluded that ISI elements were involved in a July car bombing of India's Embassy in Kabul,

Afghanistan.

Ashley Tellis has also written recently that LeT has "subterranean links with the ISI." See Ashley J. Tellis, "Terrorists

Attacking Mumbai Have Global Agenda," Yale Global, December 8, 2008.

The Lessons of Mumbai 17

Judging from President Zardari's statements and the delayed response of the Pakistani

government to the crisis, Pakistan's civilian government is either unwilling to comprehensively

shut down LeT and its front organization, Jamaat ul-Dawa (JuD), or, more likely, is seriously

constrained from doing so by the military and intelligence agencies. As late as December 17,

2008, President Zardari denied the credibility of the evidence that the surviving attacker,

Ajmal Qasab, is a Pakistani despite the admission of Qasab's own father.10 On January 7,

2009, National Security Advisor Mahmood Durrani was fired because he intimated during

an interview with CNN that the attackers had roots in Pakistan. The prime minister's spokesman,

Imran Gardaizi, explained that he was dismissed because "he gave media interviews on

national security issues without consulting the prime minister."11

Despite the denials espoused by the civilian government, it has undertaken a number of

belated steps against LeT. Pakistan was extremely reluctant to ban JuD, but promised to do so

after the United Nations Security Council proscribed the group, a move that required China's

backing.12 (Only a year before, China had declined to back a similar move.) On December

11, 2008, Pakistan finally put JuD's leader Hafiz Muhammad Saeed under house arrest and

sealed nine JuD offices in Lahore, Karachi, Hyderabad, Peshawar, and Mansehra linked to

the Mumbai attack, including the Jamia Masjid Qudsia, the main JuD office in Lahore. It is

unclear whether the police have taken any action to shut down JuD headquarters in Muridke.13

(Saeed was previously put under house arrest only to be released.) Media reports suggest that

there is lackadaisical security enforcing his house arrest; one newspaper report noted that it

was more akin to a "forced vacation."14 Finally, on December 13, 2008, Pakistan banned JuD,

a move decried by some of Pakistan's politicians.15 However, reports have already surfaced suggesting

that JuD has again reorganized under yet a new guise. 16

Pakistan's sluggish response to LeT may have several explanations, all of which could be

at play in some measure. Parts of the Pakistani security establishment likely still view the organization

as a valuable asset in some measure. Alternatively, the state may have been reticent

to take on LeT at this time because it cannot do so competently. Finally, even if the civilian

government (or its political leadership) is convinced that these groups threaten Pakistan and

the region, they do not control the security apparatus and have limited ability to suppress the

groups without further undermining their own hold in power.

10 BBC World Service, "Zardari Distances Pakistan from Mumbai Attack," December 17, 2008.

11 "Pakistan Fires National Security Adviser," Associated Press, January 7, 2009; "Pakistan's National Security Advisor

Fired After Mumbai Disclosure," VOA News, January 7, 2009.

12 On December 10, 2008, the United Nations Security Council placed financial sanctions on four members of LeT

(Muhammad Saeed, whom the UN names as the group's leader; Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, described as LeT's chief of operations;

Haji Muhammad Ashraf, its finance chief; and Mahmoud Mohammad Ahmed Bahaziq, described as a financier for

the group). The four face an assets freeze, a travel ban, and an arms embargo. In addition, the Security Council amended

its 2005 blacklisting of LeT to include the charitable foundation JuD after Pakistan banned LeT. Pakistani President Asif

Ali Zardari said that he would ban JuD if given conclusive evidence of its links to the Mumbai attack. Jay Solomon, "U.N.

Security Council Sanctions Lashkar Members," The Wall Street Journal, December 10, 2008.

13 Nirupama Subramanian, "Crackdown on Jamat-ud-Dawah," The Hindu, December 12, 2008.

14 Richard A. Oppel and Salman Masood, "With House Arrest Pakistan Curbs, Lightly, a Leader Tied to Mumbai Attackers,"

The New York Times, December 12, 2008.

15 Sridhar Krishnaswami, "Pakistan Banned Jamat-ud-Dawah for Its Own Interest, Says US," The Hindustan Times,

December 13, 2008; "Jud Ban Illegal, Says Imran Khan," Times Now, December 24, 2008.

16 "Banned JuD Back Under New Name: Menon," Indian Express, January 2, 2008.

18 The Lessons of Mumbai

The United States

The Mumbai attack attests to ongoing shortcomings—if not outright failure—in the United

States' efforts to manage its various security interests in Pakistan and the region. As is well

known, in the early phase of the war on terror, the United States tended to focus its efforts

on securing Pakistan's cooperation in pursuing al Qaeda. In part because the United States

believed the Taliban had been defeated, it did not pressure Pakistan to cooperate against the

Taliban until 2007, although interest in doing so percolated across the U.S. government in

2006. This renewed interest was due in large measure to the Taliban resurgence in 2005, which

to a large extent was facilitated by the sanctuary that the Taliban and other extremists enjoyed

in Pakistan. Washington applied only episodic pressure on Pakistan to eliminate the groups

operating in Kashmir, of which LeT was one. According to one well-placed advisor to the

Bush administration, even placing LeT on the foreign terrorist organization list was a challenge

because the administration was concerned about the reaction of the Pakistani army.

In an effort to secure Pakistan's cooperation in the global war on terrorism, the United

States focused its energies and its resources on the Pakistan military. Between fiscal years 2002

and 2008, the United States spent more than $11.2 billion presumably to further these goals.17

In return, the United States has secured access to Pakistani soil for logistical supply as well as

access to naval and air bases for the conduct of Operation Enduring Freedom. Pakistan has

also deployed significant numbers of military and paramilitary troops along the border with

Afghanistan, where it has engaged in operations with varying success against selected militants

considered to be a threat to the state.

