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We’re not your ‘hired gun’ anymore : PM Imran Khan's interview with the Washington Post

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We’re not your ‘hired gun’ anymore : PM Imran Khan's interview with the Washington Post

ISLAMABAD

Imran Khan, a onetime cricket star, led the life of a glamorous playboy before he turned to Pakistani politics. This summer, after years in the opposition and then as a member of the coalition government in Islamabad, he finally captured the premiership. He inherits it with a daunting list of challenges for his country, including poverty, terrorism and corruption. This past week, President Trump — who has traded Twitter barbs with Khan and cut military assistance to Pakistan — asked him to help bring the Afghan Taliban to peace talks. On the porch outside his home here, he gave his first foreign interview as prime minister to The Washington Post’s Lally Weymouth. Edited excerpts follow.

Q. What are you planning to do about your country's relationship with the U.S., which has been deteriorating and has involved a social media war with the president? He wrote in January that "the United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools. They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with little help. No more!"

A. It was not really a Twitter war, it was just setting the record right. [Khan wrote on the site this fall: “He needs to be informed abt historical facts. Pak has suffered enough fighting US’s war. Now we will do what is best for our people & our interests.”] The exchange was about being blamed for deeply flawed U.S. policies — the military approach to Afghanistan.

Q. He wasn't blaming you. He was blaming your predecessors.

A. No, he was saying Pakistan was the reason for these sanctuaries [for Taliban leaders]. There are no sanctuaries in Pakistan.

Q. Every U.S. official says there are Taliban leaders living in Pakistan.

A. When I came into power, I got a complete briefing from the security forces. They said that we have time and time again asked the Americans, “Can you tell us where the sanctuaries are, and we will go after them?” There are no sanctuaries in Pakistan.

Q. Do you believe that?

A. We have 2.7 million Afghan refugees still living in Pakistan. They live in big refugee camps.

Q. But the Americans aren't stupid, come on.

A. But where are these people? Our border between Pakistan and Afghanistan has the greatest amount of surveillance. The U.S. has satellites and drones. These people crossing would be seen.

Q. The U.S. government is saying it would just like Pakistan to cut it out.

A. First, there are no sanctuaries. If there are a few hundred, maybe 2,000 to 3,000 Taliban who move into Pakistan, they could easily move into these Afghan refugee camps.

Q. President Trump wrote you a letter this week asking for your assistance in bringing the Taliban to the negotiating table. What is your reply?

A. Peace in Afghanistan is in Pakistan’s interest. We will do everything.

Q. You'll put pressure on the Taliban to get them to come?

A. We will try our best. Putting pressure on the Taliban is easier said than done. Bear in mind that about 40 percent of Afghanistan is now out of the government’s hands.

Q. American officials say that Pakistan is harboring leaders of the Taliban.

A. I have never understood these accusations. Pakistan had nothing to do with 9/11. Al-Qaeda was in Afghanistan. No Pakistani was involved. And yet Pakistan was asked to participate in the U.S. war. There were a lot of people in Pakistan who opposed it, including me. In the 1980s, we collaborated with the U.S. in the Soviet jihad there. Then, in 1989, when the Soviets packed up and left, the U.S. did too. Pakistan was left with militant groups and 4 million Afghan refugees. If we had stayed neutral after 9/11, I reckon we would have saved ourselves from the devastation that took place afterward. By becoming the front-line state for the U.S. in the war on terror, this country went through hell. Over 80,000 people died in the war, and estimates are that over $150 billion was lost in the economy. Investors wouldn’t come, nor would sports teams. Pakistan was known as the most dangerous place in the world.

Q. Nevertheless, we are where we are. It appears the Americans want peace talks now in Afghanistan to bring about a settlement so the U.S. troops can leave. Do you want to see them go?

A. I talked for years about how there was no military solution in Afghanistan, and they called me “Taliban Khan.” If you did not agree with the U.S. policy, you were [thought to be] anti-American. Now I’m happy that everyone realizes there is only a political solution . . . From Pakistan’s point of view, we do not want the Americans to leave Afghanistan in a hurry like they did in 1989.

Q. Because?

A. The last thing we want is to have chaos in Afghanistan. There should be a settlement this time. In 1989, what happened was the Taliban emerged out of the chaos.

Q. There are not many American troops in Afghanistan now.

A. Yes, but the Afghan army is being supported by U.S. dollars. The Taliban clearly realize that for the reconstruction of Afghanistan, they will need American help.

Q. You get the feeling from Trump's tweets that he's done with Afghanistan.

A. This should have happened a long time ago.

Q. Do you have a vision of what you want Pakistan's relationship with the United States to be? Or are you trying to hedge your bets by growing closer to China?

A. I would never want to have a relationship where Pakistan is treated like a hired gun — given money to fight someone else’s war. We should never put ourselves in this position again. It not only cost us human lives, devastation of our tribal areas, but it also cost us our dignity. We would like a proper relationship with the U.S.

Q. What does that mean?

A. For instance, our relationship with China is not one-dimensional. It’s a trade relationship between two countries. We want a similar relationship with the U.S.

Q. Some people think you're trying to hedge your bets using China.

A. The U.S. has basically pushed Pakistan away —

Q. You've been very anti-U.S. over the years.

A. If you do not agree with U.S. policies, it does not mean you’re anti-American. This is a very imperialistic approach. “You’re either with me or against me.”

Q. You have made statements about the U.S. drone attacks.

A. Drone attacks! Who would not be against drone attacks? Who would allow a drone attack in their country when, with one attack, you kill one terrorist and 10 friends and neighbors? Has there ever been a case of a country being bombed by its own ally? Of course I objected to it. All it did was create more anti-Americanism.

Q. You also did not approve of the U.S. killing Osama bin Laden. You called it a "coldblooded murder."

A. It wasn’t killing Osama bin Laden — it was not trusting Pakistan. It was humiliating that we were losing our soldiers and civilians and [suffering terrorist] bomb attacks because we were participating in the U.S. war, and then our ally did not trust us to kill bin Laden. They should have tipped off Pakistan. We did not know whether we were a friend or a foe.

