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The greatest nation in the world?

The greatest nation in the world?

Dr. Niaz Murtaza

Which is the greatest nation in the world? A distinguished writer in ET bestowed this title on the USA arguing that the election of Obama reflects an absence of prejudice in America since he is a descendent of black slaves. Actually, Obama is neither a slave descendant nor fully black. However, there are other more fundamental issues with this argument. First, does Obama’s election really reflect an absence of racial discrimination in America? Second, is the absence of discrimination sufficient criteria to coronate a country as the greatest nation globally? Finally, is it even meaningful to speak of a greatest nation?

 

Obama’s election was a seminal event for America given that all but one of its 43 earlier Presidents had been white protestant males. The exception, Kennedy, was a white catholic male! Even though Obama is a non-typical black, his election has partially healed the racial scar which afflicts American society because of slavery and segregation. However, it would be naïve to suggest that there is consequently no discrimination against blacks in America. Such discrimination is institutionalized in many forms, the most devastating of which is the manner in which American basic public education, the bedrock of human advancement, is financed.

 

Unlike most developed countries, large metropolitan areas in America consist of dozens of small cities, each of which finances its own elementary education systems through city-level property and sales taxes.  Since property values and sales volumes are higher per capita in richer cities, they have much better public schools than poor cities where most blacks reside. While federal grants help close this gap somewhat, there remains a huge gap in educational quality across cities. The quality of education in a city is a major factor when Americans make residential choices. Stuck in low-income school districts, black children do not have the same access to quality education as white children. Such educational disparities do not exist in most developed countries. Racial stratification also continues to occur in employment, housing, lending, and government in America, certainly less so than in countries like Pakistan and India but more so than in other developed countries which represent a better comparison base for a country like America.

 Secondly, should absence of discrimination be the sole criteria for judging the greatness of a nation and if not what should it be? In comparing countries, one must consider a broad range of factors instead of getting fixated on only one measure, such as discrimination. Some people may measure national greatness by scientific, economic military prowess. For me, all these represent intermediate variables and the real criterion is actual final human outcomes. Such outcomes include the quality of life opportunities that a country provides to its own citizens as well as how it treats people in other societies. They are reflected in measures like the crime, poverty, economic inequality, life satisfaction, environmental pollution, gender equity, health and educational levels in a country. While America obviously does much better than countries like Pakistan and India in terms of the opportunities it provides its own citizens, it clearly lags behind Scandinavian countries, especially Sweden, along almost all these measures. Sweden also compares favorably and even does better than the USA on many intermediate variables, like technological innovation, economic competitiveness, economic growth, inflation, budget and trade deficits and unemployment. Finally, Sweden also does not have the checkered record that countries like the USA, Japan, Germany, UK, and France have had over the last hundred years in terms of mistreating other nations. Nor have Sweden and other Scandinavian countries faced the same economic turmoil recently as America and many other European countries. Thus, personally, I would rate Sweden and other Scandinavian countries higher than the USA as national role models. While these countries have higher tax rates than America, their superior social and economic performance validates their higher tax policies.

 

So, does this make Sweden the greatest nation in the world? Personally, I find such titles analytically meaningless and melodramatic. I would just present Scandinavian countries as better role models than America, India or Pakistan for other countries to study.

 

The writer is a political economist at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Anti-Pakistani Racism is Alive and Flourishing in the British Government Immigration Policy

The British hate the Pakistanis for two reasons:

 