In the main, U.S. policies have not secured a comprehensive commitment from Pakistan

to eliminate militants based in Pakistan. Taliban leaders and warlords—Jallaluddin Haqqani,

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and Baitullah Meshud, among others—remain free to operate from

Pakistani soil with impunity, and many believe that the Pakistani military and the ISI actively

support them.18 Equally alarming, LeT has been targeting U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan's

Kunar and Nuristan provinces at least since 2007. This is in addition to the ongoing

operations against India by a number of groups based in Pakistan.

The International Community

With the Mumbai attack, LeT demonstrated that it has the ability and the will to internationalize

its targets. LeT now has now assumed a larger role in the larger jihadi landscape. Like

some of the other militant groups in Pakistan, LeT is believed to have considerable reach into

Pakistani diaspora populations, raising a number of concerns for countries with Pakistani

expatriate communities. More than ever, India and her partners need to forge more robust

counterterrorism and law enforcement links. For the policy-relevant future, Pakistan will

remain a destination where individuals radicalized abroad can go to obtain training from

militant groups. Thus, containing the threat posed by militants in Pakistan is an international

challenge with few mechanisms to support it. The Indian government successfully pre-

17 K. Alan Kronstadt, "Pakistan-US Relations," CRS Report for Congress, Washington D.C.: Congressional Research Service,

August 2008.

18 Seth Jones, "Pakistan's Dangerous Game," Survival, Vol. 49, No. 1, 2007, pp. 15–32.

The Lessons of Mumbai 19

vailed upon the United Nations to take action against LeT and key leaders. While the United

Nations may have little impact upon LeT's ability to act, China's vote was necessary to secure

this vote. As China has long been seen as Pakistan's most reliable partner, this vote may have

some impact in Islamabad.

21

Key Judgments

India will continue to face a serious jihadi terrorist threat from Pakistan-based terrorist groups

for the foreseeable future. However, India lacks military options that have strategic-level effects

without a significant risk of a military response by Pakistan. Neither Indian nor U.S. policy is

likely to be able to reduce that threat significantly in the short to medium term. Most likely,

the threat will continue to grow. Other extremists in India inevitably will find inspiration and

instruction from the Mumbai attack.

Safe havens continue to be key enablers for terrorist groups. Safe havens allow terrorist

leaders to recruit, select, and train their operators and make it easier for terrorists to plan and

execute complex operations, such as the Mumbai attack. Therefore, at the strategic level, the

Mumbai attack underscores the imperative of addressing the transnational sources of Islamist

terrorism in India. How to do this is an extraordinarily difficult question that will require the

reassessment of basic assumptions concerning policy toward Pakistan by members of the international

community.

The focus on Pakistan in this case should not obscure the likelihood that the attackers

had local assistance or that other recent terrorist attacks in India appear to have been carried

wholly or partially by Indian nationals. Local radicalization is a major goal of the terrorists and

will remain a major political and social challenge for India.

The masterminds of the Mumbai terrorist attack displayed sophisticated strategic thinking

in their choice of targets and tactics. The attack appears to have been designed to achieve

an array of political objectives. This indicates a level of strategic thought—a strategic culture—

that makes this terrorist foe particularly dangerous.

Given that the terrorists seek to maximize the psychological impact of the attacks, we

can expect that future attacks will aim at both large-scale casualties and symbolic targets. The

jihadists have stated, and the Mumbai attack demonstrates, the determination of the terrorists

to seek high body counts, go after iconic targets, and cause economic damage.

The terrorists will continue to demonstrate tactical adaptability, which will make it difficult

to plan security measures around past threats or a few threat scenarios. Terrorists innovate.

They designed the Mumbai attack to do what authorities were not expecting. There were no

truck bombs or people attempting to smuggle bombs onto trains, as in previous attacks.

Since attacks against high-profile soft targets are relatively easy and cheap to mount,

such institutions will remain targets of future attacks. The protection of those targets presents

particularly difficult challenges. Many of India's older symbolic buildings were not built with

security considerations in mind or are in exposed locations.

Iconic institutions that are likely to be potential targets of terrorist attack must work with

local police and intelligence agencies to receive timely alerts about possible threats. They must

work with local municipalities and police to curtail open vehicular access to their premises and

22 The Lessons of Mumbai

must consider putting in place screening barriers at some distance from their physical premises

where this is possible. They must also develop preplanned response strategies, in coordination

with local law enforcement, to the wide variety of possible threats that can be reasonably

envisaged.

One of the most important lessons of this attack is the continuing importance of an earlier

operational form: the firearms assault. While the counterterrorism world has been focused

almost exclusively on explosives, this attack demonstrates that firearms assault, while not as

deadly as mass-casualty bombings, can be an effective tactic in creating prolonged chaos in an

urban setting

Intelligence failure, inadequate counterterrorist training and equipment of local police,

delays in the response of NSG commandos, flawed hostage-rescue plans, and poor strategic

communications and information management all contributed to a less-than-optimal response.

These gaps suggest the need for improved counterterrorist coordination between national-level

and local security agencies and for strengthened counterterrorist capabilities on the part of first

responders. Unless India can improve the quality and functioning of its entire internal security

apparatus, it will remain acutely vulnerable to further terrorist penetration and attacks.

23

Chronology of the Attack

November 26, 2008 (all times are local)

21:20 Gunfire outside the Hotel Oberoi at Nariman Point in south Mumbai.

21:20 Terrorists run into Nariman House, where they take control of the Chabad

Lubavich center.

21:30 Gunfire outside the Leopold Café at Colaba in south Mumbai, about 100 meters

behind the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel.