Q. Would you have been okay with it if the U.S. had tipped off Pakistan?

A. Of course . . . I don’t know where this came from, “coldblooded murder.”

Q. That's what you were reported as saying in the media.

A. I don’t remember that, but I do remember that not just me, most Pakistanis felt deeply humiliated that we were not trusted, implying that we were complicit in it.

Q. Do you think Pakistan's relationship with the U.S. should warm up?

A. Who would not want to be friends with a superpower?

Q. To be honest with you, officials across the board — Democrats and Republicans — agree with Trump about the fact that the past Pakistani governments have lied to them.

A. They’ve been misinformed. Is it possible that the greatest military machine in the history of mankind — 150,000 NATO troops with the best equipment and over $1 trillion — are they saying that just a few thousand Pakistani insurgents are the reason they didn’t win in Afghanistan? The United States expected Pakistan to take on the Afghan Taliban. But the Afghan Taliban were not hitting Pakistan. Tehrik-e-Taliban [a Pakistani branch of the Taliban] and al-Qaeda were hitting us.

Q. Recently, your government arrested the head of the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party, Khadim Hussain Rizvi. He elicited riots in the streets after your Supreme Court overturned the sentence of a Christian woman sentenced to death on a blasphemy charge. Why did you order the arrest, and why do you think it's important?

A. It’s a straightforward thing. I had gone on television and warned everyone that we will stand by the Supreme Court verdict. If you don’t stand by what the Supreme Court says, then there’s no state left. The head of the TLP then passed a death sentence on the Supreme Court judges and kept saying that they should be killed.

Q. Your predecessors left you in a terrible financial situation — your country is running a serious current account deficit.

A. In 2013, when the previous government came to power, the current account deficit was $2.5 billion . When we came to power in 2018, it was $19 billion — a huge deficit, especially in a country with falling exports. The immediate thing has been stabilizing the economy.

Q. After your election, you started traveling to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and China.

A. We needed support for propping up our foreign currency reserves.

Q. You got some money on your travels?

A. We got some.

Q. The media reports that Saudi Arabia gave you $3 billion in cash and $3 billion in oil credits.

A. Yes. We have received some from all three countries.

Q. For the UAE and China, you can't find figures.

A. Those governments want to keep it confidential. We raised money, but we are talking to the IMF [International Monetary Fund]. We do not want to have conditions imposed on us which would cause more unemployment and inflation.

Q. Are you talking about austerity?

A. Some of the IMF conditions are likely to harm the common man — that’s what I’m worried about.

Q. Do you think the negotiations will work out?

A. We have two scenarios: one with the IMF and one without.

Q. Isn't it unrealistic to say "without the IMF"?

A. In the last 30 years, we’ve had 16 IMF programs. If we go with the IMF, we will make sure this is the last time. Pakistan has never made the structural changes that are needed. Now we have embarked on structural reforms. Already exports are picking up, remittances are going up. We need higher exports, and we are curbing our imports. Already, we have investors coming into Pakistan.

Q. Don't you need to make more people pay taxes?

A. We are making major reforms in our tax collection — getting more people to pay taxes. We want people to be able to make money here. In the 1960s, we were growing fast, and then in the 1970s, [former prime minister Zulfiqar Ali] Bhutto came in with a socialist program. Somehow the mind-set became anti-wealth-creation. This has persisted, sadly, in our bureaucracy and in our political class. We want to make Pakistan an easy place to invest in so that people can utilize our young population.

Q. Do you see signs of direct foreign investment?

A. Yes, Exxon has come back to Pakistan after 27 years, and they’re doing a big exploration for us. PepsiCo has put extra investments in Pakistan.

Q. Why?

A. I guess because we are a clean government. We won’t be asking them for money.

Q. You founded your party, but it took you 22 years to reach the top.

A. It was a long struggle. For 15 years, it was a very small party. I had only one seat in Parliament. Then about seven years ago, suddenly it was an idea whose time had come.

Q. Why did you persist? You were a cricket star, and you had a great life in England.

A. Because I am part of the first generation of Pakistanis who grew up very proud of our country. Pakistan in the 1960s was an example for the developing world. Then a calamity hit us in 1971, and Pakistan broke up [after Bangladesh won its independence]. From the mid-1980s onwards, we were hit with growing corruption. Corruption goes into megaprojects which have mega-kickbacks. When your political leadership makes money, it cannot park the money in the country because it will be visible. [Past leaders] took that money out of the country, which means the country ends up getting short of foreign exchange. Once your leadership starts making money, it goes right down to every level.

Q. How do you reverse that?

A. My struggle was all about fighting corruption. Corruption you fight from the top, then you build strong state institutions.

Q. You threw out all sorts of gestures to India shortly after you came to office, but India dismissed them.

A. I know, because India has elections coming up. The ruling party has an anti-Muslim, anti-Pakistan approach. They rebuffed all my overtures.

Q. India really wants to see the perpetrators of the 2008 Mumbai bombing prosecuted. The mastermind, Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a leader of the terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba, was released on bail in Pakistan while a nine-year trial has dragged on for six other suspects, with no results.

A. We also want something done about the bombers of Mumbai. I have asked our government to find out the status of the case. Resolving that case is in our interest because it was an act of terrorism. I have opened a visa-free peace corridor with India called Kartarpur [so that Indian Sikhs can visit a holy shrine in Pakistan]. Let’s hope that after the election is over, we can again resume talks with India.

Q. Your main aim is to eliminate poverty in your country?

A. I want to make Pakistan an equitable, just society. I believe in a welfare state. I would be on the opposite side of President Donald Trump in terms of economic policy, probably closer to Senator Bernie Sanders.

Q. How were your views formed?

A. I went as an 18-year-old to play cricket in England. It was the first time I saw a welfare state. It cared for the underprivileged, for the people who can’t compete in the race.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/outl...ory.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.0500cba57c5f
 
What a load of tosh!

How are we 'hired guns'? Pakistan was only involved in the International Security Assistance Phase of the war and have not been involved in Afghanistan since 2015. Who does Imran think he's kidding? And wasn't it only a few days ago that Imran Khan pledged assistance to the US in the Afghan War.
 
What a load of tosh!