  1. The first Pakistani immigrants to Britain from 1958-1992 were from illiterate, rural, or urban, student background.  They were light years apart from the British culture and mores.  They lived in tenements and shared one room and rotating sleeping cots for several people. they worked at menial jobs from sweepers at heathrow to laborers in textile mills of Manchester and Leeds. Due to incipient racism in Britain, they were confin ed to de facto ghettos, or little “Mirpurs,”Gujar Khans, “mahjahs,” and Kashmiris of Mochi Darwaza, Bhatti Gate, shahi Mohalla, Mozang, Bahadurabad, Teen hatti, Laloo Khet, Lyari, Mardan, Peshawar, Campbellpur, Kohat, Hyderabad, Machar Kalony, Gowalmandis, Sheikhupuras, and Dhan-mandis.  Here, they re-created their “parchoon-wallahs,””hakim-jees,””halwais,””neem homeopaths,” Deher Eient ki Majad with Jahil-i-Mutalaq “Imams,” who knew Islam as much as they knew Einsteins Theory of Relativity or Higgs Boson, and “dhabas.” This was a culture shock to the British, were used to their rolling meadows, country lanes, back-yard gardens, hedgerows, rose gardens, church suppers, choirs, country cricket, private clubs, village pubs, country squires, village parsons.  There cuisines to toad-in-the hole, Yorkshire pudding, and Steak and Kidney pie, was replaced with qorma, bengali fish, tikka kebab, biryani, chicken masala, ad infinitum. Although, all these changes were not solely acts of Pakistanis, but more so of Indians, Bengalis, and West Indians of East Indian backgrounds, Indians kicked-out of Kenya. Guyanese, Goans, Sri Lankans and Uganda by likes of Idi Amin, and even Hindus from Malayasia, Singapore  and other S.E.Asian.
  2. The second reason, believe it or not is well hidden. It is based on hatred of Islam and Muslims  (to British, the Saracens) since the time of crusades. During those times, the monarchs of England and sent Knight Templars to free the Jerusalem from the “infidels,” a name given to Muslims.The crusades saw the emergence of religious knights including the Knights Templar, the Teutonic knights and the Hospitallers. The members of the orders of Religious knights were both monks and knights; that is, to the monastic vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience they added a fourth vow, which bound them to protect pilgrims and fight the infidels (1).
These two factors are the core reasons for British racism against Pakistan and Pakistanis. A lesser known reason was based on the pride of Muslims.  Muslims bow to no monarch except to the Ultimate Monarch, The Almighty Allah.  This pride was displayed by Quaid-i-Azam , Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who unlike Gandhi, did not “wash,” the testicles of British Viceroy.  The wily Gandhi, was obseqious to the British Viceroy. His lieutenant, Nehru seduced the wife of Mountbatten, bedded her several times, and during sexual interludes, brain-washed, the sex-starved woman to influence her husband to tilt towards Gandhis demand for a larger share of land. So, the tandem team of Gandhi and Nehru worked the simplistic but arrogant British Mountbatten to their advantage.
The hordes of Pakistanis who immigrated to the United Kingdom during the British “open-door,” policy have now created a problems for themselves. Their progeny of second to fourth and fifth generation have been put in a tough and inextricable situation.  These brilliant citizens of Britain are stranded on a bridge to nowhere. They consider themselves British, but, their parents still live in a shell, which lies in one of the provinces of Pakistan or Azad Kashmir. this creates a feeling of ambivalence, which either leads to total rebellion or a reversion to their parents faith and culture. Sometimes, the lack of understanding of their parents faith, Islam. leads to horrendous consequences. Inspite of the propaganda against Pakistan, the people of Pakistan are moderate to the core. In a binomial curve one can easily predict, the median lies towards, a true interpretation of Islam, the Deen (Islam is not a religion) of Peace, Love, and Harmony, among all mankind, people, places, and things. In short, all Allah’s Creation.

 

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Excuses for Assassination Secrecy

Published on Thursday, July 12, 2012 by Salon.com

Excuses for Assassination Secrecy

A high-level defender of Obama’s drone secrecy says “it’s not to cover up wrongdoing.” Let’s see if that’s credible

 

In response to his widely discussed Esquire article entitled “The Lethal Presidency of Barack Obama,” Tom Junod received a telephone call from someone he describes as “a person with intimate knowledge of the executive counter-terrorism policies of the Obama administration.” This unnamed person called Junod specifically to defend the administration’s refusal to provide any minimal transparency or even acknowledgment about these policies, even when drone attacks ordered by the President kill innocent American teenagers such as 16-year-old Abdulrahman Awlaki. Junod summarizes the defense he was given by this source as follows:President Obama has taken an extreme view of executive authority and cloaked it in veils of secrecy. (AP/Carolyn Kaster)

“You seem to think that more transparency would help rectify some of the moral problems,” he said, and then told me that “the political people in the administration, including the president himself,” would probably agree with me.

And then he proceeded toexplain why transparency was a goal difficult , if not impossible, to achieve, even when a simple acknowledgment would go a long way toward expiating the sin of killing an innocent American teenager in the course of a counterterrorism strike.

