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China Is Now in Firm Control of U.S. Debt Market

China Is Now in Firm Control of U.S. Debt Market
It is hilarious listening to the propagandists try to “spin” the events in bond and currency markets to make it sound like the U.S. government is still operating from a position of strength.
While there are many Western, corporate-media outlets spouting such drivel, I'll use the Financial Times as my example.“China stuck in dollar trap”, crows FT on May 24th. Then, later “...[Beijing] has little choice but to keep pouring the bulk of its growing reserves into the U.S. Treasury”.
What somehow escaped this “analysis” by FT is that China won't touch any U.S. dollar asset except Treasury bonds. The monthly flows of capital into (or out of) the U.S., which is known as the Treasury Department's “TIC” report, tell a clear story.
So far, in the three months of data which have been reported for this year (Jan., Feb., March), the net result was an outflow of capital from the U.S. totaling $211.4 billion.
Does this number suggest China is “trapped” into buying U.S. debt?
The March number is slightly more instructive. This marks the beginning of the newest propaganda-offensive from the U.S. corporate media in asserting (yet again) that the U.S. economy was starting to “recover”. This was epitomized by U.S. court-jester Ben Bernanke prancing around, braying about “green shoots”.
In March, the TIC inflow into the U.S. was a paltry $23.2 billion. However, net purchases of U.S. Treasuries totaled $47.9 billion – meaning the net results for all other categories of U.S. debt was yet another outflow of $24.7 billion.
About the only useful piece of information in the Financial Times' propaganda was to note that China was only purchasing short-term Treasuries. This is highly significant for two reasons.
First, the shorter-term Treasuries are the most-liquid form of U.S. debt. It's no surprise that China is choosing only these types of Treasuries, since it is currently on a commodities buying-spree – which it is financing with U.S. Treasuries. In other words, while China may be a net buyer of U.S. Treasuries in relation to its transactions with the U.S., on a global basis, China is spending its U.S. dollar holdings at least as fast as it is accumulating them. Does this look like China is “trapped”?
The second important point about China's focus on short-term Treasuries is that this does very little to help the U.S. fund its gigantic, out-of-control deficits. The focus by China (and most other foreign buyers) on short-term Treasuries means that not only is the U.S. being forced to dump the largest glut of new Treasuries in history on this already-saturated market, but it is also being forced to try to “roll-over” additional, huge amounts each month as the short-term Treasuries mature.
Does this support the ludicrous assertion by FT (and others) that China “is helping Washington fund its growing budget deficit”?
How exactly will the U.S. “fund” a deficit certain to exceed $2 TRILLION (just in the current fiscal-year) with an outflow of more than $200 billion so far this year?
The ultimate rebuttal to the nonsense of the propagandists is to simply note what is happening in markets. Since the U.S. bond-bubble hit its peak late last year, U.S. Treasuries have already plunged a sickening 30% (see “U.S. Bond Bubble Bursts – bye-bye Equities Rally”).
Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar just hit its lowest level of the year. A look at this horrific chart suggests that the plunge of the dollar is much closer to the beginning than the end.
It is not China which is “trapped”. It is the U.S. government. Trapped by years of lies and statistical “padding” of its declining economy. Trapped by years of grossly over-spending. Trapped by the self-destructive machinations of the U.S. financial crime syndicate, which runs the U.S. government in all but name.
When China runs out of things to buy with its U.S. Treasuries, it will stop accumulating them – period! Instead, it will channel its huge budget surpluses into infrastructure development and other internal uses: for a huge economy which is still in the infancy of its development.
This is the story which the Financial Times should have written.

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US: Military’s Crisis Deepens.

US: Military’s Crisis Deepens.

"The Army’s reported number of active-duty soldier suicides has climbed every year of the Afghanistan and Iraq occupations. In January, the suicide rate surpassed the combat death toll. So far this year, the Army lists 64 confirmed or suspected cases in which troops have taken their own lives. According to a May 28 Associated Press report, Fort Campbell’s 4th Brigade has just returned from a 15-month tour in Afghanistan. Such deployments have inflicted deep psychological trauma on troops and strain on military families. Head chaplain Col. Ken Brown commented to the AP, “We’ve been at war at this installation for seven years.... I think that has a cumulative effect across the for

wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/suic-m29.shtml

wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/mili-m13.shtml

wsws.org/articles/2009/feb2009/suic-f04.shtml

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Sindh’s attitude towards IDP’s

Sindh’s attitude towards IDP’s
They are creating differences, instability and anger within the state. Political authority should take steps to eliminate these evil elements from the land of pure because IDP’s have the same rights which these people have.
http://www.dailyausaf.com/news/id/15043/

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So we are ready for a war

So we are ready for a war
We have the courage...we have the power to fight with these powers of evil.






























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Pakistan's young heroes

Pakistan's young heroes
These brave soldiers are pride of nation!!!
Friday, May 29, 2009Many brave men of the Pakistan army are falling in the line of duty. Some will be recognised, others will go into history as unsung heroes. Let's not forget them and keep their spirit alive. This is the tale of a young officer, a lieutenant, with less than six months of service, who went beyond the call of duty. After receiving an SOS call from one of the patrols, which had come under ambush laid by the militants, the commanding officer ordered to immediately dispatch a party to beat back the militants and evacuate the casualties. The lieutenant volunteered himself for the task. He was not allowed as probably he was considered too young and inexperienced. The boy felt dejected but was overwhelmed with his commitment to the country.
When the party was leaving, he quietly sneaked into the vehicle, taking advantage of the darkness. When the party reached the ambush site and was dismounting, the captain leading the party noticed him. He asked him why he had come. The lieutenant replied: "Sir, I have attended anti-terrorist training and know how to tackle them. Now it's time to use those skills". Later the party successfully repulsed the militants. This officer got three bullet injuries and is now convalescing in a hospital -- and looking forward to go into action again.
Brig (r) Shahid Masud
Rawalpindi

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Brave Pakistani soldiers

Operation Rah e Rast
Brave Pakistani soldiers who gave their life to protect Islam from Taliban

  • Captain Najam Riaz Shaheed
  • Captain Bilal Shaheed
  • NCO Abdul Ghaffar Shahe

youtube.com/watch?v=SUTIk9selHA

youtube.com/watch?v=z0ENepoJiy4

youtube.com/watch?v=WGULvSrisEE

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Stolen US arms being used in Swat: ISPR

Stolen US arms being used in Swat: ISPR

"The military on Friday said US weapons stolen from Afghanistan were being used against security forces in Swat and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)."



ISLAMABAD: The military on Friday said US weapons stolen from Afghanistan were being used against security forces in Swat and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).
While speaking to Dawn, military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said the terrorists in FATA and Swat were getting material and financial support through the Afghan border and alleged that some hostile foreign agencies were abetting them.
Answering a question about the assertions over the security of strategic assets of Pakistan, he said the United States should stop worrying about the nukes and start thinking about the weapons lost in Afghanistan.
'We are not surprised if these weapons slip out from Afghanistan and many of them are found in Swat and are being used against our troops', he remarked.
Giving details on the progress of operation Rahe Rast, he said security forces have recovered a huge quantity of looted and stolen food items and a cache of arms including 12.7 mm guns from four tunnels discovered during search and cordon operations in Peochar.
He said that the food items recovered from tunnels were apparently stolen and looted as these were otherwise not locally available.
He said the packing of the food items also shows that they were part of relief goods meant to reach the people stranded in the areas where the military operation against militants was taking place.
General Athar Abbas said the security forces continued with cordon and search operation and successfully cleared the stronghold of miscreants at Peochar village. He said that forces have secured Bahrain and the area was under their complete control.
General Athar Abbas also said that 28 miscreants were killed and seven were apprehended in various areas of Swat during exchange of fire, while five soldiers and two civilians were injured.
The military spokesman said cordon and search operations were still continuing in Mingora.

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Indian Army gripped by fear

Indian Army gripped by fear
This shows to prove how much India is panicked because of a "Nuclear Pakistan".

NEW DELHI: The world must put pressure on Pakistan to restrict its nuclear capabilities, India’s army chief said on Friday, adding that reports of Pakistan stockpiling nuclear arsenal was a matter of serious concern. The New York Times last week reported US lawmakers were told in confidential briefings that Pakistan was rapidly adding to its nuclear capability, stoking fears in Congress about the diversion of US funds. Islamabad dismissed the report, saying Pakistan was determined to maintain a minimum nuclear deterrence as nuclear-armed rival India beefed up its conventional forces. agencies

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Iraq redux?

Iraq redux? Obama seeks funds for Pakistan super-embassy
Another CIA Head Quarter in the making. This must not be allowed.