How are we 'hired guns'? Pakistan was only involved in the International Security Assistance Phase of the war and have not been involved in Afghanistan since 2015. Who does Imran think he's kidding? And wasn't it only a few days ago that Imran Khan pledged assistance to the US in the Afghan War.

Did you even read the interview...
 
Firstly, Pakistan received over 8 billion USD since 2001(they promised us 18 million) to start military operations across FATA(where the military hadn't entered before), and to capture Taliban militants fleeing Afghanistan. It has also been a NATO ally, as it has been a supply route for NATO equipment. This is only in the 21st Century, as previously, Zia was given aid by the Americans to filter arms into Afghanistan to combat the Soviets. There is no doubt that we have been hired guns since the early 80s.

Secondly, Imran didn't agree to take part in the Afghan war after the letter from Trump, he only agreed to assist with peace talks, which he has been asking for since the start of this millennium, even when most ridiculed him.

I suggest you actually do some research into these matters before coming up with falsely backed opinions...
 
IK comes across as evasive rather than honest in the following exchange. Americans are not stupid, they know what is going on. The previous administrations tolerated the lies, Trump is less inclined to do so. What he is going to do about it remains to be seen. Maybe he does not have any options that would not lead to a lot of pain for Americans and Pakistanis.

Q. Every U.S. official says there are Taliban leaders living in Pakistan.

A. When I came into power, I got a complete briefing from the security forces. They said that we have time and time again asked the Americans, “Can you tell us where the sanctuaries are, and we will go after them?” There are no sanctuaries in Pakistan.

Q. Do you believe that?

A. We have 2.7 million Afghan refugees still living in Pakistan. They live in big refugee camps.

Q. But the Americans aren't stupid, come on.

A. But where are these people? Our border between Pakistan and Afghanistan has the greatest amount of surveillance. The U.S. has satellites and drones. These people crossing would be seen.

Q. The U.S. government is saying it would just like Pakistan to cut it out.

A. First, there are no sanctuaries. If there are a few hundred, maybe 2,000 to 3,000 Taliban who move into Pakistan, they could easily move into these Afghan refugee camps.
 
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That answer about harbouring the Taliban needed more openness and less evasion, absolving ourselves of all blame isn't clever diplomacy... or maybe it is in this modern era of fake news and unnecessary oneupmanship.

However, I feel the tone of that interview was unnecessarily antagonistic. Maybe it came across that way in print. But if the journo was being too clever by half, then I don't really blame Imran for not playing her game.
 
Anymore? Did he just say the Pakistani Army was hired Gun for.all.these years?
 
IK comes across as evasive rather than honest in the following exchange. Americans are not stupid, they know what is going on. The previous administrations tolerated the lies, Trump is less inclined to do so. What he is going to do about it remains to be seen. Maybe he does not have any options that would not lead to a lot of pain for Americans and Pakistanis.

What evasion there is?

He says there are no sanctuaries and if US is well aware of that then it should point to them. They also have technology for such surveillance.
Further, even if they accept that 2000-3000 people come in guise of Afghan refugees then that excuse is not sufficient enough to fail military super power in Afghanistan.
After all there is no Afghan government control in 40 percent of Afghanistan, how can movement into Pakistan be blamed for that? Isn't 40 percent of Afghanistan enough for their sanctuaries?

More over Afghan Pakistan border is porous , the blame for militant infiltration across border lies with Pakistan as much as it lies with NATO and Afghan forces.

In the end Americans have realized that there is no solution except dialogue with Taliban so, this also makes American excuse of sanctuaries in Pakistan more clear. If they thought they could win fighting then they would have been asking for those so called sanctuaries and not asking Pakistan's help for dialogue.

And please don't torture me by dividing my post into a dozen sub quotes.
 
Anymore? Did he just say the Pakistani Army was hired Gun for.all.these years?

What are you asking here? Yes, he is referring to Pakistan's support of American wars in Afghanistan. Or you think that your ally is responsible for India-Pakistan wars?

He is referring to American mindset of engaging Pakistan with a transaction approach, that it is to use Pakistan to do its fighting and then leave it quickly afterwards.
 
IK comes across as evasive rather than honest in the following exchange. Americans are not stupid, they know what is going on. The previous administrations tolerated the lies, Trump is less inclined to do so. What he is going to do about it remains to be seen. Maybe he does not have any options that would not lead to a lot of pain for Americans and Pakistanis.

If anything it proves how stupid Americans are if they dont understand the area they are operating in.
 
That answer about harbouring the Taliban needed more openness and less evasion, absolving ourselves of all blame isn't clever diplomacy... or maybe it is in this modern era of fake news and unnecessary oneupmanship.

However, I feel the tone of that interview was unnecessarily antagonistic. Maybe it came across that way in print. But if the journo was being too clever by half, then I don't really blame Imran for not playing her game.

For example?

How would you respond?
 
“You’re either with me or against me.”

The irony of Imran saying this. His whole attitude to politics can be summed with this one sentence. This is the exact policy that he has perfected over the years.

As far as his other replies are concerned, I cannot bother myself with all the lies at this time of the night. Maybe some other time. All that I have to say on this for now is that our denial has not taken us anywhere and will not take us anywhere. We had Osama living with his family in Pakistan for years yet we have the gall to question why international media and the U.S. do not take our word.
 
What are you asking here? Yes, he is referring to Pakistan's support of American wars in Afghanistan. Or you think that your ally is responsible for India-Pakistan wars?

He is referring to American mindset of engaging Pakistan with a transaction approach, that it is to use Pakistan to do its fighting and then leave it quickly afterwards.

Transaction approach of putting Osama in Pakistan? I'm sorry what are you talking about?
 
I don't know about getting in all this mess because of US stuff. ISI was involved in afghan funny business before 9/11. Why is it the world tells us one thing about ISI and we are told to believe something else by the leaders. Guys like Hamid Gul were really hardcore extremist types yet we keep playing the ignorance card.
 
An apology for housing Osama half a mile away from PMA Kakul would have been a good start.

Why apologize when even Obama accepted that we didn't know"Obama said that "we had no evidence that Pakistan was aware of his presence — that is something that we looked at."
 