21:40 Gunfire near the Bade Miyan Café (behind the Taj Hotel in south Mumbai).

21:45 Terrorists enter Taj Hotel lobby and fire indiscriminately.

21:45 Gunfire inside the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST), Mumbai's central train

station. There are ten fatalities there.

22:30 Gunfire at the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai headquarters gate 2,

opposite the CST.

22:35 Gunfire at Gokuldas Hospital, near the CST.

22:40 Gunfire at the Cama & Albless Hospital, near the CST.

22:50 Gunfire at the Metro Theatre (Metro Cinema Junction).

23:00 Explosion in a taxi in Vile Parle in north Mumbai. (This is one of the IEDs left

behind in the taxi.)

23:00 Explosion in a taxi in Mazgaon—probably the second IED left behind.

23:10 Two explosions at Napean Sea Road in south Mumbai.

23:30 Explosion at Dhobi Talao.

November 27, 2008

00:30 Gunfire after a police van was hijacked at Dhobi Talao.

01:00 Immense blast in the Taj Hotel, possibly caused by two grenades.

02:00 Army arrives at the Taj Hotel.

03:00 Large fire breaks out at the Taj Hotel.

09:15 Army arrives at Oberoi Hotel, storm hotel.

09:15 Security forces engage in first attempt to retake the Taj Hotel.

10:30 Security forces engage in room-to-room searches at the Taj Hotel.

17:30 NSG forces arrive at Nariman House. Helicopters begin surveillance.

24 The Lessons of Mumbai

November 28, 2008

07:30 NSG forces storm Nariman House.

11:00 Hostage siege ends at the Hotel Oberoi, hostages released.

11:00 NSG forces report that they have cleared the new section of the Taj Hotel.

13:00 Indian security forces report 30 people dead in one Taj Hotel hall.

18:00 Operations reported to have ceased at Nariman House. However, NDTV

reports that one floor still has not been cleared.

19:45 All NSG forces emerge from Nariman House, stating that no one was found

alive.

November 29, 2008

04:30 Gunfire and explosions heard at the Taj Hotel.

07:30 Fire breaks out on the lower floors of the Taj Hotel.

08:50 Taj Hotel hostage siege declared over, according to Indian police.

25

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26 The Lessons of Mumbai

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The Lessons of Mumbai 27

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at 1:17pm
Light nahi hain, Aata nahi hain, Gas nahi hain, Aman nahi hain..........
Aawam mar gaye lakin......... SALA phir bhi BHUTTO zinda hain. Hay na joke?
Hasan Jamshed (Pakistan) wrote
at 12:50pm
if things keep going like this then rest assured PPP wont be coming back ever
making Zardari President iz the best thing tht ever happened to Pakistan
after this we will be freed of Waderas and Jagidaars who bury women alive then defend it in the Senate
Rabia Aslam (Pakistan) wrote
at 12:46pm
he is simply kutty ka bacha.
Displaying 3 of 75 discussion topics

JAISEY QOOM WAISAY LEADER

19 posts by 6 people. Updated 2 hours ago

I'll Volunteer For The Pakistan Army if India Attacks - Community

123 posts by 24 people. Updated on January 17, 2009 at 12:50pm
 
 
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Journalists are biggest terrorists: Zardari


Journalists are biggest terrorists: Zardari

Monday, January 19, 2009

By Rahimullah Yusufzai

PESHAWAR: President Asif Zardari seems to be so unhappy with the media that he told a delegation of businessmen from the NWFP recently that journalists were the biggest terrorists in Pakistan.

Members of the delegation of the Sarhad Chamber of Commerce & Industry (SCCI), which met the president on January 15, quoted him as saying that journalists misreported things and presented the situation in a non-objective manner. They said the president felt the media should be careful in its handling of sensitive issues.

"Journalists are the biggest terrorists," President Zardari is said to have remarked while talking about the issue of terrorism in NWFP and Fata. In his view the journalists were bigger terrorists than even the terrorists.

Requesting anonymity, some of the delegation members told The News that they were surprised by the Zardari's remark as it was made out of context. They said no example of misreporting or distortion of facts by the media was given to justify the remark about journalists being terrorists.

"It came out of the blue. There was intensity of emotion when that statement was made," a senior Peshawar businessman recalled. A PPP leader, who for obvious reasons wished not to be named, confirmed that the president did make the statement about journalists being terrorists.

A source, close to the Presidency, asserted that the president could not declare journalists as terrorists. He said the president holds journalists in great respect. He said Zardari had many journalist friends in the past and at present too he enjoyed good relations with mediamen. He insisted that many a time in his presence the president praised the journalist community.

There are reasons for President Zardari to be angry with the media and journalists. The president and the PPP-led federal government have come under growing criticism by most of the media due to their handling of the situation in the wake of Mumbai attacks. The decision to send the ISI head to India in response to the demand by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was roundly criticised by the media and had to be taken back. Even before that, sections of the media tended to blame President Zardari and the PPP for backing out of the promises and agreements made with Nawaz Sharif's PML-N. The media has become increasingly critical of the government's performance on account of the poor law and order situation, energy crisis and certain unmerited appointments in government departments, banks and the foreign ministry.

Led by the Sarhad Chamber of Commerce & Industry President Sharafat Ali Mubarak, the delegation had met President Zardari to request him to declare the militancy-hit NWFP as a war-affected zone and provide the province a special package of economic incentives for its doomed industries. The delegation also sought relief in provision of gas and electricity for the industrial estates in the Frontier in view of the dire state of affairs in the province.