State secrecy, the man on the phone said, exists for a reason, and it’s generally not the reason that the Glenn Greenwalds of the world think it is — it’s not to cover up wrongdoing. It’s to protect two essential things: the sources and methods of the intelligence community, and something called “the requirement of non-acknowledgement”. . . .

Secrecy isn’t always the main driver here. Sometimes diplomacy is. “The requirement of non-acknowledgement” is. It’s very common for cooperation and consent to be drawn from other countries only if you don’t acknowledge something. They say, You can do this, but you can never acknowledge that you’re involved.

So there are deals — deals that have already been made. And part of the deal is that you don’t acknowledge the deal. If you do, then the country you made the deal with is obligated to do react [sic], because now there’s been a violation of sovereignty. The problem is that there are a lot of these kinds of deals, because they are so easy to make. They’re a little like allowing a source to go off the record in journalism. If the source asks, Can I go off the record?, you’ll say, Of course you can, because you want the source to talk. It’s the same in statecraft. You make the deal because you want there to be a deal.

It might sound trivial, he said. It might sound as though large principles are being sacrificed to the sensitivities of small nations. But everyone in the political branches considers non-acknowledgement to be the lifeblood of diplomacy.

The source’s first justification for total secrecy even when it involves extrajudicial killing of citizens — we need to protect sources and methods – is easily dispensed with, and Junod does so easily:

But nobody’s asking the Administration to reveal sources and methods here, I said. Nobody’s asking for anything but the ability to hold the administration accountable when it kills an American citizen, in a manner that is absent of due process, especially when the killing is apparently a mistake, as it was in the case of Abdulrahman al-Awlaki. Surely, there’s a way to challenge the inevitable sense of license that attends an administration carrying out killings in secret without revealing intelligence sources and methods.

Of course, the right way to provide “accountability” when the President wants to execute a citizen is for him to have to show evidence to a court that the execution is warranted — at the very least, to obtain an indictment — and have a court provide oversight (exactly the way progressives spent the entire Bush years vehemently demanding be done for mere eavesdropping and detention, let alone assassinations). But the Obama administrationvehemently resists any such due process, so at the very least, some sort of post-assassination accountability (did you mean to kill this person? why? what’s the evidence that it was justified?) is vital, for obvious reasons. But, as the defender’s justifications make clear, the administration just as vehemently resists even this woefully inadequate post hocform of accountability.

The other profferred justification — non-acknowledgment is necessary to preserve our diplomatic deals that let us bomb people in other countries – is a bit more subtle, but even more pernicious. Junod makes the crucial point in response:

The issues we are facing when we consider the implications of the Lethal Presidency have always seemed to me the largest possibleThe power that the administration has claimed and strenuously defended — the power to identify and kill the nation’s enemies, from a remove of secrecy — is the power of kings, and it’s one of the powers the elemental principle of due process exists to address.

And so, yes, I have to admit that this one man’s informed explanation sounded trivial. I have to admit that it sounded as if large principles are being sacrificed not only to small nations but also to smaller principles. I have to admit that it sounded antique and arcane, as though the administration had decided to put aside the Constitution because France had decided to revoke the Edict of Nantes.

That point is, by itself, dispositive of the source’s proferred justifications, in my view. But several others are worth making:

First, this defense of total secrecy is intellectually corrupted because it only counts one side of the equation. Specifically, this “non-acknowledgment” argument recognizes the ostensible value that comes from executing the policy in question (namely, executing people whom President Obama decides should be dead), while completely ignoring the costs of the policy. The costs should be clear to any rational person.

Those costs come from vesting in the President what is literally the most extremist power a political ruler can seize, the true hallmark of authortarianism: namely, the power to order even his own citizens executed without a whiff of due process or accountability and in total secrecy — far from any battlefield. One would have to view the threat of Terrorism as some sort of truly existential menace on par with, say, the Civil War — which was the standard neocon myth to justify whatever Bush/Cheney did — in order to view the risks of vesting this secret, unaccountable assassination power in one political official as worthwhile.