An apology for housing Osama half a mile away from PMA Kakul would have been a good start.

This is not the question.

Furthermore, ISI intelligence helped them to get closer to Osama.

Not to mention US government itself is sure that Pakistan's leadership was unaware of Osama holding up there.
 
“You’re either with me or against me.”

The irony of Imran saying this. His whole attitude to politics can be summed with this one sentence. This is the exact policy that he has perfected over the years.

As far as his other replies are concerned, I cannot bother myself with all the lies at this time of the night. Maybe some other time. All that I have to say on this for now is that our denial has not taken us anywhere and will not take us anywhere. We had Osama living with his family in Pakistan for years yet we have the gall to question why international media and the U.S. do not take our word.

You stick to the honest Sharif's or Billo.
 
Transaction approach of putting Osama in Pakistan? I'm sorry what are you talking about?

Where are you taking the discussion? From where you brought up Osama in your question of "Pakistan being a hired gun? "
Anyways, read the above post. That issue is well settled , with Americans acknowledging that no part of Pakistani government knew about him.
 
This is not the question.

Furthermore, ISI intelligence helped them to get closer to Osama.

Not to mention US government itself is sure that Pakistan's leadership was unaware of Osama holding up there.

But this idiot is sure even when they are not sure.
 
Why apologize when even Obama accepted that we didn't know"Obama said that "we had no evidence that Pakistan was aware of his presence — that is something that we looked at."

Sure. Osama was living half a mile away from a military academy wearing Harry Potter's invisibility cloak. Do you also believe in Santa?

And if by any chance this is actually true, it is a bigger cause of concern than protecting Osama. Perhaps Imran should apologise on the behalf of his masters in the GHQ for how grossly incompetent our Army and our intelligence is. The most wanted man in the world was chilling 0.5 miles away from their military academy and they had no idea.
 
This is not the question.

Furthermore, ISI intelligence helped them to get closer to Osama.

Not to mention US government itself is sure that Pakistan's leadership was unaware of Osama holding up there.

Do you actually believe that? Do you honestly believe that the Pakistan leadership had no clue that Osama was hiding in Abbottabad with his family?

Do you actually believe that the ISI informed the CIA and Pentagon as soon as they got to know about his whereabouts? This is the denial that the international media calls us out for. We will never make any progress unless we admit that we were complicit in giving protecting to Osama.

May 1, 2011 is the day we completely lost any credibility we had, and 7 years on, we have done nothing to repair thanks to our denial and refusal to acknowledge the truth.
 
Sure. Osama was living half a mile away from a military academy wearing Harry Potter's invisibility cloak. Do you also believe in Santa?

And if by any chance this is actually true, it is a bigger cause of concern than protecting Osama. Perhaps Imran should apologise on the behalf of his masters in the GHQ for how grossly incompetent our Army and our intelligence is. The most wanted man in the world was chilling 0.5 miles away from their military academy and they had no idea.

Unless he was walking his dog everyday, it's very difficult to tell who lives where. The Americans, Israelis and the Ind have agents in PK, do the ISI know where they are?
 
Do you actually believe that? Do you honestly believe that the Pakistan leadership had no clue that Osama was hiding in Abbottabad with his family?

Do you actually believe that the ISI informed the CIA and Pentagon as soon as they got to know about his whereabouts? This is the denial that the international media calls us out for. We will never make any progress unless we admit that we were complicit in giving protecting to Osama.

May 1, 2011 is the day we completely lost any credibility we had, and 7 years on, we have done nothing to repair thanks to our denial and refusal to acknowledge the truth.

Do you believe Obama or not?
 
An apology for housing Osama half a mile away from PMA Kakul would have been a good start.

Why should he apologize for the actions or inactions (if true) of the past governments? That's like asking the current Germans to apologize for the Nazis. Has Obama or Trump apologized for Iraq (which is still ongoing) yet?

90% of your rubbish usually clouds the 10% when you you actually have a point and are not just being an attention seeker ala the boy who cried wolf.
 
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Unless he was walking his dog everyday, it's very difficult to tell who lives where. The Americans, Israelis and the Ind have agents in PK, do the ISI know where they are?

Yes. They are in bed with them.

ISI is the most dangerous intelligence organisation in the world not only because of its outreach but because it actively works against the interests of the nation.
 
Why should he apologize for the actions or inactions (if true) of the past governments? That's like asking the current Germans to apologize for the Nazis. Has Obama or Trump apologized for Iraq (which is still ongoing) yet?

90% of your rubbish usually clouds the 10% when you you actually have a point and are not just being an attention seeker ala the boy who cried wolf.

If he is going to defend and deny the involvement of his masters and the previous governments, he may as well apologise on their behalf too.

The whole interview can be summed up with the following:

Q) Pakistan did....

A) No we did not

Q) Pakistan did.....

A) No we did not

Rinse, repeat.
 
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Yes. They are in bed with them.

ISI is the most dangerous intelligence organisation in the world not only because of its outreach but because it actively works against the interests of the nation.

And the Americans, Israelis and Ind love us and won't do us any harm. The ISI is not perfect but it stands in their way, and hence idiots join in with its critics.
 
Do you believe Obama or not?

No I don't. That is the one great thing about Trump - he is a buffoon of the highest order, but at least he is straightforward and is not going to hold back. He calls us out for our nonsense and it is the only way forward for both countries in my opinion, and the only way they can come to an amiable solution.

However, that would require Pakistan to finally own up to its crap and not pretend to be a sinless child that has done no wrong. The denial has not taken us anywhere and will not take us anywhere in the future. However, it appears that our very own Trump is not willing to walk the road of honesty yet.
 
If anything it proves how stupid Americans are if they dont understand the area they are operating in.

There is a difference between American leadership elite and the common American people. The American leadership elite understands what is happening but won't act because they are guided by a 4-year election cycle and they don't want painful solutions that will cost them. Trump (who doesn't belong to the previous leadership elite) is making different noises than the leadership elite, it remains to be seen what action he actually takes. My guess is that if he does win re-election in 2020 he will ramp up the pressure on Pakistan as he will feel less constrained.

The American public is indeed stupid as they believe whatever story the American leadership elite and the media feeds them.