The president offered to facilitate a visit by the Frontier businessmen to the US to lobby with government officials and other relevant people to argue their case, particularly with regard to the setting up of the proposed Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (ROZs) in NWFP. He also directed some of the federal ministers and advisers, including Rehman Malik and Shaukat Tareen, to listen to the grievances and proposals of the SCCI members and jointly prepare proposals for bailing out the industrial sector in NWFP.

A number of the delegation members said they were disappointed with the outcome of their meeting with President Zardari. They said the delegation expected the president and the federal government to help NWFP through special measures to cope with the unprecedented challenges of extremism and terrorism.


 
 
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Sunday, January 18, 2009

Sherry's husband & Rs 100m NBP gift


Sherry's husband & Rs 100m NBP gift
Mr Nadeem Hussain, husband of Information Minister Sherry Rehman, is a privileged person in the modern day Pakistan. His micro-finance bank, Tameer Finance Bank Limited (TMFB), recently got a Rs100 million loan from National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) despite being declared 'negative' in ratings.
Sources say the National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) President Ali Raza was made to approve the loan for the micro-finance bank, as he feared the high profile PPP minister might turn against him in case he declined.
But the NBP chief says there was no arm-twisting and the loan was sanctioned on merit.
Talking to this scribe, Mr Raza said as NBP did not do
business at micro-level so it decided to extend facilities to the micro-finance bank. He opined that the TMFB had a sound financial base and a reputed telecom company was also investing in it. When asked about the dissenting note of the top executives, he claimed that they had prepared the report keeping in mind a normal bank, but the micro-finance bank earns profits after a long span of investment.
Information Minister Sherry Rehman, when contacted, strongly refuted to having used any kind of political pressure to secure a loan for her husband's bank. "I have no concern, no share holding, nothing to do with the bank. I even don't know if they had applied for the loan or
not. I think some political opponents of mine are trying to propagate this non-issue," she categorically said.
She said she had never contacted Ali Raza, the NBP president, though she knew him well socially. "I have not used my influence in any way in the financial matters of my husband," she added.
Mr Nadeem Hussain, when contacted, said he had secured this facility from National Bank and had repaid it. He denied having used the political clout of her spouse. "Our bank is A-rated. We have secured this facility from two more banks. The financial health of our institution is very good. This is a normal procedure to get such facilities from other banks, nothing wrong with this," said the TMFB president.
While the NBP chief easily hinted that his team responsible for approval of such a critical loaning facility to the other institutions did not have these aspects in mind, the dissenting note by three top executives, obtained by The News was signed by Shahid Anwar Khan, SEVP, Group Chief Credit Management of the bank; Wahajat A. Baqai, SVP, CMG; and Arshad Zia, AVP, CMG. 
It reads: "The Tameer Finance Bank Limited (TMFB) started its operations in August 2005. Since the start of its operations, the TMFB is in continuous losses. In 2007,
the loss after tax is increased to Rs228 million compared to loss of Rs50 million in 2006. Because of the losses, the equity of TMFB has subsequently reduced to Rs335 million in 2007 from Rs551 million in financial year 2006.
The loss of Rs44 million in first quarter of 2008 further deteriorated the equity base. The rating of the bank is
another concern. As per JCR VIS the outlook for TMFB is negative. Since NBP presently has no relationship with TMFB and in view of overall weak financials, taking clean exposure of Rs100 million as recommended by FI, Operations Group has been considered as high risk.
The three bank officials did not sign the loan approval document. On the other hand, Credit Approval Memorandum, a confidential document of
the bank, signed by the other three officials, Mohammad Nadeem, SVP, Head of Financial Institutions and Management Division; Dr Asif A. Brohi SEVP Group Chief Operations, and Tariq Abdullah, Relationship
Manager, favouring the loan says: "CEO of the subject bank has requested NBP for local currency line i.e. clean placement. We have visited the office of TMFB located on Share-i-Faysal. We found TMFB had sound ownership structure, qualified and experienced management. Their
present request was for Rs300 million call line. But after evaluating their financial standing we found that Rs300 million was too much. We therefore convinced them to put the request for Rs100 million for which they agreed.
As desired by State Bank of Pakistan, that large commercial banks cannot do such business, we therefore suggest to support micro-finance banks in providing easy funding facility to them."
Nadeem Hussain, a career banker having spent 27 years with Citi group, is president and chief executive officer of the bank. He got the micro-finance bank licence in 2005 when Shaukat Aziz was prime minister of the country and Nadeem's spouse Sherry Rehman was on the opposition
benches. Having enjoyed long association with Shaukat Aziz as his one time subordinate, Nadeem had a big advantage in his favour, but wife Sherry was criticised on the assembly floor by the PML-Q legislator Kashmala Tariq for getting a favour in exchange for her silence over
the Steel Mills scandal.
Sherry had forcefully denied the charge then and stated that since Nadeem was a career banker having known and
worked with Shaukat Aziz, so it was a purely business thing and nothing to do with politics.
NBP Chief Ali Raza seems convinced that support to such micro-finance banks was a social service. The bank says it is an institution established for the purpose of serving the economically active poor with limited access to financial sector. But the ultimate sufferer in these cases, as seen in the past, seems the public money and that too at the hands of public representatives.
 
 
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More Evidence Of Lashkar Role, More Evidence Of Our Bungling- Tehelka

 
More Evidence Of Lashkar Role, More Evidence Of Our Bungling

By HARINDER BAWEJA, Jan 17, 2009

Cover Story
Ruptured Silence Blood splayed on the platforms in the CST after the shootout Photo Deepak Salvi

'What makes terrorism particularly threatening at this moment is the impression of vulnerability combined with the display of greater sophistication in techniques and methodologies of terrorist outfits. The challenges before us are to demonstrate that we have both the capability as well as the sophisticated instrumentalities to anticipate and overcome the shifts and changes in terrorist methods. We cannot, therefore, afford to conceptualise narrowly. We must not react merely to immediate events.