When Al Gore delivered his major speech on the Washington Mall in 2006 denouncing the unrestrained Bush/Cheney assault on core American values, he asked: “If the president has the inherent authority to eavesdrop on American citizens without a warrant, imprison American citizens on his own declaration, kidnap and torture, then what can’t he do?” That’s exactly my question here for the far more extreme power claimed by Obama: if you believe the President should have the power to order people, including U.S. citizens, executed with no due process and not even any checks or transparency, what power do you believe he shouldn’t have? It’s impossible to see what answer someone could offer after defending this level of secret power.

Second, this “no-acknowledgment” excuse is tantamount to a license to lie to the citizenry about the most vital of all matters: war. When WikiLeaks released the diplomatic cables relating to Yemen, those cables revealed that Yemen’s then-President, the U.S.-supported Ali Abdullah Saleh, boasted to American diplomats that he would continue to lie publicly about who was perpetrating U.S. air attacks on Yemeni soil (“‘We’ll continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours,’ Saleh said, prompting Deputy Prime Minister Alimi to joke that he had just ‘lied’ by telling Parliament that the bombs in Arhab, Abyan, and Shebwa were American-made but deployed by the [Yemini military]“).

By refusing to inform the nation that it was the U.S. which was actually launching these attacks (“no-acknowledgment”), the Obama administration was enabling these lies to mislead not only Yemenis but also the American citizenry. For instance, as we now know, on December 17, 2009, President Obama ordered an air attack — using Tomahawk cruise missiles and cluster bombs — on the village of al Majala in Yemen’s southern Abyan province; the strike ended the lives of 14 women and 21 children.

At the time, the Yemeni government outright lied about the attack, falsely claiming that it was Yemen’s air force which was responsible. The Pentagon helped bolster this misleading claim of responsibility by issuing a statement that “Yemen should be congratulated for actions against al-Qaeda.” Meanwhile, leading American media outlets, such as The New York Times, reported — falsely — that “Yemeni security forces carried out airstrikes and ground raids against suspected Qaeda hide-outs last week with what American officials described as ‘intelligence and firepower’ supplied by the United States.”

Anyone who defends this “no acknowledgment” justification is defending the right of the President to order military action in foreign countries without the knowledge of the American people, or worse, by allowing them to be actively misled about who is doing the bombing. If one finds that justifiable, then what was wrong with Nixon’s secret bombing of Cambodia and Laos, once so objectionable to American liberals that it formed the basis for the impeachment argument against him?

There are few things more dangerous in a democracy than allowing a President to wage secret wars without the knowledge of the country. I’ll permit Abraham Lincoln — not exactly a pacifistic worshipper of legalisms and restraints on Executive power — to explain why this is so, in an 1848 letter to a proponent of unrestrained presidential warmaking powers:

Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation, whenever he shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion, and you allow him to do so, whenever he may choose to say he deems it necessary for such purpose and you allow him to make war at pleasure. Study to see if you can fix any limit to his power in this respect, after you have given him so much as you propose.

If, to-day, he should choose to say he thinks it necessary to invade Canada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could you stop him? You may say to him, I see no probability of the British invading us but he will say to you be silent; I see it, if you dont.

The provision of the Constitution giving the war-making power to Congress, was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons. Kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object. This, our Convention understood to be the most oppressive of all Kingly oppressions; and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us. But your view destroys the whole matter, and places our President where kings have always stood.

Third, this “no-acknowledgment” claim cannot be sustained factually in the case of Obama’s assassination of the American teenager in Yemen, or the killing of numerous Pakistani teeangers. After substantial pressure, Attorney General Eric Holder issued a public defense of the Awlaki assassination in Yemen, and John Brennan did the same for strikes in Pakistan. Obama officials, and the President himself, have repeatedly boasted about them. So the U.S. has already acknowledged launching these attacks. Moreover, everyone now knows — in Yemen and elsewhere — that it’s the U.S. who is killing people en masse by drones, which would trigger the same “sovereignty” demands which this anonymous defender cites as what must be avoided.

So even if you agree with the “no-acknowledgment” rationale in general as an excuse to justify secrecy, it’s inapplicable here. When it comes to presidential assassinations, the only thing this secrecy achieves is to prevent discovery of bad acts and “mistakes,” and more important, to bar accountability for them on the part of Obama officials (we can’t and won’t answer for what we’ve done because it’s all too secret even to acknowledge that we did it). That, manifestly, is the purpose of this secrecy (see Wired, June 15, 2012: ”CIA Refuses to Confirm or Deny Drone Attacks Obama Brags About“).