The fact is the Taliban kills American soldiers, and Bush and Obama didn't do much about it.
 
Sure. Osama was living half a mile away from a military academy wearing Harry Potter's invisibility cloak. Do you also believe in Santa?

And if by any chance this is actually true, it is a bigger cause of concern than protecting Osama. Perhaps Imran should apologise on the behalf of his masters in the GHQ for how grossly incompetent our Army and our intelligence is. The most wanted man in the world was chilling 0.5 miles away from their military academy and they had no idea.

Do you believe Obama or not?

Osama located himself in a place where he felt the safest. His calculation was that the Pakistani Army would protect him from an American raid, and it wasn't an entirely wrong calculation seeing that the Americans went to extraordinary measures to keep the raid secret from the Pakistanis.
 
If he is going to defend and deny the involvement of his masters and the previous governments, he may as well apologise on their behalf too.

The whole interview can be summed up with the following:

Q) Pakistan did....

A) No we did not

Q) Pakistan did.....

A) No we did not

Rinse, repeat.

No, he has no need to apologize because he was not a party to it.

How many PMs of the previous governments of Pakistan or PMs, Presidents, Heads of States of other countries during accusations have you seen going

Q) Did you?

A) Yes we did.

The only rinse and repeat here is your going against the general consensus to seek some online attention.
 
No I don't. That is the one great thing about Trump - he is a buffoon of the highest order, but at least he is straightforward and is not going to hold back. He calls us out for our nonsense and it is the only way forward for both countries in my opinion, and the only way they can come to an amiable solution.

However, that would require Pakistan to finally own up to its crap and not pretend to be a sinless child that has done no wrong. The denial has not taken us anywhere and will not take us anywhere in the future. However, it appears that our very own Trump is not willing to walk the road of honesty yet.

Interesting, Trump is telling the truth and Obama who found the guy is lying. Any more grains of wisdom?
 
Do you actually believe that? Do you honestly believe that the Pakistan leadership had no clue that Osama was hiding in Abbottabad with his family?

Do you actually believe that the ISI informed the CIA and Pentagon as soon as they got to know about his whereabouts? This is the denial that the international media calls us out for. We will never make any progress unless we admit that we were complicit in giving protecting to Osama.

May 1, 2011 is the day we completely lost any credibility we had, and 7 years on, we have done nothing to repair thanks to our denial and refusal to acknowledge the truth.

American officials, both military and civilian, at the highest ranks, including Obama have categorically denied Pakistan state's role in facilitating Osama.

May be Americans are also lying and only our Indian friends, very keen for Pakistan's well being speak truth.
 
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"Everything has a price".. few additional billions and the tone would change.
 
Good interview.

hopefully the ISI will up the support to resistance fighters in Afghanistan and take out those terrorists who are hiding within Afghanistan.
 
Where are you taking the discussion? From where you brought up Osama in your question of "Pakistan being a hired gun? "
Anyways, read the above post. That issue is well settled , with Americans acknowledging that no part of Pakistani government knew about him.

Just highlighting Imran's words , Pakistan was a hired Gun but failed at it's most basic goal(Osama) , the dumbest hired Gun? And as per Obama Army wasn't even aware apparently that Osama was so close to them.
Maybe interviewer should ask Imran does he think Osama was in Pakistan, we might get his views.
 
Just highlighting Imran's words , Pakistan was a hired Gun but failed at it's most basic goal(Osama) , the dumbest hired Gun? And as per Obama Army wasn't even aware apparently that Osama was so close to them.
Maybe interviewer should ask Imran does he think Osama was in Pakistan, we might get his views.

May be Pakistan army was the dumbest gun or may be the Americans were the dumbest recruiters. May be Pakistan and its army were lying or may be Obama and Pentagon were lying. May be they were aware , may be they were not aware. May be both were speaking truth , may be both were lying.

May be interviewer should have asked about Osama directly or may she should not have asked.

And may be, some of our Indian friends were not so desperate to make us feel bad and inferior.
 
What evasion there is?

He says there are no sanctuaries and if US is well aware of that then it should point to them. They also have technology for such surveillance.
Further, even if they accept that 2000-3000 people come in guise of Afghan refugees then that excuse is not sufficient enough to fail military super power in Afghanistan.
After all there is no Afghan government control in 40 percent of Afghanistan, how can movement into Pakistan be blamed for that? Isn't 40 percent of Afghanistan enough for their sanctuaries?

More over Afghan Pakistan border is porous , the blame for militant infiltration across border lies with Pakistan as much as it lies with NATO and Afghan forces.

In the end Americans have realized that there is no solution except dialogue with Taliban so, this also makes American excuse of sanctuaries in Pakistan more clear. If they thought they could win fighting then they would have been asking for those so called sanctuaries and not asking Pakistan's help for dialogue.

And please don't torture me by dividing my post into a dozen sub quotes.

If you don't see evasion when you see it, then I cannot really make you see it.

The journalist says something straightforward "there are Taliban leaders living in Pakistan".

He can say, "yes" or he can say "no". Instead he says the Pakistanis said "Can you tell us where the sanctuaries are, and we will go after them?”. Of course, the Americans may or may not know where the sanctuaries are. He answers neither yes, nor no.

Then he goes on to say "Our border between Pakistan and Afghanistan has the greatest amount of surveillance. The U.S. has satellites and drones. These people crossing would be seen." This is more misdirection. The Haqqanis operate in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, if you are not aware of that you should try to learn more about the real situation.
 
Interesting, Trump is telling the truth and Obama who found the guy is lying. Any more grains of wisdom?

Here is a pearl of wisdom. Obama was a professional politician who would say whatever suited his convenience.
 
If you don't see evasion when you see it, then I cannot really make you see it.

The journalist says something straightforward "there are Taliban leaders living in Pakistan".

He can say, "yes" or he can say "no". Instead he says the Pakistanis said "Can you tell us where the sanctuaries are, and we will go after them?”. Of course, the Americans may or may not know where the sanctuaries are. He answers neither yes, nor no.

Then he goes on to say "Our border between Pakistan and Afghanistan has the greatest amount of surveillance. The U.S. has satellites and drones. These people crossing would be seen." This is more misdirection. The Haqqanis operate in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, if you are not aware of that you should try to learn more about the real situation.