This is the underlying message contained in the Home Minister's letter inviting you to this meeting. It is important at this juncture to demonstrate our combined will, and for that we are effectively galvanising the internal security system to deal with future terrorist attacks. Technology is empowering nonstate actors across the globe and it is necessary for us to come up with a comprehensive strategy that combines the best of technological and human capabilities within the country to defeat terrorism in all its manifestations.

The Home Minister has already outlined a number of steps that have been taken in recent weeks to erect additional mechanisms to counter future terrorist attacks. The main message is that we need to break down barriers to informationsharing between the various agencies.

What I would add is that we need better intelligence and perhaps, more importantly, sophisticated assessment and analysis of the intelligence that is available. Complaints are often heard that the intelligence provided by the agencies is not actionable. All intelligence produced is actionable, though it may not always be specific. It depends on the capability and ingenuity of those who assess the information to further develop and convert the fragmentary pieces of intelligence into a complete whole and for those who have to act on it to possibly pursue each and every lead.'

— Excerpts from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's opening remarks at the inaugural session of the Conference of Chief Ministers on Internal Security on 6 January.

IF THE Prime Minister chose to pointedly focus on the crucial issue of 'information-sharing between various agencies', it was

Cover Story
Photo PIB

with a reason. He knew that vital and critical intelligence had simply been ignored. It lay unattended in various files, in the offices of different premier intelligence agencies. He is aware that if all the intelligence that came in two months before the Mumbai terror attack on 26/11 had been put through a 'sophisticated assessment and analysis', senior officers could well have been able to join the dots and zero in on the fact that terrorists were going to use the sea route to come into Mumbai and attack five-star hotels. Incredibly, sources in the highest quarters in New Delhi have told TEHELKA that the mobile numbers that were used by the Mumbai terrorists were available with the Intelligence Bureau at least five days before 26/11.

Highly placed sources shared the contents of a 'Secret' note that contains 35 mobile numbers. Of the 35 SIM cards, 32 had been purchased from Kolkata and three from Delhi, by "overground" workers of the Lashkar-e-Toiba, and sent to Pakistan-occupied Kashmir by mid- November. The precise contents of the 'Secret' note could not have been more direct: "The numbers given below have been acquired from Kolkata by overground workers (OGWs) and have been sent through Pakistan trained militants based in Kashmir to PoK. These numbers are likely to emerge in other parts of the country. These numbers need to be monitored…" The note contains more: "These numbers need to be monitored and the information taken from these numbers regarding the contents of the conversation, current locations of the call detail records are required for further developing the information. The monitoring is possible at Kolkata."

Highly placed sources reveal that this crucial and stunning piece of information was received by the Intelligence Bureau (IB) on 21 November, at least five full days before Ajmal Amir Kasav, the lone surviving terrorist and his nine accomplices got off the inflatable dinghy at Mumbai's Badhwar Park on the evening of 26/11. The Prime Minister and Home Minister are aware that for all the five crucial days that the numbers were available, they were not being monitored. The lapse is all the more critical because at least three of the 32 numbers contained in the Secret note, were the exact same cell numbers that the Mumbai terrorists used to keep in touch with their handlers in Pakistan. It is well possible that the terrorists only activated their mobile numbers after reaching Mumbai but that does not excuse the fact that the numbers were not put under surveillance despite the knowledge that they had been sent to trained militants in PoK.

This was perhaps uttermost in the Prime Minister's mind while he was addressing the conference of chief ministers on internal security. That is perhaps why he emphasised this: "All intelligence produced is actionable, though it may not always be specific. It depends on the capability and ingenuity of those who assess the information to further develop and convert the fragmentary pieces of intelligence into a complete whole and for those who have to act on it to possibly pursue each and every lead." He knew that crucial information was available, which if analysed, could have been converted into a 'complete whole.' The agencies had failed in monitoring the vital numbers.

On 18 September, for example, the Research and Analysis Wing had intercepted a satellite phone conversation which clearly indicated that a hotel at the Gateway of India in Mumbai would be targeted. Crucially, the intercept also revealed that the sea route would be used to launch this operation. Again, on 24 September, RAW recorded another conversation. This time, the hotels were mentioned by name and they included the Taj, the Sea Rock Hotel and the Marriott hotel. If these inputs were being analysed, it would have become clearer that hotels in Mumbai would be attacked and that the sea route would be used.

Cover Story
Security breached The ease with which Mumbai came under attack brought back the question of internal security PhotoReuters

THIS IS not all. Again on 19 November, RAW picked up another piece of conversation in which a voice

said, "We will reach Bombay between nine and 11." RAW tracked the coordinates of the call and frighteningly discovered that it came from the sea near Mumbai. RAW passed on this vital piece of information to the IB who in turn sent it to the Navy but the terrorists, who were first aboard the hijacked trawler MV Kuber and subsequently on the inflatable dinghy, still managed to sail into Badhwar Park, ironically, almost at the promised time: between nine and 11.