ISLAMABAD — The U.S. is embarking on a $1 billion crash program to expand its diplomatic presence in Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan, another sign that the Obama administration is making a costly, long-term commitment to war-torn South Asia, U.S. officials said Wednesday.
The White House has asked Congress for — and seems likely to receive — $736 million to build a new U.S. embassy in Islamabad, along with permanent housing for U.S. government civilians and new office space in the Pakistani capital.
The scale of the projects rivals the giant U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, which was completed last year after construction delays at a cost of $740 million.
Senior State Department officials said the expanded diplomatic presence is needed to replace overcrowded, dilapidated and unsafe facilities and to support a "surge" of civilian officials into Afghanistan and Pakistan ordered by President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Other major projects are planned for Kabul, Afghanistan; and for the Pakistani cities of Lahore and Peshawar. In Peshawar, the U.S. government is negotiating the purchase of a five-star hotel that would house a new U.S. consulate.
Funds for the projects are included in a 2009 supplemental spending bill that the House of Representatives and the Senate have passed in slightly different forms.
Obama has repeatedly stated that stabilizing Pakistan and Afghanistan, the countries from which al Qaida and the Taliban operate, is vital to U.S. national security. He's ordered thousands of additional troops to Afghanistan and is proposing substantially increased aid to both countries.
In Pakistan, however, large parts of the population are hostile to the U.S. presence in the region — despite receiving billions of dollars in aid from Washington since 2001 — and anti-American groups and politicians are likely to seize on the expanded diplomatic presence in Islamabad as evidence of American "imperial designs."
"This is a replay of Baghdad," said Khurshid Ahmad, a member of Pakistan's upper house of parliament for Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the country's two main religious political parties. "This (Islamabad embassy) is more (space) than they should need. It's for the micro and macro management of Pakistan, and using Pakistan for pushing the American agenda in Central Asia."
In Baghdad and other dangerous locales, U.S. diplomats have sometimes found themselves cut off from the population in heavily fortified compounds surrounded by blast walls, concertina wire and armed guards.
"If you're going to have people live in a car bomb-prone place, your are driven to not have a light footprint," said Ronald Neumann, a former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan and the president of the American Academy of Diplomacy. Neumann called the planned expansions "generally pretty justified."
In Islamabad, according to State Department budget documents, the plan calls for the rapid construction of a $111 million new office annex to accommodate 330 workers; $197 million to build 156 permanent and 80 temporary housing units; and a $405 million replacement of the main embassy building. The existing embassy, in the capital's leafy diplomatic enclave, was badly damaged in a 1979 assault by Pakistani students.
The U.S. government also plans to revamp its consular buildings in the eastern city of Lahore and in Peshawar, the regional capital of the militancy plagued North West Frontier Province. The consulate in the southern megacity of Karachi has just been relocated into a new purpose-built accommodation.
A senior State Department official confirmed that the U.S. plan for the consulate in Peshawar involves the purchase of the luxury Pearl Continental hotel. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly.
The Pearl Contintental is the city's only five-star hotel, set in its own expansive grounds, with a swimming pool. It's owned by Pakistani tycoon Sadruddin Hashwani.
Peshawar is an important station for gathering intelligence on the tribal area that surrounds the city on three sides and is a base for al Qaida and the Taliban. The area also will be a focus for expanded U.S. aid programs, and the American mission in Peshawar has already expanded from three U.S. diplomats to several dozen.
In all, the administration requested $806 million for diplomatic construction and security in Pakistan.
"For the strong commitment the U.S. is making in the country of Pakistan, we need the necessary platform to fulfill our diplomatic mission," said Jonathan Blyth of the State Department's Overseas Buildings Operations bureau. "The embassy is in need of upgrading and expansion to meet our future mission requirements."
A senior Pakistani official said the expansion has been under discussion for three years. "Pakistanis understand the need for having diplomatic missions expanding and the Americans always have had an enclave in Islamabad," said the official, who requested anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. "Will some people exploit it? They will."
In Kabul, the U.S. government is negotiating an $87 million purchase of a 30- to 40-acre parcel of land to expand the embassy. The Senate version of the appropriations bill omits all but $10 million of those funds.
(Shah is a McClatchy special correspondent. Jonathan S. Landay contributed to this article.)

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Zaid Hamid’s interview with Canadian radio

Zaid Hamid’s interview with Canadian radio "Saaz o Awaz"
(Urdu Language)

Interview with Zaid Hamid - April 20, 2009

http://www.eawaz.com:1234/audiospecials.jsp

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N. Korea stuns world with nuclear test

N. Korea stuns world with nuclear test
Another Big Problem for US.
SEOUL, May 25: North Korea conducted its second nuclear test on Monday that was far more powerful than its first one, triggering an emergency UN Security Council meeting and drawing condemnation from around the globe. The official KCNA news agency said the North had “successfully conducted one more underground nuclear test on May 25 as part of the measures to bolster its nuclear deterrent for self-defence in every way”. The country also test-fired three short-range missiles hours later, Yonhap news agency said. Russia, which called the test a threat to regional security, said the blast was about equal in power to the US atom bomb dropped on Nagasaki in World War Two. Officials in Washington and Beijing said North Korea had warned their governments of the test about an hour before detonation but Japan said it was not given advance notice. According to Russia, the blast was up to 20 times more powerful than the North’s first nuclear test about two and a half years ago, underscoring the advances in its nuclear programme. However, the Vienna-based Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organisation claimed that the magnitude of the latest test was “slightly higher than in 2006, measuring 4.52 on the Richter scale, while in 2006 it was 4.1”. The country’s first nuclear test, in October 2006, was of about one kiloton. US President Barack Obama said Pyongyang’s attempts at developing nuclear weapons were a threat to international peace and security and the international community would need to respond. “North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes pose a grave threat to the peace and security of the world, and I strongly condemn their reckless action,” he said at the White House. “The United States and the international community must take action in response,” he said. China said it was “resolutely opposed” to the test. The Chinese foreign ministry said in a statement: “The Chinese side vehemently demands North Korea abide by its denuclearisation promises, stop any actions which may worsen the situation and return to the six-party talks process. “The Chinese government calls on all sides to calmly and appropriately deal (with the situation).” Germany, France, Britain and the European Union were among those condemning Pyongyang’s act, while United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was “deeply worried”. He expressed the hope that the council would take “necessary measures corresponding to the seriousness of this situation”. The UN Security Council was to hold emergency talks on the issue. Iran said it had no missile or nuclear cooperation with North Korea. The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation called for North Korea to refrain from raising tensions. “These irresponsible actions by Pyongyang pose a serious challenge to peace, security and stability in the Asia-Pacific region.” US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke to Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone and South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan on the issue, State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said. Financial markets in Asia wobbled briefly on the news. Markets in the United States and Britain were closed for a holiday. South Korea’s main stock market index fell more than six per cent at one stage on worries by some that investors would flee. But the decline was short-lived. Analysts said the test would force Washington to acknowledge that its leverage over the unpredictable state was, at best, limited. The US must hope China would put pressure on Pyongyang, despite its fear of destabilising its neighbour. However, Beijing was unlikely to back stronger sanctions, they said. North Korea already is so isolated that there is little left with which to punish a government that has been ready to take dealings with the outside world to the brink.—Reuters

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CIA plans to break India by 2015


CIA plans to break India by 2015

NEW DELHI: Indian army officer, one of the 452 witnesses in the September 29 Malegaon blast case, has revealed in his statement that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had a grand design to split India into smaller independent countries by 2015.
According to an Indian newspaper, the officer said in a statement that he had attended one of the meetings held by the Malegaon blast accused on April 12, 2008 at the Ram temple in Bhopal. The officer from the Army Education Corps said that he was shocked by the proceedings. He added that an ex-Raw personnel, who was present in the meeting, divulged these sinister plans of splitting the nation, based on a similar operation in the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics).
The witness added that the ex-Raw official also revealed that the CIA had managed to penetrate several departments in India. The officer cautioned the witness that the meeting was being observed by the Intelligence Bureau.
The officer met Lt Col Shrikant Purohit in an official dinner at the Officers’ Mess of AEC training college and centre in the second week of December 2007 at Deolali. He told Purohit about a plan to take premature retirement to develop his village, and establish an old age home.
On January 26, 2008, Purohit asked him to come to Faridabad and meet a few people for his project. There he was introduced to Sameer Kulkarni and the other accused in the Malegaon blast case. Then on April 12, 2008, Purohit called him for a meeting at Ram Mandir. He met all the Malegaon accused and another 20 people, along with the ex-Raw officer and the IB source.
The former RAW officer spoke about the USSR and Purohit spoke about his plans to bring Abhinav Bharat to the fore. Purohit also spoke about Hindu fundamentals and his contacts in Israel and Thailand.
It is pertinent to mention that some of RAW officials were had been spying for US and one of them of was former RAW Joint Secretary Rabindor Singh who remained involved in such activities. On the revelation of his and CIA nexus, he fled form India on US passport via Nepal to US when Indian secret agencies were seeking permission from the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in June 2006 to take any action against him.-

SANA

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Balkanization of Pakistan

Balkanization of Pakistan

The given article reveals the sinister game plan of balkanization of Pakistan by US and its allies. BUT “and (they) plotted and planned, and Allah too planned, and the best of planners is Allah.” (Quran; Surah 3 Al 'Imran: Ayah 54). Pakistan need a strong leadership urgently. This corrupt and compromised governemnt must go NOW.

ummatpublication

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Muslims of Indian Gujrat Killings

Muslims of Indian Gujrat Killings
We dare you to see the reality of Hindu Zionists and their sick face. We take this pledge that Gujarat Muslims will be avenged and Hindu Zionists will be made to pay for every innocent soul killed in that genocide. We have never forgotten nor forgiven!!