Forget his evasion, what are the Inds doing in Afghanistan?
 
If you don't see evasion when you see it, then I cannot really make you see it.

The journalist says something straightforward "there are Taliban leaders living in Pakistan".

He can say, "yes" or he can say "no". Instead he says the Pakistanis said "Can you tell us where the sanctuaries are, and we will go after them?”. Of course, the Americans may or may not know where the sanctuaries are. He answers neither yes, nor no.

Then he goes on to say "Our border between Pakistan and Afghanistan has the greatest amount of surveillance. The U.S. has satellites and drones. These people crossing would be seen." This is more misdirection. The Haqqanis operate in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, if you are not aware of that you should try to learn more about the real situation.

He said that according to their knowledge there were no sanctuaries.
Then she kept insisting. And for the sake of argument, keeping bigger picture in mind, he said that even if they accepted that some people come disguised as refugees Americans could point out these elements and provide actionable intelligence. Further that this can't be the excuse for American failure in Afghanistan, where they are unable to control a vast area.
There is no misdirection. In simplest of words, he meant. "There are no sanctuaries according to us, but if you claim there are , guide us to them, show us the evidence, give us actionable intelligence " What is so difficult here?
 
He said that according to their knowledge there were no sanctuaries.
Then she kept insisting. And for the sake of argument, keeping bigger picture in mind, he said that even if they accepted that some people come disguised as refugees Americans could point out these elements and provide actionable intelligence. Further that this can't be the excuse for American failure in Afghanistan, where they are unable to control a vast area.
There is no misdirection. In simplest of words, he meant. "There are no sanctuaries according to us, but if you claim there are , guide us to them, show us the evidence, give us actionable intelligence " What is so difficult here?

In the simplest of words the Haqqanis are ISI assets, and are funded and armed by the ISI. The Haqqanis are the major killers of US soldiers in Afghanistan. Debating whether these facts are true or not is a waste of time.
 
Forget his evasion, what are the Inds doing in Afghanistan?

The Indians are helping the existing Afghanistani government. That fact has nothing to do with what IK said to the American interviewer.
 
The Indians are helping the existing Afghanistani government. That fact has nothing to do with what IK said to the American interviewer.

No the Inds are using Afghanistan to train insurgents into PK. Btw Yadav says hi
 
Trump says what he thinks, which often leads to much criticism. He has little filter between his lips and his brain. This has been observed by many.

Trump says what suits his agenda, he criticised May but speaks highly of Putin.
 
An apology for housing Osama half a mile away from PMA Kakul would have been a good start.
Yeah and how about the US apologise to the entire world for selling and distributing weapons of mass destruction? Or an apology for invading countries for oil? 9/11 is also a dodgy event but since i have no proof i wont go into it. The US is the last country in the world we should apologise.
 
May be Pakistan army was the dumbest gun or may be the Americans were the dumbest recruiters. May be Pakistan and its army were lying or may be Obama and Pentagon were lying. May be they were aware , may be they were not aware. May be both were speaking truth , may be both were lying.

May be interviewer should have asked about Osama directly or may she should not have asked.

And may be, some of our Indian friends were not so desperate to make us feel bad and inferior.

Indian friends don't want to make Pakistanis feel.inferior, they jus wanna talk about Imran Khan here who has been left and right making statements about India.
 
In the simplest of words the Haqqanis are ISI assets, and are funded and armed by the ISI. The Haqqanis are the major killers of US soldiers in Afghanistan. Debating whether these facts are true or not is a waste of time.

So, in the simplest of words, the US is asking Pakistan's assistance , from the same people that are directly killing Americans inside Afghanistan? US has been supporting Pakistan's military over the years when Pakistanis in fact are killing them.
 
Indian friends don't want to make Pakistanis feel.inferior, they jus wanna talk about Imran Khan here who has been left and right making statements about India.

Imran has mostly talked about India with his vision to ease tensions and bring some normalcy. regarding today's speech there is no doubt that Muslims in India are behind Hindus and Sikhs in terms of socio-economic indicators.
 
Yeah Pak was doing America's dirty work under previous governments. IK is telling the Americans the way it is like he promised. Now he has to get them out of Afghanistan one way or another as well as bring back all that looted wealth he promised to do. I will judge him in a years time or so, it's to early yet.
 
I think Trump can easily get elected in India with number of fans he has there, he seems to be more popular in India than even USA :)
 
Imran has mostly talked about India with his vision to ease tensions and bring some normalcy. regarding today's speech there is no doubt that Muslims in India are behind Hindus and Sikhs in terms of socio-economic indicators.

And if Partition hadn't happened, that wouldn't had been the case..coz educated Muslims would had helped create awareness among the religion.
 
And if Partition hadn't happened, that wouldn't had been the case..coz educated Muslims would had helped create awareness among the religion.

no point guessing what would have happened if there was no partition. there may have been a civil war, or provinces declaring independence, or entire subcontinent would have been muslim majority. my personal wish was that british should have continued to rule us..they were forced to leave just when they were becoming better rulers.
 
Indian friends don't want to make Pakistanis feel.inferior, they jus wanna talk about Imran Khan here who has been left and right making statements about India.

That is all IK is left with. Playing to the gallaries. Good that Modi ignored him.
 
No the Inds are using Afghanistan to train insurgents into PK. Btw Yadav says hi

Maybe. It still doesn't have anything to do with what IK replied to the interviewer.

As for Yadav, remember Mumbai? Two can play this game.
 
So, in the simplest of words, the US is asking Pakistan's assistance , from the same people that are directly killing Americans inside Afghanistan? US has been supporting Pakistan's military over the years when Pakistanis in fact are killing them.

Yes, all this is true.

This is what Trump was referring to in his tweet at the beginning of the year. Previous administrations have been tolerant, but Trump is different. Just how different remains to be seen.
 
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Maybe. It still doesn't have anything to do with what IK replied to the interviewer.

As for Yadav, remember Mumbai? Two can play this game.