They were off only by less than an hour or so, for according to the dossier which the Ministry of External Affairs has handed over to

"The numbers given below have been acquired from Kolkata by overground workers (OGWs) and have been sent through Pakistan trained militants based in Kashmir to PoK. These numbers are likely
to emerge in other parts of the country. These numbers need to be monitored…"

( CRUCIAL INTER-ORGANISATION MEMO DATED 21/11/2008 )


35 SIM cards were sent to
the LeT and the IB was
informed five days ahead.
Three of these numbers
were used in Mumbai


DELHI NUMBERS

9 9 1 0 7 1 9 4 2 4
9 9 1 0 7 9 9 9 1 0
9 9 1 0 7 6 4 1 3 6

KOLKATA NUMBERS
9 8 7 4 3 7 9 2 4 6
9 8 7 4 3 7 9 2 5 1
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 8 0
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 7 8
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 7 5
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 8 4
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 7 9
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 8 1
9 0 5 1 4 2 8 3 8 2
9 0 5 1 0 3 2 1 7 4
9 8 7 4 9 7 2 7 6 7
9 8 7 4 9 7 2 7 6 9
9 0 5 1 5 0 9 1 7 8
9 0 5 1 2 9 4 1 7 9
9 8 8 3 4 0 3 4 5 8
9 8 8 3 2 6 8 3 5 8
9 8 0 4 4 7 3 8 2 9
9 8 0 4 4 7 3 8 2 8
9 8 0 4 4 7 3 8 3 1
9 0 0 7 6 2 1 6 7 5
9 0 0 7 6 2 5 7 1 0
9 0 0 7 6 2 1 6 7 6
9 0 0 7 5 6 0 9 9 5
9 0 0 7 7 8 7 1 3 8
9 0 0 7 7 8 7 1 3 7
9 0 0 7 6 2 5 7 1 1
9 0 0 7 7 6 6 3 7 6
9 0 0 7 6 2 1 6 7 1
9 0 0 7 5 6 1 0 1 6
9 0 0 7 5 6 0 4 1 9
9 0 0 7 5 6 0 4 1 7
9 7 4 8 2 9 2 0 8 9

Pakistan, the 10 terrorists arrived at Badhwar Park at 8.30 pm. The dossier says, "The ten terrorists performed watch duties on board MV Kuber. Log sheets maintained by them have been seized. The MV Kuber reached a point four nautical miles off Mumbai at 1600 hours on November 26, 2008. As soon as it was dark, the team leader, Ismail Khan, contacted their handler in Pakistan, who directed them to kill Amar Singh Solanki, the captain of MV Kuber. After killing Solanki, the terrorists along with their weapons and IEDs, boarded the inflatable dinghy. They traversed the last four nautical miles to Mumbai in about one hour and 15 minutes, reaching the locality of Badhwar Park (Cuffe Parade) in South Mumbai at about 2030 hours."

If the intelligence was being analysed and not ignored and if the Secret note which the IB received on November 21 had been connected with RAW's intercepts, and the numbers had been put under surveillance, an alert intelligence apparatus may have been able to connect the activation of the Kolkata numbers with the arrival of terrorists in Mumbai. Were the phones activated at 1600 hours or at 2030 hours? The answer to this question was not known, at least, on the day of the attack.

SOURCES REVEAL that the numbers were not being monitored. It is only after Ajmal Kasav and his accomplice Ismail Khan (the 10 had broken up into five pairs) had killed 58 passengers at Chhatrapati Shivaji Stadium, after ATS Chief Hemant Karkare had been shot dead alongwith two other officers; after the remaining four pairs had lodged themselves at their intended targets (Nariman House and the Taj and Oberoi Hotels) that someone in the IB woke up to the fact that it had received a list of phone numbers. Quick calls were then made to Kolkata, the service providers alerted and the blood curdling truth soon hit home — at least three of the 35 numbers that ought to have been monitored, were being used by the terrorists.

It was only after this that the Mumbai Police was alerted and the process of recording the conversations began. The dossier of evidence provided to Pakistan emphasises the fact that the terrorists were using mobile phones to stay in touch with their handlers in Pakistan. It however, does not go into the details of which numbers the terrorists were using or how they were procured. The dossier says, "Even while the terrorists had occupied the target buildings and the security forces were engaging them, the terrorists were in contact with their controllers/ handlers over mobile telephones. They also used mobile telephones belonging to hostages/victims. Shortly after the attack on Taj Mahal Hotel, Indian agencies were able to intercept mobile telephone calls made from and to the Hotel. The controllers/ handlers used the virutal number to contact a mobile telephone with one of the terrorists [obviously one of 35 numbers]. This conversation was intercepted and thereafter, all calls made through the virtual number [being used by the handlers] were also intercepted and recorded."

The dossier also contains excerpts from these recordings. The intercepted conversations are listed as per the location of the terrorists and also have a timeline. The timing reveals also therefore that the entire procedure of recording the conversations started, not on 26/11, the day of the attack, but in the early hours of 27/11. For example, one of the intercepts, located at Hotel Taj Mahal was recorded on 27/11 at 0126 hours and it reads:

Caller: Are you setting the fire or not?

Receiver: Not yet. I am getting a mattress ready for burning.

Caller: What did you do to the dead body? [Probably Solanki, the captain of MV Kuber]

Receiver: Left it behind.

Caller: Did you not open the locks for the water below? [Probably of MV Kuber]

Receiver: No, they did not open the locks. We left it like that because of being in a hurry. We made a big mistake.

Caller: What big mistake?

Receiver: When we were getting into the boat, the waves were quite high. Another boat came. Everyone raised an alarm that the Navy had come. Everyone jumped quickly. In this confusion, the satellite phone of Ismail got left behind. The terrorists were not the only ones who had made a mistake. The intelligence agencies too had made crucial mistakes. It is clear

Cover Story
Fully armed Mumbai police exhibit one of the guns that the terrorists had used Photo Reuters

from the above transcript that the handlers were able to call the terrorists in Mumbai because part of their advance planning included sourcing SIM cards from India. Ironically, the numbers were available with the 'handlers of intelligence', but they were simply not monitored. The casual attitude with which information is gathered but not analysed and acted on is what makes India a soft state.