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Israeli Phalcon AWACS arrives in India

Israeli Phalcon AWACS arrives in India
India became the first country in South Asia to own an Airborne Early Warning and Control System, called 'an eye in the sky', with the Israeli-made Phalcon arriving at the Jamnagar airbase on the country's western coast on Monday morning. The Phalcons will now be formally inducted into the Indian Air Force on May 28 by Defence Minister A K Antony at the Palam airbase in New Delhi [Images], IAF sources told PTI. The AWACS will provide IAF means to keep a tab on enemy aircraft and missiles taking off from across the border, thereby enhancing response time. The Phalcon, mounted on a Russian Ilyushin-76 heavy-lift transport aircraft's airframe, had left Israel on Sunday. Jamnagar would be its first stop, followed by Palam on Tuesday, before it reaches Agra [Images], which would be its home base, sources said. The delivery of the $1.1 billion AWACS was previously scheduled on May 18, but last minute technical check-ups delayed its departure from Israel, sources said. The remaining two AWACS, under the tripartite deal between India, Israel and Russia [Images], will be delivered by mid or late 2010, IAF sources said. The system, primarily used for detection of incoming hostile cruise missiles and aircraft from hundreds of kilometers away, can also direct air defence fighters during combat operations against enemy jets. It also helps detect troop build up across the borders. With the induction of the Phalcons, frontline IAF fighters like Sukhoi-30MKIs, Mirage-2000s and Jaguars will now be backed by the airborne radar system to provide data on incoming enemy aircraft or missile much beyond visual range through a direct link. India and Israel are said to be in advanced negotiations for the purchase of three more Phalcon AWACS, which the IAF proposes to integrate with other air and ground assets. All six AWACS would be linked with the country's first military satellite proposed to be launched by the middle of next year.An all weather system capable of locking on to 60 targets simultaneously at 400-km range, the swift mobility that the AWACS platform provided will help neutralise any threat, as it could be moved anywhere on very short notice. AWACS, a potent force-multiplier, will significantly enhance the effectiveness of both offensive and defensive operations. The US had earlier reportedly pressurised Israel to cancel a similar deal with China in 2000, but gave green signal to the Indian deal in May 2003. Israel has recently emerged as India's largest supplier of defence equipments with the country's weapon sales to New Delhi constituting about 50 per cent of its arms exports.

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Martyrs of Rah-E-Haq

Martyrs of Rah-E-Haq
We salute you dear brothers. You will be dearly missed but would live on in our hearts and soul.

youtube.com/watch?v=RHy1h8ClpYI&NR=1

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Troops take over Maalam Jabba

Troops take over Maalam Jabba



ISLAMABAD: The army claimed on Monday that security forces had captured Maalam Jabba, a stronghold of militants, after heavy clashes.

It said troops were facing ‘stiff resistance’ to wrest the control of Swat from the Taliban.

According to AFP, Military spokesman Maj-Gen Athar Abbas warned it could take up to 10 days to regain control of Mingora, as the punishing assault across three rugged northwest districts entered a fifth week.

‘It may take seven to 10 days to clear Mingora of militants,’ he told AFP.

‘The operation may be a little slow to avoid civilian casualties, damage and destruction to property. There are also improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted in Mingora, and we have to clear these IEDs as well.’

According to the ISPR, Maalam Jabba, on the main line of communication between Swat and Mansehra, was being used by militants as a training centre and logistic base. Four militants were killed and six security personnel injured in the fighting. Eight terrorists were arrested.

The ISPR said that troops were now trying to secure Kabbal where militants had training facilities and terrorists fleeing Mingora were gathering there.

The areas of Aligrama, Guljaba, Fizaghat and a swathe up to Watakai have been secured.

Two militants were killed and six soldiers injured in clashes in these areas. An armoured personnel carrier (APC) and a large quantity of arms and ammunition were seized and several improvised explosive devices defused.

Troops resumed operation in Peochar valley on Monday. Two militants were killed and five captured.

‘Miscreants are on the run from the valley,’ the ISPR said.

Security forces took control of Qambar village and Qambar ridge and cleared six tunnels. An area up to Grid Station, Amankot and T-Junction in Saidu Khawar and Udigram were cleared of militants. Three militants were arrested.

The army distributed on Monday 50 tons of rations among 80,000 displaced people. It has so far provided 560 tons of foodstuff from its own quota.

Troops are assisting the civil administration in preparing sheds inside camps for IDPs.

Besides providing treatment in two field hospitals, the army set up a medical camp at the Benazir camp in Jehanded Society. Its lady doctors have so far treated 180 women in the camp.

Our Correspondent in Peshawar adds: A resident from Kalam told Dawn by phone that the government should provide cash and to the local people allow them to go to the neighbouring Bisham bazaar market to buy goods they need and medicines.
He said that shortage of fuel had added to the misery of the residents. About 90 per cent of the land in Kalam could not be cultivated this year because of fuel shortage and curfew, he added.

According to the last census, the population of Kalam is over 70,000.

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Exclusive Video (Urdu Version)

Exclusive Video
Urdu Version

Zaid Hamid: Pakistanis are READY to DEFEND their HOMELAND from any Aggressor Nation!

youtube.com/watch?v=QQ91QP4Upa4

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Ziad Hamid on Rise and Shine (Waqt) Urdu Version

Ziad Hamid on Rise and Shine (Waqt)
Urdu Version
22-May-09
In this program Zaid sahib have discussed the current situation of Swat Operation, Baluchistan and President Zardari’s visit to US.
These are the links to the program.
http://blip.tv/file/2149294/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rVynABPChw

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Nato to broaden engagement with Pakistan: Mullen

Nato to broaden engagement with Pakistan: Mullen
WASHINGTON, May 22: The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) is going to increase its engagement with Pakistan, seeking a more in-depth relationship with a country plagued by terrorism and instability, says the US military chief.
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a congressional hearing on Thursday that other similar international organisations will also seek to broaden their relations with Pakistan.
“Where I see Nato going is increasingly towards a broader and more in-depth relationship with Pakistan, because of the common interests,” he told a Senate panel.
Admiral Mullen recalled that the chairman of the military committee in Nato had invited Pakistan’s army chief General Ashfaq Kayani to the committee last year.
“He came and laid out a very clear view” on his country’s strategy to combat terrorists before military chiefs from 28 countries.
“There are ongoing discussions in various venues outside the military (as well) to connect more internationally through these organisations, alliances, whatever they might be,” the admiral added.
“And I see that as growing, and certainly the capacity in some of these other areas that other organisations have and represent are critical, and the more of that we can do, and the sooner we can do it, I think the better off we’ll be.”
Earlier, Senator Johnny Isakson, a Republican, asked Admiral Mullen to comment on the news that Pakistan might want to join the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
The OSCE is Europe’s primary instrument for early warning, conflict prevention, and crisis management. The OSCE is the world’s largest regional security organisation whose 56 participating states span the geographical area from Vancouver to Vladivostok.
Senator Isakson noted that if Pakistan joined the OSCE, the organisation could bring in resources to help build the country’s military and civilian capacity for dealing with the Taliban-led insurgency.
“I mention that because I think your involvement here in trying to bring in more international support for nation building is a positive step in the US objectives in both Afghanistan and Pakistan,” the senator observed and asked if the US had a workable strategy for involving the OSCE in Pakistan.
The admiral said that while he was not trying to compare the OSCE with Nato, he believed Nato was trying to broaden its relationship with Pakistan.
Already, supplies for Nato troops in Afghanistan go thorough Pakistan but Admiral Mullen indicated that a new relationship would enable Nato to play a more direct role inside Pakistan.

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Why Zardari Interfering In Burma?

Why Zardari Interfering In Burma?