Fourth, this anonymous Obama defender claims that “State secrecy . . . . exists for a reason, and it’s generally not the reason that the Glenn Greenwalds of the world think it is — it’s not to cover up wrongdoing.” This I find astounding: that someone would actually claim that rampant government secrecy is not designed to conceal wrongdoing.

The most basic truth of political power — and (therefore) the core precept of the American founding — is that power exercised in secret, without checks and accountability, will beinevitably abused: not sometimes or maybe abused, but inevitably, and not only when Bad People are in power, but always, even when it involves someone so deeply and profoundly magnanimous as Barack Obama (“There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty” – John Adams, Journal, 1772; ”In questions of power…let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution” – Thomas Jefferson: Kentucky Resolutions, 1798).

We know with certainty that top Obama officials such as John Brennan have blatantly liedabout killing civilians with drones (along with other key national security matters). We know with certainty that the Obama administration has re-defined “militants” to include any military-age males they kill regardless of whether they were actually doing anything wrong. We know with certainty that the U.S. Government has detained and publicly branded as Terrorists people they knew at the time were innocent. We know with certainty that Pakistani teenagers have been killed by U.S. drones shortly after attending meetings to protest civilian drone deaths. We know with certainty (despite rampant secrecy) that the Obama administration is targeting rescuers of drone victims and funeral attendees who aregrieving drone victims with follow-up drone attacks: clear war crimes. And we know with certainty that — despite being hailed for stopping torture and CIA black sites — the Obama administration continues, in secret, to maintain secret black sitesindefinite detention,rendition and even torture by proxy.

Given that record, only a religious-type faith in the Goodness of Barack Obama and his officials, or willful ignorance, or both, would permit someone to believe that this rampant secrecy has nothing to do with an attempt to conceal wrongdoing, ineptitude and even corruption. Even more so, this claim ignores a basic precept: secrecy is and always has been the linchpin of abuse of power. The more extreme the power is (ordering people assassinated), the more likely it is to be abused when exercised in secrecy and with no accountability. That’s precisely the situation that we have allowed the U.S. Government under President Obama to bring about. The two lame, factually challenged excuses offered for this secrecy regime by this unnamed defender actually do more to highlight its dangers than justify it.

Read the full article with updates at Salon.com

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The Nation, Pakistan: U.S. and Allies Foment ‘Terror’ in Balochistan with Eye on Iran

 

People in Karachi Protested Against Pro- Indian Sympathizer Dana Rohrabacher
People in Karachi Pakistan protest a U.S. Congressional resolution
introduced by Republican congressman Dana Rohrabacher, which calls
for the self-determination of Pakistan’s Balochistan Province. While the
bill has little chance of pasing, it feeds the suspicion that the U.S. is
partly to blame for growing unrest in the province.
The Nation, Pakistan