Another reason why, in the same address to the Chief Ministers, the Prime Minister stressed the need for 'zero tolerance' saying it is imperative to "effectively galvanising the internal security system to deal with future terrorist attacks. Technology is empowering non-state actors across the globe and it is necessary for us to come up with a comprehensive strategy that combines the best of technological and human capabilities within the country to defeat terrorism in all its manifestations."

Covert operations are key to gathering advance information and keeping pace — if not staying at least one step ahead — with what terrorist groups are planning. In this case, in a superb covert operation, Indian forces had managed to penetrate the ranks of the Lashkar-e- Toiba and plant 35 SIM Indian cards with them. In other words, the SIM cards used by the Mumbai terrorists were like Trojan horses in the LeT ranks.

But in a terrible communication and execution bungle the scrupulous follow-up monitoring of the SIMs that should have taken place was not done. And now, ironically, despite the gravity of the Mumbai attack and the Prime Minister's call for information- sharing between various agencies, the agencies are once again engaged in a blame game, with the IB blaming the Jammu and Kashmir Police for having provided the SIM cards in the first place!

THE TRUTH of the matter is that the J&K police is hardly to blame since it passed on the details of the mobile numbers to the IB. Having been shown up and embarrassingly caught out for not monitoring the numbers, the rivalry has reached tragic proportions. Mukhtar Ahmed, the J&K police constable who travelled from Srinagar to Kolkata to procure the SIM cards (used to infiltrate the LeT), has been arrested and jailed. In a knee-jerk reaction, the agencies have also temporarily deactivated all the mobile numbers instead of putting them under surveillance, a move that could perhaps yield further intelligence!

The government has launched a massive diplomatic effort against Pakistan through credible evidence that it has succeeded in getting. A similar offensive is needed to ensure that the different intelligence agencies work in tandem and not at cross-purposes. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh emphasised precisely this when he said, "The information available from diverse sources, thereafter needs to be properly channelised to reach a common point such as the recently revitalised Multi- Agency Centre (MAC) in Delhi for collation and analysis. It will, hence, be necessary to establish centers locally, at the state and lower levels across the country, to collate all the available information which might have a bearing on a potential terrorist situation."

In fact, if there is one important lesson post 26/11, it is this — that the diverse agencies work on a coordinated manner to process information, for if there is one thing that will help prevent future attacks, it will be advance intelligence.

From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 2, Dated Jan 17, 2009

 
 
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Saturday, January 17, 2009

Bhutto was unique: Mark Siegel


Bhutto was unique: Mark Siegel

 

By Asma Amanat

As the month of December comes to a close, gloom in the air rises up several notches. In the mid of this month, Pakistan lost its eastern wing in 1971. In the bitter cold of December 2007, the world lost one of the greatest leaders of Pakistan. Hundreds of thousands of people mourn the first death anniversary of Benazir Bhutto's assassination. Her death brought tears even to those who were against her. However, this month is especially hard on Ms Bhutto's family and her close friends. One of those very cherished friends is Mark Siegel.

Mr Siegel was Ms Bhutto's friend for almost 25 years during which he shared her sorrows and joys discreetly. He was her friend and lobbyist, a key player in negotiations between her and the Musharraf government.

When I called to ask for an interview about Ms Bhutto, he cheered up and mourned at the same time. Although we were talking over the phone, I could see his eyes brimming with tears. At times his voice quivered with emotion. His genuine affection for Ms Bhutto was evident from the way he spoke about her. "We were close friends for 25 years; we grew up together, worked together, wrote together and at times, we could finish off each others' sentences. I miss her extraordinarily; I have not reconciled to her being not with us. It has been a great tragedy not only for me but a great tragedy in terms of loss of legitimacy and the voice she had internationally as well as domestically. It's rough."

He recalls fondly. "A lot of people from Pakistan treated her as an icon or goddess or whatever, but she was my friend, she would tell me when I was wrong and I would tell her when she was wrong. There were no cultural barriers that separated us. I just miss so much talking to her. I can't tell you how many times I have reached for the telephone when something global had happened to run it by her. And then I stop." He says he was sometimes frustrated with her stubbornness. However, she won 9 out of 10 intellectual arguments that they had. Her curiosity, her quick processing of the information was most admirable, Mr Siegel declares.

Mark Siegel collaborated with Ms Bhutto on her final book 'Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy, and the West' which gives a clear vision of reconciling East and West and how she would have dealt with religious extremism and militancy.

Pakistani intellectual circles are convinced that democracy and dictatorship alternate in Pakistan according to the dictates of America. But Siegel reminds us that this is the major theme of her last book: "The United States advances dictators for their short-term goals when necessary. The book talks about the great mistake the West made in the jihad in Afghanistan and leaving immediately after the Russians were defeated and not trying to coalesce pluralistic society in Afghanistan. I remember her saying to President Bush Sr in 1991: 'Mr President! You're creating a Frankenstein and this will come back to haunt us' and that is exactly what happened."

Has this been rectified now, I asked. The critical rejoinder was: "The US and NATO are engaged in a war in Afghanistan. I'd like to think that once the country is stabilised, they would pour resources in the social and economic foundation of the country, but it is silly to talk about it when there is an active war going on in 70 percent of the country." Pakistani moderates believe that Ms Bhutto let them down by not advancing a moderate and secular agenda, and giving in to some of the goals of the jihadis when in power. But Siegel says he had the opportunity to learn first hand how Ms Bhutto felt about it. He says, "We talked about it all the time. She said it was frustrating and that we have to do incremental changes and not opt for revolutionary changes...You're a Pakistani, you know the political and cultural constraints in trying to bring dramatic change."