I hope all Pakistanis have by now heard the latest joke: That our Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has called on the government of Burma to release opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi from jail.
This story is especially relevant to the 1.5 million Pakistanis who are sleeping in the wilderness now thanks to the anti-Pakistan scheming of the Americans and their poodles [Britain, Karzai, India] in Afghanistan. Mr. Qureshi has no time to raise the issue of the weapons and money coming from Afghanistan to the terrorists inside Pakistan. No, he has no time for this. But he has all the time in the world to worry about Ms. Kyi's health. What a compassionate man.
Here's my reaction on the statement: Ha ha ha ha ha.
No really.
What is Pakistani Foreign Minister's business in calling for the release of Burma's opposition leader?
Was Mr. Shah Mahmood Qureshi bored of the myriad foreign policy problems facing Pakistan that he chose to make a statement that obviously is none of our business and only seeks to appease Washington and London?
Burma's government has decided to put the lady opposition leader on trial because she basically is a tool in the hands of US and UK, the Am-Brit brigade. She is a tool pretty much like Foreign Minister Qureshi's own government and his own boss, President Zardari.
This partially explains why Mr. Qureshi stuck his nose where it doesn't belong.
But there is another explanation.
Burma's government has excellent relations with China and Pakistan, and not with the Am-Brit brigade, US and UK. The free press in Washington and London keeps the story of Ms. Suu Kyi alive because this way they keep the pressure on Burma's government. The usual pretext of human rights and democracy is used for this Am-Brit interference.
Pakistan supports the government of Burma since we have no problem with them and it is none of our business what they do to the lady opposition leader who's basically an American poodle, or ... I'm sure you get what the appropriate word here is.
The only reason I can think of that made Pakistani Foreign Minister Qureshi issue this unusual statement is because that's what Washington wants.
This would also be a clear signal to Beijing that Islamabad is firmly in the US orbit. The Burmese government would also be in a shock because they thought Pakistan supported them since like us they are also sick and tired of Indian arrogance and often take joy in cutting India down to size in their own ways.
Mr. Qureshi had more urgent business to attend to than to interfere in Burma's internal matters. Besides the issue the of American double game against Pakistan in Afghanistan, Mr. Qureshi should have been more concerned about the statement issued by the Shanghai Cooperation Organization [SCO] and by a Russian official on Pakistan's nuclear arsenal. The statement basically endorsed the Am-Brit [American-British] propaganda on the safety of Pakistan's strategic weapons.
This appears to be an urgent business that begs Mr. Qureshi's attention. But no. Mr. Qureshi and his US puppet government is more interested in appeasing its masters in Washington.

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Kalabagh dam scrapped: minister

Kalabagh dam scrapped: minister
HYDERABAD, May 23: Federal Water and Power Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf has said that Kalabagh Dam project has been scrapped and that he is making this statement with authority.
He was talking to journalists at a rest house here on Saturday after addressing a workers’ gathering.
“Kalabagh Dam project has been scrapped and I am making this statement as minister of water and power. The government has rejected this project,” he said when his attention was drawn to a statement of Deputy Chairman of Planning Commission Sardar Aseff Ahmed Ali that Kalabagh Dam project had not been scrapped.
The power minister didn’t answer when pressed why Mr Aseff had made such a statement while talking to journalists after the Annual Plan Coordination Committee (APCC) meeting in Islamabad.
He said that all power projects of Wapda were on time and the shortfall of 3,500 megawatts of electricity would soon be overcome.
He said that 165 megawatts of electricity had been made available and the prime minister would soon inaugurate a 235 megawatts power house in Lahore.
Around 3,000 to 3,500 megawatts of electricity had been injected into the system through improvement in supplies of oil and gas, Pervez Ashraf said. Wapda has managed to upgrade its system.”
He said that out of Rs185 billion, Rs85 billion had been paid by the government towards outstanding dues of Pepco against power distribution companies.
The remaining amount was being cleared through circular debt by the government, he said, adding that the government felt relatively comfortable this year as far as power crisis was concerned. He disagreed with a questioner who quoted Federal Labour Minister Syed Khursheeid Shah as saying that load-shedding won’t end by December this year.
“His (Shah’s) statement has been made somewhat spicy in media,” he said, pledging that load-shedding would come to an end by December.
He said that Wapda was opting for hydropower generation in addition to solar, solid-waste and windmill energy. He said that steam energy was also being worked out and a contract had been signed with a Turkish firm.
The minister said that the government intended to ensure electricity for tube-wells and streetlights through solar energy.
About Thar coal, he said the government would go for international competitive biddings and best companies would be chosen for the project because there were several companies based in South Korea, China and Australia which had shown interest in the project. Through energy conservation, he said, 1,000 megawatts of electricity had been saved.

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Not A War For America’s Pakistani Apologists

Not A War For America’s Pakistani Apologists
Not A War For America’s Pakistani Apologists


Prime Minister Gilani, Foreign Minister Qureshi and Interior Minister Malik are now talking about support for the terrorists – the so-called Pakistani Taliban – from Afghanistan. Why did Mr. Qureshi and Mr. Malik not mention this when both were in Washington? And why no one is taking up the venomous anti-Pakistan propaganda in the U.S. media? A weak official stand is adding to the confusion over the real meaning of the latest military operations in our northern and western belts. Suddenly we have American apologists inside Pakistan, including some political parties, claiming vindication for the exaggerated notion of ‘Talibanization’. Unfortunately, this is a sad example of using the occasion to settle scores in the secular-religious debate. It is about Pakistan making a final push against criminal militants in the north and the western belt adjoining Afghanistan after concluding that a large portion of this insurgency consists of shady terrorists and handlers pushed inside Pakistan from a neighboring country.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Not a single official from the Pakistani political leadership visiting Washington recently dared say a word about it. But back home, these officials are now beginning to shyly speak up about the best kept secret of the criminal insurgency inside Pakistan: how it stays alive through support from someone in U.S.-occupied Afghanistan.

Not a word in Washington despite the fact that Islamabad is currently at the receiving end of the worst kind of disinformation campaign mounted exclusively by the American media, a campaign based on leaks by unnamed American officials feeding worldwide confusion about Pakistan. Compare this to how U.S. diplomats react to the slightest criticism of America in the Pakistani media. In 2007, while working for PTV, I received a call in my office from a U.S. diplomat threatening to ‘report me’ to senior government officials if I did not stop ‘spreading anti-Americanism’. What about U.S. media spreading anti-Pakistanism, I asked. ‘Does Musharraf know what you’re doing?’ the diplomat retorted, using the oldest trick in intimidating anyone. All I did was to criticize U.S. blunders in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Which pales in comparison to the trash the U.S. media is producing everyday on the demise of the Pakistani state.

Recently there has been a concentration of advocates of Pakistani separatism on the U.S. think tank circuit, which is disturbing considering another little reported story: how various U.S. government departments have quietly established direct contacts with Pakistani ethnic-based parties and the kind of access we have given to American spooks inside our most troubled areas: Balochistan and NWFP.
All of which feeds on genuine Pakistani problems that we need to resolve, meaning we hold the key to stopping this mess. But the point here is: We remain America’s most abused ally. Washington is not helping where it really matters, in the propaganda war and inside Afghanistan itself. America’s apologists inside Pakistan’s power structure these days cite the massive U.S. aid plans but conveniently gloss over the humiliating strings in the fine print, including the emerging disturbing signs that freezing funding for Pakistan’s classified advanced strategic weaponization programs is part of the deal. The mechanism for the release of the new U.S. aid is yet to be defined.

Prime Minister Gilani, Foreign Minister Qureshi and Interior Minister Malik are now talking publicly about support for the terrorists – the so-called Pakistani Taliban – from Afghanistan. Why did Mr. Qureshi and Mr. Malik not mention this when both were in Washington? And why no one is taking up the venomous anti-Pakistan propaganda in the U.S. media?

A weak official stand on these two points is adding to the confusion over the real meaning of the latest military operations in our northern and western belts. Suddenly we have American apologists inside Pakistan, including some political parties, claiming vindication for the exaggerated notion of ‘Talibanization’. Unfortunately, this is a sad example of using the occasion to settle scores in the secular-religious debate.

The military operation is certainly not an exercise in semantics.

It is about Pakistan making a final push against criminal militants in the north and the western belt adjoining Afghanistan after concluding that a large portion of this insurgency consists of shady terrorists and handlers pushed inside Pakistan from a neighboring country. This insurgency is using Islam to gain sympathizers and recruit the gullible, but its tactics are classic Insurgency 101: Secretive ruthless commanders who excel in the art of slaughter designed to spread terror and force villagers to submit. They plant themselves among a civilian population in a manner where any government action results in innocent deaths that feed into the terror propaganda machine. These terrorists can’t survive without continuous supply of money and weapons. Large stacks of U.S. dollars and Pakistani rupees, lots of anti-aircraft guns and other advanced equipment, and ruthlessly trained butchers to help sustain the fight against Pakistan and Pakistanis.

This is exactly the profile of LTTE terrorists, UNITA rebels and other shadowy militias that litter the Cold War history. The emergence of these new Pakistani warlords over the past four years in Swat and the tribal belt, flush with money and weapons, recruiting the innocent using Islam and Pashtun identity, is part of a wider problem. It is not just ‘Talibanization’ as U.S. officials and some of their Pakistani apologists are claiming.

Our suave Foreign Minister can demand that our American ally cease the support that terrorists here are getting from Afghanistan. He gave this statement almost a week ago. Did anyone listen? Mr. Qureshi should instead do something to grab attention, like, for example, stop being apologetic about maintaining contacts with some members of the Afghan Taliban, like Haqqani and others. We have interests in this region. These contacts do not amount to supporting terrorism. The Americans themselves are secretly in touch with the Afghan resistance, most recently with Hekmetyar’s men. The Afghan Taliban can help Pakistan in isolating and discrediting the fake Pakistani Taliban.