I do, the staged attack. As far as Afg is concerned there is no way PK will allow( and with total justification as the Ind and Afg sponsored insurgency has killed 1000's in PK ) Ind to be on its Western border especially after we are the ones that help it to be freed from Russian invasion who at the time was your ally.
 
I do, the staged attack. As far as Afg is concerned there is no way PK will allow( and with total justification as the Ind and Afg sponsored insurgency has killed 1000's in PK ) Ind to be on its Western border especially after we are the ones that help it to be freed from Russian invasion who at the time was your ally.

Every country gets to decide its foreign policy. Afghanistan is not Pakistan's property so that you can say "no way PK will allow". One major reason for Pakistan's current economic malaise is the lack of security it has created within its own country by nurturing jihadist groups like the Afghan Taliban. As Hillary Clinton said, you can't nurture snakes in your backyard without having them bite you sometime.

India is least interested in conquering Pakistan and taking over the biggest headache possible. Pakistanis need to forget if Afghanistan wishes to be allied with India or not and fix their own country.
 
The most wanted terrorist was living with his entire family near an army camp for years. Osama Bin Laden found it the safest place in world.

US was always convinced that Pakistani army and intelligence are working hard to get rid of all terrorists and that's why US shared all information with Pakistan before killing Osama.

Pakistan also gave medals to the doctor who helped in getting rid of Osama.
 
The most wanted terrorist was living with his entire family near an army camp for years. Osama Bin Laden found it the safest place in world.

US was always convinced that Pakistani army and intelligence are working hard to get rid of all terrorists and that's why US shared all information with Pakistan before killing Osama.

Pakistan also gave medals to the doctor who helped in getting rid of Osama.

really ?
 
Every country gets to decide its foreign policy. Afghanistan is not Pakistan's property so that you can say "no way PK will allow". One major reason for Pakistan's current economic malaise is the lack of security it has created within its own country by nurturing jihadist groups like the Afghan Taliban. As Hillary Clinton said, you can't nurture snakes in your backyard without having them bite you sometime.

India is least interested in conquering Pakistan and taking over the biggest headache possible. Pakistanis need to forget if Afghanistan wishes to be allied with India or not and fix their own country.

Exactly try to clean up your back yard first before giving other lectures.

Currently the extremist government of India is using radicalized version of hindu and nationalists to win votes and it has started to bite Minority of India.
 
Every country gets to decide its foreign policy. Afghanistan is not Pakistan's property so that you can say "no way PK will allow". One major reason for Pakistan's current economic malaise is the lack of security it has created within its own country by nurturing jihadist groups like the Afghan Taliban. As Hillary Clinton said, you can't nurture snakes in your backyard without having them bite you sometime.

India is least interested in conquering Pakistan and taking over the biggest headache possible. Pakistanis need to forget if Afghanistan wishes to be allied with India or not and fix their own country.

Every country doesn't, try asking Cuba when they placed Missiles next door America, or what happened when Ukraine hinted at joining NATO and the EU
 
Every country gets to decide its foreign policy. Afghanistan is not Pakistan's property so that you can say "no way PK will allow". One major reason for Pakistan's current economic malaise is the lack of security it has created within its own country by nurturing jihadist groups like the Afghan Taliban. As Hillary Clinton said, you can't nurture snakes in your backyard without having them bite you sometime.

India is least interested in conquering Pakistan and taking over the biggest headache possible. Pakistanis need to forget if Afghanistan wishes to be allied with India or not and fix their own country.

As far as Ind is concerned- Ind govt is obsessed with CPEC, uses proxies from Afghanistan and Baluchistan, and Ind trolls are on PK websites. Ind is desperate to damage PK but you can't.
 

I was just being sarcastic with the last two statements.

IK is no one to control anything in Pakistan. Army controls everything. IK may have good intention, but it's not up to him. I personally don't believe anything coming from Pakistan about terrorists.

There is saying. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. But Pakistan will try to convince everyone that hole doesn't exist.

No one can do much about it unless army wants to clean up, but then army owning a country is a rare situation. They have no incentive to really clean up.

Tragic part is 200M population gets taken for a ride by all this. That's the saddest part. US used Pakistan to fight Russia. Pakistan should have cleaned up immediately after that, but they encouraged all terrorist organizations to have a base Pakistan. They continued with this for decades to use them against their neighbors. How dumb you can get, but then army did it to help themselves and they are not dumb.

Nothing is going to change in Pakistan. Even now good terrorist and bad terrorist theory is practiced. Only losers are 200M population with more than 25M young kids out of school.
 
As far as Ind is concerned- Ind govt is obsessed with CPEC, uses proxies from Afghanistan and Baluchistan, and Ind trolls are on PK websites. Ind is desperate to damage PK but you can't.

CPEC is a lot of Chinese built infrastructure that Pakistan is buying. Repayments of the loans taken to but this equipment is going to drive Pakistan to bankruptcy. If anyone opposes CPEC, they have Pakistan's best interests at heart.

CPEC is unlikely to produce money for repayment. Pakistan needs modern industries to increase exports, not roads. It is already close to bankruptcy, how do you think it will repay $60 billion to China?

CPEC is great for China as it gets to sell infrastructure to Pakistan.
 
CPEC is a lot of Chinese built infrastructure that Pakistan is buying. Repayments of the loans taken to but this equipment is going to drive Pakistan to bankruptcy. If anyone opposes CPEC, they have Pakistan's best interests at heart.

CPEC is unlikely to produce money for repayment. Pakistan needs modern industries to increase exports, not roads. It is already close to bankruptcy, how do you think it will repay $60 billion to China?

CPEC is great for China as it gets to sell infrastructure to Pakistan.

Thanks for yours and all Inds concern about CPEC on here and on every website. I never knew you cared so much, or shall I say you feared so much.
 
Thanks for yours and all Inds concern about CPEC on here and on every website. I never knew you cared so much, or shall I say you feared so much.

I doubt if CPEC is in the list of the top 100 things I, or most Indians think of during a day. If it helps you to think that Indians are obsessed with CPEC as your country goes bankrupt, you are welcome.
 
I doubt if CPEC is in the list of the top 100 things I, or most Indians think of during a day. If it helps you to think that Indians are obsessed with CPEC as your country goes bankrupt, you are welcome.