Mr Siegel was part of the intense negotiations between General Pervez Musharraf and Ms Bhutto as a result of which she returned to Pakistan on October 18, 2007. He categorically denied any deals between Ms Bhutto and General Musharraf – "Everyone talks about a deal; there was no deal. All Benazir wanted was fair elections and having to contest those elections. That was the key and as it turned out the elections that occurred were relatively free and fair." Although he is not authorised to speak about these negotiations, he did deny rumours of Governor Jeb Bush and Secretary Chertoff's involvement in the negotiation process. He acknowledged Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Ambassador Patterson and Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher's involvement in the process. Mr Rehman Malik, federal interior adviser to Prime Minister, was present in one of these negotiations in Abu Dhabi, he indicated.

Several reasons are advanced for her murder. Some speculate that she had made promises that she did not fulfill once she was in Pakistan in 2007. Mr Siegel was in constant communication with Ms Bhutto and believed that their messages were intercepted. He said somewhat heatedly: "I don't know how anyone can say that. I don't know what they are accusing her of backing out. We know what the motivation was, and the motivation was that some people did no want her to be the Prime Minister; they did not want her to bring change to Pakistan; people thrive on chaos; these people did not want Pakistan to become a modern technological state. I want to learn more about the assassination. I don't think we know enough."

Christine Fair, a political scientist at RAND, once told me that Pakistani intelligence services were not very forthcoming with Scotland Yard about information regarding Benazir's assassination. Mr Siegel says "I am much more concerned with who planned it, who paid for it, who trained these people, which young man pulled the trigger is of little interest to me; it's what, how, and why that interests me." Benazir had requested for four vans that would move ahead, behind and on the two sides for her protection. But her request was denied by the Musharraf government. "We were not allowed...the party was not allowed to import those vehicles; we were not allowed to bring trained personnel from abroad, the visas were denied....I do know that earlier in the day there was a great deal of security, but later the protection was withdrawn." He insisted that questions about her security in Pakistan should be directed to the PPP leaders.

So who killed this great personality?

In an email written to Mr Siegel on October 26, 2007, Ms Bhutto had wanted the world to hold General Musharraf accountable for her death. There were other people named also. Among those were Punjab's former Chief Minister, Mr Pervaiz Elahi, and Brigadier (r) Ijaz Shah. Some of these names were removed from the FIR. In fact some are believed to be working closely with Prime Minister Gilani. Mr Siegel says: " really don't know anything about that."

Was there an international conspiracy behind our great leader's murder?

Mr Siegel disregards it as "speculations.". However, he adds "Obviously it was an attempt to create instability in Pakistan...to disrupt her coming to office...but you know…there are also people abroad who do not want Pakistan to become a bridge between the East and the West. I don't know; that's why I'm asking all those questions."

What is Ms Bhutto's legacy then?

Scholars believe that her father left Pakistan with 1973's Constitution and initiated Pakistan's nuclear programme. Mr Nawaz Sharif was the one who inaugurated the Motorway and tested Pakistan's nuclear assets. So what did Benazir do? Mr Siegel says passionately pointing to the book he had collaborated with Ms Bhutto that "She was the voice of modern Islam; she was a symbol of what a Muslim woman can accomplish; she was a modern force, she was committed to technologically moving the country to the 21st Century; she was committed to human rights, student unions, labour unions, electrification of villages; these were the steps towards modern Pakistan. Her legacy would be a moderate tolerant Pakistan."

In an interview to me earlier, Ms Bhutto said very lovingly that her younger daughter Asifa helped her in keeping her correspondences. However she never mentioned anything about her children being in politics. In unusual circumstances, her son Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was nominated Co-chairman of the party. I asked Mr Siegel what his mother would have thought about it. In a reserved tone, Mr Siegel said; "I know the answer to that question, but that was very, very personal and I don't want to answer that."

Would she have helped get rid of the 17th Amendment and Article 58(2b)?

He said: "She made it clear that Pakistan should return to the 1973 Constitution and the parliamentary system, where the head of the state does not have the legal authority to bring down the elected government." In extraordinary circumstances, Mr Zardari held the party and the country together. He is admired by many for that, including Mr Siegel. He feels "Asif Zardari has stepped up to the plate in extraordinary circumstances." But did Benazir want him to be the head of state? Mr Siegel believes "When Benazir was alive, she was our leader, she was the boss…Asif Zardari and Benazir Bhutto are two different people. Whatever he has done is on her name. We have to judge him by the standards of this time. We can't compare him or anyone else to her. Benazir was Benazir; Benazir was unique; Benazir was extraordinary; Benazir is gone, and now, we have to move forward."

 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




Get news, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Check it out!

GEORGE W BUSH

http://www.acaciabahrain.com/aboelezz/images/21-12-2008/81881249%5b2%5d.jpg

 
 
-----------------------------------------------------------
N A D E E M   M A L I K
Director Programme
AAJ TV
ISLAMABAD
00-92-321-5117511

nadeem.malik@hotmail.com 




Get news, entertainment and everything you care about at Live.com. Check it out!

Friday, January 16, 2009

GAZA...........



 
 

Oh The aggressors! Oh The killers of the Innocent!

Zionist celebration of New Year with the American taxpayers money
With blessing of Bush and his War Co. For democracy, and freedom….Ltd. ????
It will never shake the heart of Bush who killed 13,00000 in Iraq alone who were not plotted 9/11 or owned WMD!
By this will not be happy the terror angel Zionist who had notorious history in killing innocents and prophets.
 
It will not hurt who having tie-up with these terrorist countries and still expecting more cooperation…!!!!!

But what about you?
How you can eat and consume what these terrorist produce?
How you can contribute a bullet against the innocent kids and human by buying their products?
 
At least say "NO" for what the terrorist produce and supply…

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