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India Playing With Fire


eng_kabul_attack_5__605567g

India supports insurgent forces attacking Pakistan. “The Indians are up to their necks in supporting the Taliban against the Pakistani government in Afghanistan and Pakistan,” a former intelligence official who served in both countries said. “The same anti-Pakistani forces in Afghanistan also shooting at American soldiers are getting support from India. India should close its diplomatic establishments in Afghanistan and get the Christ out of there.”
Read the full article from Foreign Policy magazine, February 16th issue Laura Rozen
The CIA played a back-channel role in serving as an arbiter and vehicle for intelligence sharing in order to ease tensions between India and Pakistan after the Mumbai attacks, the Washington Post reports today. “In the aftermath of the Mumbai terrorist attacks, the CIA orchestrated back-channel intelligence exchanges between India and Pakistan, allowing the two former enemies to quietly share highly sensitive evidence while the Americans served as neutral arbiters, according to U.S. and foreign government sources familiar with the arrangement,” the paper writes.
Former U.S. intelligence sources concerned about the potential for the situation to escalate had brought the channel to the attention of The Cable a few weeks ago. A few days before Christmas, they said, the United States sent then Director of National Intelligence Michael McConnell and veteran CIA analyst Charlie Allen, who at the time was a top DHS intelligence official, to India. Allen and McConnell were there to talk about Mumbai. Both have since retired and could not be immediately reached.
Also on the trip to India, another U.S. government official said on condition of anonymity, was Michael Leiter, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center. “It was a quick in and out trip,” the US official said, of the previously undisclosed visit of the three intelligence officials to India. “They got in on a Sunday [Dec. 21], and were out on Tuesday morning,” Dec. 23. McConnell had previously visited India last June, the official said.
But the former intelligence officers said the person the United States should be sending to defuse a potential India-Pakistani conflict is Defense Secretary Robert Gates. “The only guy in this administration they are likely to listen to is Gates,” one former U.S. intelligence official said. “He’s done this twice before.” Gates, who was then deputy national security advisor for the first President Bush, was sent to “talk the Indians and Pakistanis out of war” in both 1988 and 1990, the former official, who had been among those involved in briefing Gates at the time, said.
The former official said the message Gates told India is, “If you go to war with Pakistan, you’ll win. But your industrial infrastructure will be destroyed.” And the message Gates told Pakistan is, “If you go to war with India, you’ll lose. And at the end, you will not have a country.”
“Bob Gates was the cool hand in keeping the Indians and the Pakistanis from going to war during Brass Tacks (Indian military exercise) in 1987,” another former U.S. intelligence officer said, referring to when Gates was then serving as acting Director of Central Intelligence. “It was very tense.”
“They are constantly shooting at one another along the line of control,” the first former intelligence official said. “These little skirmishes risk getting out of hand. Both [India and Pakistan] feel they are great players at brinkmanship. But in fact they are terrible at it. They lose control very quickly. They don’t know where their people are and what they are doing.”
The former intelligence official strongly supported the regional approach to Afghanistan suggested by US special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke. “Afghanistan is a classic power vacuum,” the former official said. “Neighbors see it as point of instability to guarantee their own stability or an opportunity to score points.”
While the U.S. media has frequently reported on Pakistani ties to jihadi elements launching attacks in Afghanistan, it has less often mentioned that India supports insurgent forces attacking Pakistan, the former intelligence official said. “The Indians are up to their necks in supporting the Taliban against the Pakistani government in Afghanistan and Pakistan,” the former intelligence official who served in both countries said. “The same anti-Pakistani forces in Afghanistan also shooting at American soldiers are getting support from India. India should close its diplomatic establishments in Afghanistan and get the Christ out of there.”
“None of this is ever one-sided,” he added. “That is why it was so devastating and we were so let down” when India got taken out of Holbrooke’s official brief.
Holbrooke flew to India Sunday night after visits to Pakistan and Afghanistan. “Mr. Holbrooke … said he was shocked by the problems he saw in the country [Pakistan], which he last visited a year ago,” the New York Times reports. “He said he was especially concerned that the Swat Valley, a onetime ski resort about 100 miles from Islamabad, had been seized by Taliban guerrillas, who blow up schools, assassinate police officers and beat — or behead — those who do not adhere to their strict version of Islam.” On Sunday, the paper also reports, the Taliban declared a 10 day cease-fire with Pakistani forces in Swat valley.
The Post report, sourced initially to unnamed Pakistani officials, could be interpreted as an effort by Pakistan to prevent Indian actions against the country that some U.S. military analysts predict are likely before Indian elections this spring.
“The Indians are almost certainly going to do something before [their] elections,” said AEI military analyst Thomas Donnelly. “They will strike camps in Pakistan. They are really pissed about the incompetence of the response to the [Mumbai] attacks. …. It doesn’t look like the Pakistanis are willing to or even can do anything that will satisfy the Indians. I would really be surprised if something doesn’t happen, unless that changes. They got an election coming up in March or April. It will be an interesting test for the United States.”
A spokesman for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said it would have no comment on travel taken by the DNI.
UPDATE: A Washington South Asia expert, among others, wrote to dispute the allegation made by a former U.S. intelligence official cited in the piece that India is aiding the Taliban, although he said such support may be going to other anti-Pakistan insurgent groups. “It doesn’t square with my observations/sources, even though lots of Pakistanis will say it is true,” one said. “The Indians have – by many accounts – had a longstanding connection with Baluch nationalists/separatists in Pakistan, but these are not Taliban and they aren’t active in Afghanistan fighting against US/NATO forces. So yes, India gives Pakistan grief (as Pakistan has in India), but I’ve seen no evidence that it comes from Pakistani or Afghan Taliban.
“As for the consulates, that’s a regular refrain from Pakistani government and military,” the expert added, “but there’s very little US evidence to support the claims of major Indian activity in these locations, which appear to be minor operations with rather few personnel.” The former U.S. intelligence officer who made the allegation said that U.S. policymakers do not require the U.S. government to collect intelligence on the issue.

LINK

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Who is behind TTP’s Terrorists?

Who is behind TTP’s Terrorists?

May 23, 2009

Baitullah Mehsud is rolling in dollars and has access to highly sophisticated light weaponry. He is also in possession of highly sophisticated communication equipment, or homing devices in other words. The Pakistan army has been asking the US for help in ‘taking out’ Mehsud and has on at least four different occasions provided the US with accurate information of his location over a period of twelve to twenty four after the US was informed, but he was never targeted.
Shaukat Qadir
India would be better off trying to negotiate a state of peaceful coexistence with Pakistan, rather than follow a course that is bound to be self-destructive
Finally, some American analysts have acknowledged that New Delhi is actively involved in destabilising the Pakistani province of Balochistan. They have also come to the realisation that it is also funding some of the Taliban.
Foreign Affairs, a journal published by the Council for Foreign Relations in Washington, has published this discovery, supported by the large variety of speakers at a round table conference held recently in Washington.
The speakers at the conference included Christine Fair, a senior political analyst formerly at the RAND Corporation; Stephen Cohen of the Brookings Institution; Sumit Ganguly, an Indian-born American citizen; and Ashley Tellis, the author of “India’s emerging nuclear doctrine”, published by RAND in 2001.
When Ashley asked me to comment on his work, I wrote back: “You have provided India with a nuclear doctrine that no one in India could have come up with, and have legitimised it through the RAND.”
With such participants, the conclusion is indisputable, but the US chooses to consider the evidence inconclusive. Though not when the evidence is against Pakistan!
I am prepared to believe that Pakistan, through Bangladesh, is involved in supporting insurgencies in India. The reasons are obvious: India is a far larger country, with greater resources and, in due course, is likely to outstrip Pakistan, economically and militarily, unless bled constantly.
Indian involvement to destabilise Pakistan is less easily understood, except as a tit-for-tat response, because it cannot take possession of Balochistan, and if Pakistan implodes India will face disastrous consequences.
A tit-for-tat response has its own logic and, in the wake of the Mumbai attacks, many Indian analysts, convinced of the Indian military’ inability to gain a decisive victory against Pakistan, suggested this policy.
One of them, Bharat Karnad, ex-member of the Indian national security advisory board, even sent me his article for ‘comments’. However, if the outcome of such a policy is as obviously self-defeating in the long run; perhaps India would be better off trying to negotiate a state of peaceful coexistence with Pakistan, rather than follow a course that is bound to be self-destructive.
I am a reluctant believer in conspiracy theories, but the writings of Charles Ferndale, Norman Finkelstein, Uri Avnery and Israel Shahak — not to mention Noam Chomsky — have half-convinced me that central to the Israeli Zionist — mind you, all Jews are not Zionists; Jews have their extremists, just like Muslims and Christians and Hindus have theirs — survival theory is that no regional power in its vicinity should be capable of confronting it militarily. Thus Iraq’s nuclear capability had to be destroyed, Iran prevented from getting there and, since Pakistan is already there, it must be destroyed from within. If this be so, theorists contend that the US and India are unwitting pawns in the hands of Israeli Zionists.
That would explain a number of inexplicable pieces of information. However, many of these could also result from the ineptitude of the CIA, a conclusion I strongly subscribe to, as well as policies for short-term political gains by Indian politicians. Take your pick.
The vast, silent, and irrelevant majority amongst the Mehsud tribe have no love lost for Baitullah, the undisputed Taliban leader of their tribe. I am reliably informed that he is rolling in dollars and has access to highly sophisticated light weaponry. Now he could have got these from a number of sources; India, Israel, Iran, Russia, or even the US.
I am also reliably informed that Baitullah Mehsud is in possession of highly sophisticated communication equipment and what are presumably homing devices. That narrows the field a little: Israel, the US, or Russia.
I am also, not so reliably, informed that there are strong rumours afloat that Baitullah Mehsud has been in touch with the CIA.
We know for certain that the Pakistan army has been asking the US for help in ‘taking out’ Mehsud and has on at least four different occasions provided the US with accurate information of his location over a period of twelve to twenty four after the US was informed, but he was never targeted.
We also know that US drone attacks have been more successful in the last few months and that their kill ratio of militants to innocent people has increased dramatically in favour of militants killed.
However, if my information is correct, that there are less than twenty hard-core Al Qaeda personnel present in each tribal area, not a single one of them has been successfully targeted. In fact, almost all of the militants killed in the Mehsud area were lowly soldiers, many of them Uzbeks and, according to some Mehsuds, some of those killed included those who disputed Baitullah’s leadership.
With a puzzle as disconnected as this, the dotted lines can be connected in many different ways to lead to widely divergent conclusions. I will leave it to the readers to arrive at their own conclusions. However, I will adjure them to bear in mind that the US refused to target Baitullah Mehsud on a number of occasions, despite Pakistani requests and accurate information on his location for many hours, and that no really high value target has ever been hit in the Mehsud area.
Each time a hit on a high value target has been claimed, it has been refuted within hours, sometimes days, occasionally even months later.
I leave it to you to dot the lines, but this time I am almost certain that there is a conspiracy; let each of you decide where it leads.
This article is a modified version of one originally written for the daily National. The author is a retired brigadier. He is also former vice president and founder of the Islamabad Policy Research Institute (IPRI)