U.S. and Allies Foment ‘Terror’ in Balochistan with Eye on Iran

“One motive for American involvement is the port at Gwadar: The U.S. and its allies don’t want see Chinese access to it. Another factor is America’s desire to invade Iran: it would appear that part of its plan involves the use of Balochistan, Pakistan’s western-most province. Thus by stirring up trouble in Pakistan, the U.S. can achieve both of its larger goals: invading Iran and containing China.”
EDITORIAL
February 23, 2012
Pakistan – The Nation – 
Republican Congressman from California Dana Rohrabacher: By introducing a bill calling for the self-determination of Pakistan’s Balochistan Province, he has stoked the fears of Pakistanis and others in the region that America wants to gain geopolitical advantage by partitioning certain countries and enlarging others.
AL-JAZEERA NEWS : Balochistan: Pakistan’s other war, Jan. 4, 00:47:30
A report in this newspaper quotes a military source as saying that India, Israel and both the CIA and Xe Services, are active inside Balochistan. But despite the fact that it was Interior Minister Rehman Malik who earlier accused India of terrorist involvement there and the military has evidence of Indian meddling, the government has taken no action, even keeping silent about it.
It has become clear that foreign powers hostile to Pakistan are exploiting unease in the province to foment trouble. It is also noteworthy that while India has been hostile to Pakistan since the time it was created, and Israel doesn’t even have diplomatic relations with Pakistan, the U.S. is supposed to be Pakistan’s ally and yet is fomenting terrorist activity in Balochistan, which makes a U.S. Congressional resolution calling for Baloch self-determination all the more suspicious. One motive for American involvement is the port at Gwadar: The U.S. and its allies don’t want see Chinese access to it. Another factor is America’s desire to invade Iran: it would appear that part of its plan involves the use of Balochistan, Pakistan’s western-most province. Thus by stirring up trouble in Pakistan, the U.S. can achieve both of its larger goals: invading Iran and containing China. And of course Israel also has a grudge against the Iranian regime, which regularly speaks out against it.
[Pak Tribune, Pakistan]
SEE ALSO ON THIS:
The Frontier Post, Pakistan: America’s Secret War on Iran in Balochistan
Le Monde, France: Muslim Brotherhood is the Least of America’s Problems
Al Ahram, Egypt: Raids on U.S. NGOs Reveal Scheme to ‘Partition’ Egypt
El Akhbar, Egypt: ‘Maps’ Cited in Arrest of Foreign NGO Workers
The Nation, Pakistan: Downing American Drones: Iran Shows Pakistan the Way
The Nation, Pakistan: Time for Pakistan to Down America’s ‘Bionic Dragons’
The Nation, Pakistan: Cost of Friendship with America is Far Too High
The Nation, Pakistan: ‘Sorry’ Won’t Wash Away NATO Crimes in Pakistan
The Daily Jang, Pakistan: Is Washington Behind Pakistan’s ‘Memogate’?
The Frontier Post, Pakistan: U.S. Withdrawal Plans ‘Spell Doom’ for Pakistan

Those attempting to restore the [Pakistan] supply lines to NATO which were suspended after a U.S. helicopter gunship attack on a Pakistani border check post killed 26 soldiers, should take note of both overt and covert U.S. interference in Balochistan and stop seeking to curry favor with Washington. The Balochistan issue shouldn’t be dismissed by simply blaming local agencies. This simplistic explanation fails to account for the outside interference now taking place, and serves the interests of the responsible outside powers, providing a cover for them to carry out their nefarious activities.

Posted by WORLDMEETS.US
The government must pay more attention to Balochistan and not rely on cosmetic measures. It should be prepared to bring all stakeholders together in an attempt to find a solution. The situation is grave. Pakistan’s regional enemy [India] is involved in this, and now other interests have intruded.
If the sense of deprivation in Balochistan was removed by giving people there a real share in the benefit from their own resources, foreign powers would have to look elsewhere to stir the pot. It mustn’t be forgotten that America, India and Israel are just stoking a fire that was already lit, and which was sparked by the rulers in Islamabad. It should also be remembered that putting out that fire is the government’s job.

 

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US gives 50 Million dollar to Pakistani Media to Promote Break-up of Balochistan

 

What the US is doing in Balochistan

The most effective way to defeat a conspiracy is to expose it. The people should know what is the reality.

Most of our media talks about “the rights of Balochistan,” “deprivation of Balochistan,” “use of force against the people,” “the missing of innocent persons,” etc. Some channels, newspapers and media persons harp on these themes because America pays them to do it. They interview the terrorist leaders as if they are heroes. Some media people, with herd mentality, also follow them but without any monetary benefit. (We already know about $50 million allocated for use on our media but there is much more. Then there are paid-for daily programs of VOA.)

It was not without reason that all members of the Balochistan Assembly were taken in the cabinet. It is also not without reason that there is so much noise about “missing persons,” who are actually terrorists or their supporters. Provincial Government does not take any action against them and America wants them to be free again to resume their activities. FC (Frontier Constabulary) is portrayed as a villain, while it is the only force fighting the enemies of the country.

The following article, US Attempting to Trigger Color Revolution in Pakistan, by Tony Cartalucci, April 13, 2012, will help you understand what the US plans are how it is implementing them.

 
محمّد عبد الحمید
مصنف، "غربت  کیسے مٹ سکتی ہے" (کلاسک پبلشر، لاہور)
References
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