It's strange that any article anywhere in the world has Ind having fits, and here you are telling us you don't care. Face it, we couldn't give a monkeys about Ind, you are not an issue in our elections or conversations but you guys are obsessed with PK.
 
Yes, all this is true.

This is what Trump was referring to in his tweet at the beginning of the year. Previous administrations have been tolerant, but Trump is different. Just how different remains to be seen.

Sure, Trump is different in a worst way.

We have seen that , only couple of days earlier he wrote to PM to seek Pakistan's full cooperation.
 
I was just being sarcastic with the last two statements.

IK is no one to control anything in Pakistan. Army controls everything. IK may have good intention, but it's not up to him. I personally don't believe anything coming from Pakistan about terrorists.

There is saying. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. But Pakistan will try to convince everyone that hole doesn't exist.

No one can do much about it unless army wants to clean up, but then army owning a country is a rare situation. They have no incentive to really clean up.

Tragic part is 200M population gets taken for a ride by all this. That's the saddest part. US used Pakistan to fight Russia. Pakistan should have cleaned up immediately after that, but they encouraged all terrorist organizations to have a base Pakistan. They continued with this for decades to use them against their neighbors. How dumb you can get, but then army did it to help themselves and they are not dumb.

Nothing is going to change in Pakistan. Even now good terrorist and bad terrorist theory is practiced. Only losers are 200M population with more than 25M young kids out of school.

US not only had the major part in sponsoring proxies, militants , terrorists and dictators in this region but also in other parts of the world. US sponsored and launched these Haqqanis and Talibans, and also supported military dictators over the decades in Pakistan.
But we are now seeing more balance of civil-military power in Pakistan. It will take a while to clear out the mess that US created in the greater middle east from Afghanistan to Iraq, and Libya to Yemen.
 
I was just being sarcastic with the last two statements.

IK is no one to control anything in Pakistan. Army controls everything. IK may have good intention, but it's not up to him. I personally don't believe anything coming from Pakistan about terrorists.

There is saying. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. But Pakistan will try to convince everyone that hole doesn't exist.

No one can do much about it unless army wants to clean up, but then army owning a country is a rare situation. They have no incentive to really clean up.

Tragic part is 200M population gets taken for a ride by all this. That's the saddest part. US used Pakistan to fight Russia. Pakistan should have cleaned up immediately after that, but they encouraged all terrorist organizations to have a base Pakistan. They continued with this for decades to use them against their neighbors. How dumb you can get, but then army did it to help themselves and they are not dumb.

Nothing is going to change in Pakistan. Even now good terrorist and bad terrorist theory is practiced. Only losers are 200M population with more than 25M young kids out of school.

Beside Army being influential rest is just rant while ignoring the context of the situation.
 
Imran Khan is a good man, and may turn out to be the kind of leader Pakistan needs, or has always needed.

One thing I hope he will do, is confront Muhammad bin Salman - implicated in the Jamal Khashoggi murder - about Saudi Arabia's merciless, cruel, heartless and evil crusade against impoverished Yemen, where millions are at risk of starvation, and where hundreds of thousands of children may already have starved to death.

Unless Muslim governments stand up to and challenge the mega-hypocrites in oil-rich Arab states, that are busy slaughtering and/or oppressing their own compatriots/co-religionists, they will never have any credibility. The U.S, its allies, India and so on, are not the greatest enemies of Pakistan or Muslims, the aforementioned are.
 
I was just being sarcastic with the last two statements.

IK is no one to control anything in Pakistan. Army controls everything. IK may have good intention, but it's not up to him. I personally don't believe anything coming from Pakistan about terrorists.

There is saying. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. But Pakistan will try to convince everyone that hole doesn't exist.

No one can do much about it unless army wants to clean up, but then army owning a country is a rare situation. They have no incentive to really clean up.

Tragic part is 200M population gets taken for a ride by all this. That's the saddest part. US used Pakistan to fight Russia. Pakistan should have cleaned up immediately after that, but they encouraged all terrorist organizations to have a base Pakistan. They continued with this for decades to use them against their neighbors. How dumb you can get, but then army did it to help themselves and they are not dumb.

Nothing is going to change in Pakistan. Even now good terrorist and bad terrorist theory is practiced. Only losers are 200M population with more than 25M young kids out of school.

i agree with your post completely .
 
US not only had the major part in sponsoring proxies, militants , terrorists and dictators in this region but also in other parts of the world. US sponsored and launched these Haqqanis and Talibans, and also supported military dictators over the decades in Pakistan.
But we are now seeing more balance of civil-military power in Pakistan. It will take a while to clear out the mess that US created in the greater middle east from Afghanistan to Iraq, and Libya to Yemen.

US was surely responsible for supporting many terrorists organization. There is absolutely no denying that fact. I was making a different point.

Pakistan may have found itself in situation where it felt compelled to have a all foreign fighters coming and getting trained in Pakistan in Afghanistan initially. But there was absolutely no pressure to keep using the same foreign fighters and even local ones for the next 10 years. Russia had left Afghanistan and having large number of terrorists inside Pakistan was never going to help Pakistan.

Even now, I have no doubt that US and may countries support non-state actors and many terrorist organizations around the world. But they didn't invite thousands of foreign fighters at home to give them a base for training and recruitment of locals. Any fool can see that it was going to blow big time. Pakistan was under no pressure to do something this stupid after Russia left, but they did it for decades.

Only reason is that Army incentive is not the same as 200M+ general population. Army did what they thought was best for them. Unless army changes it's track, this problem won't go away. US or anyone shouldn't be telling anything to Pakistan. It's Pakistan best interest to shut down all terrorists and not do the stupidity of good and bad terrorists. How dumb some one can be to give shelter to Osama Bin Laden after 9/11? Not only that , let's even put a person who helped to capture Osama in jail. Action speaks louder than words.

Providing home base to terrorists is not going to solve anything, but it's up to army to do full clean up rather than selective clean up. Everyone knows that army has the final say. I hope that IK can influence the future direction here, because Pakistan surely needs it. It has nothing to do with what other countries say, but it's about the best direction Pakistan can go.
 
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