Reported
pakistankakhudahafiz

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Women in Kalam Take On TTP Terrorists

Women in Kalam Take On TTP Terrorists
May 23, 2009

The Taliban visited the house of a local elder, Mehar Rafi in the Bijlee Ghar area of Kalam but, as there were no men inside the house, the women climbed to the rooftop of the house and opened fire. Five Taliban were killed at the scene.
An attempt by the Taliban to infiltrate Kalam village was repulsed in the first sign that the army’s action is encouraging residents to stand up against the militants. Kalam’s deputy mayor, Shamshad Haqqai, said that about 50 Taliban fighters tried to enter Kalam on Wednesday but that locals had fought them off.
The militants had come to the village to collect arms, ammunition and food.
Muhammadi Room, a Kalam resident, said the Taliban visited the house of a local elder, Mehar Rafi in the Bijlee Ghar area of Kalam but, as there were no men inside the house, the women climbed to the rooftop of the house and opened fire. Five Taliban were killed at the scene.
A doctor from the area, who did not want to be named, said a group of Taliban entered his clinic before taking him to a place were several fighters were injured. He said he treated the Taliban, numbering around six or seven, before being asked to leave.
Locals said the Pakistani security forces, which are involved in operation against the Taliban in Swat, had not yet reached Kalam to assist the revolt.
The army claims it has killed more than 1,000 militants and won back swathes of territory in Swat. But it faces stiff resistance and has ventured no prediction of when the Taliban will be defeated.
Authorities say the clashes have prompted about 1.9 million people to flee their homes, creating a humanitarian crisis that could sap popular support for the drive. Locals said an outflow had also started from South Waziristan amid predictions of a Swat-style operation in the stronghold of Pakistan Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud.
At a donors’ conference yesterday in Islamabad, Pakistan’s allies promised $224 million in aid for people displaced by the offensive.

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Even if I had ten sons,

Even if I had ten sons, I'd be proud of they were all sacrificed on Pakistan
  • Capt Najam's Mother
We can't even begin to realize how lucky we are to have such amazing and brave people as our brothers and sisters... اللہ اکبر

jang.com.pk/jang/may2009-daily/24-05-2009/col9.htm

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Taliban forcefully wanted to marry

Taliban forcefully wanted to marry daughters of a man lived in Swat
A Family tells how Tehreek e Taliban Pakistan forcefully married their daughters & Pakistan Army saved them. "This is a short video of a family from SWAT which tells how Zionist funded Tehreek e Taliban Pakistan forcefully married their daughters. When the father resisted, they tried to kill him and kidnap his daughters but الحمد اللہ Pakistan Army saved them and now they are in safe place."

youtube.com/watch?v=sdXBREz6N3E

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Official recounts Taliban’s doggedness in holding on to ridge

Official recounts Taliban’s doggedness in holding on to ridge
By Zahid Hussain

BAINI BABA ZIARAT: The ridge overlooking the valley afforded a spectacular view of the enchanting Swat region. It would have been unthinkable a few weeks ago that such idyllic surroundings could one day shelter a band of desperadoes.
A labyrinth of caves and underground bunkers shield the Taliban from the blitz carried out by the military.
“It was very difficult to dislodge them from that height,” said Brigadier Suba Khan, who led the assault on the strategic ridge popularly known as Baini Baba Ziarat.
After two weeks of ferocious fighting his men captured the height, 7,000 feet above sea level, on Wednesday — the military’s biggest success so far in the battle against Taliban in Malakand division.
“They fought to the last man,” said Lt-Col Mohamed Riaz, who led the final charge. Up to 150 militants were killed in the battle, described by the two military officials as the bloodiest since the government ordered the operation in Swat to reclaim territory lost to Taliban.
“Some 100 bodies are probably still buried inside one of them,” said Colonel Riaz, pointing towards one of the destroyed caves.
Baini Baba Ziarat was also used by the Taliban as a centre for training youths forcibly recruited by them. Mohamed Akhtar, a 14-year-old schoolboy, was taken to the camp five months ago to be trained as a suicide bomber.
“There were dozens of young boys in the camp,” said Akhtar, looking emaciated and frightened. Akhtar, who was rescued by the security forces, said: “At least three of my colleagues turned suicide bomber.”
After driving out militants from Matta and Khwazakhela, the two major towns of northern Swat, the forces are now pressing towards Peochar valley and Mingora town, where the militants are still entrenched. Normality is gradually returning to Khawazakhela town, a town at a critical crossroads linking Swat to other districts.
“The town is completely safe and people who fled the fighting have started returning,” said Maj-Gen Sajjad Ghani, who is leading the operating in northern Swat.
He was hopeful that residents would be able to return to Matta after two weeks. The capture of Matta, a Taliban stronghold, has enabled the army to soften up the enemy with heavy bombings in Charbagh, regarded as a bridgehead for advancing on Mingora.
Although the military has made significant gains, commanders held out little prospect for an early end to the fighting. “We cannot give any timeline for an end to fighting,” said Gen Ghani.
The main objective of the military operation was to dismantle the militants’ fighting machine and to wipe out their leadership, the general recalled.
The loss of Matta might have weakened the Taliban, but they are still putting up fierce resistance in some key areas, demonstrating their prowess to fight a prolonged war. “The hardcore militants would never surrender. We have to eliminate them,” a realistic but tough Gen Ghani warned.
Some senior militant commanders have been killed in the recent clashes, but the top leadership has come out unscathed.
Mullah Fazalullah, the firebrand whose inflammatory rhetoric has grabbed media attention, is believed to have made a number of narrow escapes. Other commanders like Shah Doran, Muslim Khan and Bin Yamin have also evaded capture so far.
According to military officials, a large number of Arabs, Afghans and Uzbeks have joined the fighting in Swat. Three Uzbek and Afghan fighters captured by the security forces were paraded before journalists recently.
Military authorities are certain the militants have a lifeline across the border in Afghanistan. The journalists were shown a letter from Mullah Omar, the supreme commander of Taliban, pledging financial and “moral support” to the Swat insurgents. Drugs and kidnapping for ransom are also believed to be a major source of funding for the insurgents.
SOURCE OF INSPIRATION: The effectiveness of the military operation has instilled confidence into non-combatants. The nation saw an inspirational example on Thursday when people of Kalam beat back militants who were trying to gain a foothold in the town. Earlier Bahrein had set the precedent.
“Such actions are helping the army,” Gen Ghani said. “The people are also coming to us with information about Taliban activities in their areas.”
Although the operation has restored a semblance of sanity to a hapless populace, it is still a long way to go before they feel so safe as to even think of returning home.

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Pakistan army battles Taliban militants

Pakistan army battles Taliban militants

Posted Sun May 24, 2009 12:19am AEST Updated Sun May 24, 2009 5:08am AEST
Pakistani security forces have entered Mingora, the Swat Valley's main city, and killed at least 17 Taliban militants as a new phase of their offensive against the militants began, the military said.
The military offensive in the Swat Valley and neighbouring districts earlier this month to stop the spread of a Taliban insurgency that had raised fears for nuclear-armed Pakistan's future.
"Street fighting has begun in Mingora," military spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas told a news conference.
He said government forces had cleared some parts of the city but fierce clashes were underway in the centre of Mingora.
The United Nations has warned of a long-term humanitarian crisis and called for massive aid for nearly 1.7 million people displaced by the Swat offensive and about 555,000 people who had been forced from their homes by earlier fighting in the region.
On Friday (local time) the United Nations launched a $US543 million "flash appeal" for the displaced.
This came after donors on Thursday promised $US224 million, including $US110 million from the United States.
About 15,000 members of the security forces are fighting between 4,000 and 5,000 militants in Swat, the military says.
Officials have warned that the militants might try to strike back, although the government has vowed to expand the offensive once it is completed in Swat.
Before Saturday's fighting, Pakistan had said more than 1,000 militants and more than 50 soldiers had been killed in the offensive.
There has been no independent confirmation of that estimate of casualties.

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Nawaz Sharif, Washington And $ 658 Million

Nawaz Sharif, Washington And $ 658 Million

The Bushes do it again, imposing restrictions on U.S. aid to Pakistan. Time to learn from our mistakes with the Americans. Mr. Sharif wasn’t careful and ended up paying to the Americans a half-billion dollars. And like the last time, look again for the ‘Indian connection.’

KARACHI, Pakistan—The Defense Bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives last week, which imposes tough conditions on American military aid to Pakistan, has revived memories of the infamous Larry Pressler.
He, of course, was the Republican senator from South Dakota who, in 1986, sponsored the notorious Pressler Amendment to the U.S. Foreign Assistance Act, under which all American military and economic aid to Pakistan was stopped in October 1990, when President George H W Bush -- Dubya's dad -- said he could no longer certify that Pakistan did not possess nuclear weapons.
That cut off all U.S. aid to Pakistan, including the delivery of 28 F-16 fighter aircraft, which were part of a larger order for 42 F-16s that Pakistan had placed on General Dynamics Corporation of the United States in 1988. The aircraft were to be paid for in installments under the U.S. 'Foreign Military Sales' program.
At the time when the Pressler ban was imposed, Pakistan had made only an initial down payment of $ 50 million for the aircraft. Had Islamabad decided not to make any more installment payments, the national exchequer would have been out-of-pocket only to the tune of that initial $ 50 million.
But the then-Nawaz Sharif government, in its infinite wisdom, chose to continue making installment payments of $ 90 million every three months, even though senior U.S. State Department officials had publicly stated on more than one occasion that, after the imposition of the Pressler ban, there was "no question" of the United States supplying any military equipment or economic aid to Pakistan.
Between February 1991 and April 1993, I wrote a series of 14 detailed investigative articles for The News, pointing out repeatedly that Pakistan would neither get the planes nor its money back and urging the government to stop further payments. The trick, in life, is to be wiser BEFORE the event, not after it.
All those warnings fell on deaf ears, however, and the Nawaz administration continued to pay the installments as and when they 'fell due' under the terms of the original agreement with General Dynamics, notwithstanding the fact that the agreement had become invalid after the Pressler ban was imposed and the U.S. government had refused to deliver the aircraft.
It was only after the Nawaz government was dismissed by then-President Ghulam Ishaq Khan on April 18, 1993, and the Balakh Sher Mazari-caretaker government took over that Ilahi Bakhsh Soomro, a member of the caretaker cabinet, wrote a letter to the U.S. manufacturer in May 1993 stating that no further installment payments would be made.
By then, however, the total amount that had been paid to the manufacturer had swelled to $ 658 million -- all thanks to the Nawaz government, though it was said at the time that an element of sleaze was also involved in the government's decision to continue with the payments, with millions of dollars of the money allegedly going 'missing' and finding its way into the pockets of Pakistani middlemen.
To add insult to injury, the U.S. government continued to bill Pakistan several million dollars a year as 'parking charges' for the 28 aircraft that were parked at a U.S. air force base in Tuscon, Arizona. And that's where they remained for more than 10 long years, with Islamabad having to shell out some $ 20 million in parking fees.
But what was our old friend Larry Pressler up to in the meantime? Well, he chaired the South Asia subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for a while in the 1980s and the 1990s, but lost his Senate seat in the 1996 mid-term congressional elections, despite receiving substantial campaign contributions from the Indian lobby in Washington as well as from Indian political action committees.
Given this lucrative Indian connection, it came as no surprise to anybody when, in January 2003, Pressler again turned up like a bad penny, this time as an advocate for the US making India an ally, in an article written by him in the Washington Times from Bangalore, India, headlined India: a natural ally.
This is how the article began: "Fast forward to November 1, 2003. The Iraq war is over. Saddam Hussein is gone (somewhere?)! We won! U.S. troops return to ticker-tape parades, the world bows to America's superpower with our citizens living in homeland peace forever after. Right? No, unfortunately, probably wrong.
"After a seemingly inevitable and necessary war with Iraq, President George W Bush may bask in victory. But Americans must also anticipate post-war chaos, as the Muslim world seethes with anti-American hatred. China and North Korea flex their muscles, the threat of terrorism increases, and countries tell U.S. citizens and businesses to stay at home.
"Post-Iraq, America will attempt to engage the Muslim world through diplomacy, but it must also send its Peace Corps volunteers, business leaders and college students with aid and assistance to placate those who hate us. More importantly, we will need to identify our friends and to stand by those countries that reflect our faith in democracy, human rights and religious freedom."
And then came the clincher -- the commercial message from Larry Pressler's sponsor, as it were. "When Mr Bush woos his closest allies in the post-Iraq war era, India should be first among them," he wrote. So now the cat was well and truly out of the bag.
To reinforce his message, Pressler added: "I write from Bangalore in southern India, where the summer sun and the outlook for the town's software companies shine equally bright -- as the ancient Silk Road linked India to the West, so the software trade links it to the United States. But these ties are not nearly close enough. The United States for too long has treated India and Pakistan as equal allies in the region, when America would be better served if it set India and China side-by-side and gave India the edge."



There was more in this fulsome pro-India vein, but you get the picture. What Pressler seemed to have overlooked, however, in his apparent eagerness to serve as a lobbyist for India was that the "ancient Silk Road" he spoke of in his article terminates in what, today, is Pakistan, not India.
Mr. Omar is a renowned Pakistani journalist. This is a slightly edited version of his original weekly column Newswatch published in the daily newspaper The News.

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Obama vows not to send people to war without cause

Obama vows not to send people to war without cause

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – President Barack Obama promised graduating midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy on Friday that, as their commander in chief, he will only send them "into harm's way when it is absolutely necessary." In his first address to military graduates, Obama also pledged to invest in the men and women who defend America's liberty, not just in the weapons they would take with them into battle against 21st century threats.
"I will only send you into harm's way when it is absolutely necessary, and with the strategy, the well-defined goals, the equipment and the support that you need to get the job done," the president told more than 1,000 graduates during a sun-splashed ceremony at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.
Obama said he has halted reductions in the Navy, is building up the Marine Corps and investing in the hardware — combat ships, submarines and fighter aircraft — they'll need to do their jobs. He promised higher pay, enhanced child care and improved support and other benefits.
"In short, we will maintain America's military dominance and keep you the finest fighting force the world has ever seen," Obama said, as more than 30,000 watched from the stands.
The president also praised the role of Navy SEALS in freeing a U.S. sea captain by killing his Somali pirate captors last month.
"The extraordinary precision and professionalism displayed that day was made possible, in no small measure, by the training, the discipline and the leadership skills that so many of those officers learned at the United States Naval Academy," Obama said in his first public comments on the matter.
Among those receiving degrees was John S. McCain IV, the son of Obama's presidential rival, Sen. John McCain, who watched from a front-row seat on the grassy field with his wife, Cindy, his mother, Roberta, and several of his children. Had the Arizona Republican, who also graduated from the academy, defeated Obama, McCain could have addressed the Class of 2009 himself.
Obama and "Jack" McCain, a fourth-generation academy graduate, shared a handshake, an embrace and a few words when the young man was called up to receive his diploma, following in the footsteps of his father, grandfather and great-grandfather.
Obama did not recognize Sen. McCain in his speech; the White House says it was out of respect for the family's wishes. But the president did say a few words about his rival for the presidency before he left the White House. He praised the senator as he signed legislation giving the Pentagon new power to curtail wasteful defense spending. McCain was a sponsor of the bill.
"Senator McCain couldn't be here today because he's making sure he has a good seat to watch his son graduate from the Naval Academy in a few hours, and that's where I'm headed as soon as I catch my ride over here," Obama said at the bill signing in the Rose Garden.
Presidents typically deliver the commencement address at one of the service academies each year. Friday's speech was the third graduation address by Obama in the past nine days. He used the previous two to tackle issues that threatened to overshadow both events.
At the University of Notre Dame last Sunday, abortion opponents protested Obama's appearance because he supports abortion rights. Obama took on the debate, telling graduates of the Roman Catholic university that people on both sides of the issue must stop demonizing one another.
At Arizona State University, where Obama spoke on May 13, the issue was the school's decision not to award him an honorary degree on grounds that he hadn't accomplished enough. Obama said he agreed, saying no one's body of work is ever complete.
On Thursday, Obama delivered a different kind of speech, one in which he sought to regain control of the emotional debate over closing the detention center for suspected terrorists in Cuba. He denounced "fear-mongering" by political opponents and insisted that maximum-security prisons on the U.S. mainland can safely house the dangerous detainees he wants transferred from Guantanamo Bay.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney countered the same day with a speech denouncing some of Obama's actions as "unwise in the extreme" and repeating his contention that the new president is endangering the country by turning aside Bush-era policies.

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Obama signs law curbing surprise credit card fees

Obama signs law curbing surprise credit card fees
President Barack Obama greets lawmakers in the Rose Garden of ...
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama warned overeager shoppers and greedy credit card companies alike on Friday to act responsibly as he signed into law a bill designed to protect debt-ridden consumers from surprise charges.
The White House staged a signing ceremony in the Rose Garden, an indication of the legislation's importance to Obama. Though opposed by many financial companies, the bill cleared Congress with broad support.
Obama made clear that he didn't champion the changes with the intention of helping those who buy more than they can afford through "reckless spending or wishful thinking."
"Some get in over their heads by not using their heads," the president said. "I want to be clear: We do not excuse or condone folks who've acted irresponsibly."
And yet, he said, for many of the millions of Americans, trying to get out of debt has been made difficult and bewildering by their credit card companies.
Nearly 80 percent of Americans have credit cards and half of those carry a balance, according to the White House. The Federal Reserve estimates the nation is some $2.5 trillion in debt, a figure that does not include home mortgages.
Obama said many people have gotten "trapped" because of the downturn in the economy that has turned family budgets on their heads. But, he said, "part of it is the practices of the credit card companies."
He criticized policies that allowed for confusing fine print; the sudden appearance of unexplained fees on bills; unannounced shifts in payment deadlines, interest charges or rate increases even when payments aren't late; and payments directed to balances with the lowest interest rates rather than the highest.
"We're here to put a change to all that," Obama said.
One part of the bill Obama did not publicly celebrate at the signing, a gun amendment. The measure by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., allows people to bring loaded guns into national parks and wildlife refuges.
The addition of the amendment to the bill — and Obama's acceptance of it — was viewed as a bitter disappointment for gun-control advocates.
They watched gun-rights supporters gain a victory from a Democratic-controlled Congress and a Democratic president that they couldn't achieve under a Republican Congress and president. Many blamed the National Rifle Association, which pushed hard for the gun law.
Democrats lawmakers and aides said they didn't have enough time to send the bill to the House-Senate conference committee — where the gun provision could have been removed without a vote — and still get the bill to Obama by the Memorial Day weekend as he requested.
The new credit card rules, which go into effect in nine months, prohibit companies from giving cards to people under 21 unless they can prove they have the means to pay the debt or a parent or guardian co-signs. A customer also will have to be more than 60 days behind on a payment before seeing a rate increase on an existing balance. Even then, the lender will be required to restore the previous, lower rate if the cardholder pays the minimum balance on time for six months.
And consumers also will have to receive 45 days' notice and an explanation before their interest rates increase.
Despite being touted as a victory for consumers, financial experts said the bill could have unintended consequences as credit card companies look for ways to make up for potential lost revenue. Those measures could include more cards with annual fees and the loss of a grace period before interest accrues, which would affect even those consumers who pay off their balance each month.
Last year, the Nilson Report estimated that more than 700 million credit cards were in circulation in the United States. That's more than two cards for every man, woman and child.
The president noted that nearly half of all Americans carry a balance on their credit cards, and that their average balance is more than $7,000.
Obama decried the "uneasy, unstable dependence" that a minority of card users have on credit.
"So we're not going to give people a free pass, and we expect consumers to live within their means and pay what they owe," Obama said. "But we also expect financial institutions to act with the same sense of responsibility that the American people aspire to in their own lives."

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Four Indian spies arrested in Lahore

Four Indian spies arrested in Lahore
The performance of Law Enforcement institution in tracking these terrorists needs to be improved as there are clear indications that Hindu Zionists cabal wants to destabilize the only Muslim state with nuclear power.
Source: The NewsLAHORE: Intelligence agencies are reported to have arrested four persons on suspicion of working for Indian spy agency Research and Analyst Wing (RAQ) during raids at different places of the provincial capital on Tuesday.According to sources, the suspected agents, residents of Sheikhupura, Nankana and Kamonke, have been identified as Khalid, Abid, Karamat and Khizar.
The sources said initial investigation revealed that the accused used to enter India from the border area of Bado Malai where Indian agents would take them to Amritsar.
They were being paid Rs.40, 000 in exchange of completing one task.
The sources further said that agencies were carrying out more raids at other places in order to apprehend their accomplices.

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Catholic Church failed to stop 'endemic' s*x abuse

Catholic Church failed to stop 'endemic' s*x abuse
Beatings and humiliation by nuns and priests were common at institutions that held up to 30,000 children, Ryan report states
Rape and sexual molestation were "endemic" in Irish Catholic church-run industrial schools and orphanages, a report revealed today.
The nine-year investigation found that Catholic priests and nuns for decades terrorised thousands of boys and girls in the Irish Republic, while government inspectors failed to stop the chronic beatings, rape and humiliation.
The high court judge Sean Ryan today unveiled the 2,600-page final report of Ireland's commission into child abuse, which drew on testimony from thousands of former inmates and officials from more than 250 church-run institutions. Police were called to the news conference amid angry scenes as victims were prevented from attending.
More than 30,000 children deemed to be petty thieves, truants or from dysfunctional families – a category that often included unmarried mothers – were sent to Ireland's austere network of industrial schools, reformatories, orphanages and hostels from the 1930s until the last facilities shut in the 1990s.
The findings prompted the new Archbishop of Westminster, the Most Rev Vincent Nichols, to say that it took "courage" for those clergy involved in child sex abuse to confront their actions. In an interview to be broadcast tonight on ITV News at Ten, he said: "I think of those in religious orders and some of the clergy in Dublin who have to face these facts from their past which instinctively and quite naturally they'd rather not look at. That takes courage, and also we shouldn't forget that this account today will also overshadow all of the good that they also did."
The Irish Survivors of Child Abuse (Isoca), an organisation set up to help victims, condemned the newly appointed head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales for his remarks.
"Rubbish is too kind of word for what the archbishop has said. I believe I have heard this kind of twaddle uttered by politicians in Ireland like Bertie Ahern, the former prime minister. It is the verbiage of un-reason and it leaves me cold. What the Archbishop really has to do is take a long hard look at the character and nature of the people he is talking about and ask himself if they are capable of being good," said Patrick Walsh.
The report found that molestation and rape were "endemic" in boys' facilities, chiefly run by the Christian Brothers order, and supervisors pursued policies that increased the danger. Girls supervised by orders of nuns, chiefly the Sisters of Mercy, suffered much less sexual abuse but instead endured frequent assaults and humiliation designed to make them feel worthless.
"In some schools a high level of ritualised beating was routine ... Girls were struck with implements designed to maximise pain and were struck on all parts of the body," the report said. "Personal and family denigration was widespread."
The report concluded that when confronted with evidence of sex abuse, religious authorities responded by transferring offenders to another location, where in many instances they were free to abuse again.
"There was evidence that such men took up teaching positions sometimes within days of receiving dispensations because of serious allegations or admissions of sexual abuse," the report said. "The safety of children in general was not a consideration."
The Catholic church had been steeling itself for the report, which was repeatedly delayed by church lawsuits, missing documentation and alleged government obstruction.
The Christian Brothers delayed the investigation for more than a year with a lawsuit that successfully defended their members' right to anonymity in all references in the report, even in cases in which individual Christian Brothers had been convicted of sexual and physical attacks on children.
The church had already been under fire over the sexual misbehaviour of several priests in various Irish parishes. The commission's experts have sought to produce a comprehensive portrait of sexual, physical and emotional damage inflicted on the child victims. The thousands of survivors said they had no safe way to tell their stories until the investigation began because much of Irish Catholic society regarded them as liars.
Isoca today said it was now up to the Vatican to investigate its religious orders in the republic.
John Kelly, the Isoca co-ordinator in Dublin, said: "Now that the Ryan [Laffoy] commission is finished, we call upon ... Pope Benedict XVI to convene a special consistory court to fully investigate the activities of the Catholic religious orders in Ireland.
"Amongst other things, such a court could establish the whereabouts of Irish state assets that were misappropriated over many years by the religious orders and make restitution to the Irish state exchequer."
During the commission's investigations, oral evidence was collected from more than 1,000 people, mainly aged from their 50s to 70s.
Several hundred travelled back to Ireland from the US and Australia to describe their childhood of terror and intimidation.
One victim, John Walsh, of Isoca, called the report a hatchet job that left open wounds gaping. "The little comfort we have is the knowledge that it vindicated the victims who were raped and sexually abused," he said.
"I'm very angry, very bitter, and feel cheated and deceived. I would have never opened my wounds if I'd known this was going to be the end result. It has devastated me and will devastate most victims because there is no criminal proceedings and no accountability whatsoever."
The commission's original judge, Mary Laffoy, resigned from her post in 2003 over claims that the Irish department of education – which was in charge of inspecting the orphanages and industrial schools – was refusing to hand over documents to her.

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