Thursday, May 5, 2011

[Bahujan-forum] Indian Jubilation at Pakistan's Discomfiture

[Bahujan-forum] Indian Jubilation at Pakistan's Discomfiture

We're experiencing a virtual rerun of what had happened in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.

A section of Indians went jubilant that now Pakistan's day of reckoning has come. (Now Pakistan will be bombed to the stone age (to use the picturesque phrase used by Richard Armitage in his conversation with Pervez Musharraf) by the US, of course! (India is too weak to do that.))
But Musharraf disappointed them, and in a very big way.
Pakistan became a close ally in the "war on terror". (It has reportedly received around 20 billion US $ in various aids since then.)

Even this time, things are not going to be too different. (Though it won't be nearly as dramatic.)
Pakistan's value as a strategic ally from the US point of view still remains.
And even if these fools don't understand, the Obama administration realises the consequences of allowing Pakistan to "fail".

Reproduced below are two news items as a reality check followed by the "jubilant" piece.

Sukla

I/III.

US official informed MEA of killing

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


New Delhi: The chill in the India-US relationship has already set in. Just before US president Barack Obama went on air to announce the death of Osama bin Laden, he is reported to have briefed some key world leaders. Not Manmohan Singh. 
    Instead, a senior official in the Obama administration called MEA officials early morning to inform 

them of the impending announcement. 

    India-US ties have gone into a fresh trough after India removed American fighter jets from the reckoning in the $10 billion deal, which Washington thought would symbolize bilateral transformation. After the initial shock of rejection, adding insult to injury, it was revealed that India had not even bothered to inform Washington of its impending decision in advance. 
    Analysts predict that the US will probably cool off on India's UN Security Council aspirations. 


II.

Red faces in IAF over snag in Antony's copter

Rajat Pandit, TNN | May 5, 2011, 05.19am IST

NEW DELHI: It could have proved much worse but defence minister A K Antony was fortunate enough to escape with just a mild sunstroke. Two Mi-17 helicopters deployed to ferry Antony and his high-level entourage to forward areas in Rajasthan developed technical snags, one after the other, on Monday. 

Already grappling with a resurgent crash rate, with close to 50 fighter and helicopter accidents being recorded just since 2007, the fact that technical problems can dog even VVIP flights has come as a major embarrassment to IAF. 
"Fortunately, the rotor and power-pack problems took place while the helicopters were on the ground. If they had occurred in the air, it would have been curtains for the passengers...helicopters, after all, drop like stones," said a source. 

IAF, however, tried to downplay the episode, holding that there was "no need to order a full-scale inquiry" since they were "just some minor technical problems in starting the helicopters". Added another officer. "Sometimes in hot weather, the battery does not give optimal power... it does not mean there is something wrong with the helicopter." 
The Antony episode, however, comes in the backdrop of a spate in helicopter crashes around the country, including the one which killed Arunachal Pradesh CM Dorjee Khandu. Incidentally, Antony's entourage included Army chief General V K Singh and defence secretary Pradeep Kumar, among others. 

The two main reasons for crashes in IAF, both for fighters and helicopters, are attributed to "human errors" and "technical defects". In other words, "inadequate" training to pilots, ageing machines, shoddy maintenance practices and lack of adequate number of spares all come together to form an explosive mix. Just last year, IAF recorded a dozen crashes, which killed five pilots, 11 military personnel and four civilians. 

Sources said while the flight of the two Mi-17s from Jaisalmer to Tanot went off fine, the problems began on the way back. First, one of the helicopters developed the technical snag, leaving the "less important" among the passengers to take to the road back to Jaisalmer. 

Then, the second Mi-17, which was supposed to take Antony and the other VVIPs to the airport from the Jaisalmer military station also refused to start. This time, Antony and the others had no recourse but to travel by cars to the airport to take the plane back to New Delhi

Antony did not attend office on Wednesday as he was "slightly indisposed" after his hectic Rajasthan tour, which took place in blistering heat. The 71-year-old minister also has to conserve his energy for his three-day visit to Saudi Arabia and Qatar beginning Saturday.

III.

 

Pakistan 'involved or incompetent', says furious US

 

Washington/New Delhi:  Two days after Osama bin Laden's dramatic killing, the US Wednesday described its ties with Islamabad as 'complicated' with the CIA chief saying that Pakistan was either 'involved or incompetent' in la'affaire Osama.

In a stinging attack, CIA director Leon Panetta told US lawmakers that Washington was trying to get to the bottom of Pakistan's 'troubling' role in their professed ignorance about the whereabouts of the Al Qaeda chief.

In a closed door briefing for House members Tuesday, Panetta said that 'either they were involved or incompetent. Neither place is a good place to be', CNN reported.

Senators were unrelenting in their attack on Pakistan, a country whose leaders have repeatedly claimed that Osama, the world's most wanted terror leader, was either dead or hiding in Afghanistan.

'It had everything except a neon sign sticking out there,' Democratic Senator Frank Lautenberg told CNN, referring to spacious and high-walled mansion in Pakistan's Abbottabad city where US special forces shot dead Osama after a 40-minute gun battle Sunday night.

Republican Allen West echoed the angry mood in the Congress.

'There is no way people in the ISI (Pakistan's intelligence agency) and military did not know that Osama has been living there for quite some time,' said West, who has served in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

In his detailed briefing on how Osama was trapped and killed, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney spoke approvingly of Pakistan's cooperation on the war on terror but admitted that US-Pakistani ties were 'complicated'.

'Pakistan is a partner - a key partner - in the fight against Al Qaeda and terrorism,' he said. 'It's a complicated relationship. There's no question. And we do have our differences.'

In India, US envoy Timothy J. Roemer kept up the pressure.

'We are certainly going to see Capitol Hill take a very hard look at the assistance that we give (to Pakistan),' he told reporters on the sidelines of an event in New Delhi.

Underlining that Pakistan needed to do more against terrorists, Roemer said it had to be seen whether Islamabad was using the funds given by the US in a 'proper way'.

'Congress is going to engage in I think two very fundamentally important tasks in the weeks ahead. One will be as we share or sell certain military equipment to Pakistan, is that being used in the proper way to take on counter terrorism efforts.'

While conceding that Pakistan had taken on Al Qaeda, he said it wasn't, however, doing enough against terrorists ranged against India.

'Are they doing enough on Lashkar-e-Taiba? Are they doing enough on Mumbai trials? Are they doing enough on Hafiz Saeed and (Zakiur Rehman) Lakhvi? No, they need to do more.'

He said Pakistan should also show results on trying the masterminds of the Mumbai massacre of November 2008.

'They need to show progress and results on the Mumbai trials. That Mumbai attack on 26/11 killed scores of Indians, six Americans, and the US wants to see progress and results and justice.'

Roemer said Osama's discovery in Pakistan would also be taken up.

'The second part of this will be in respect to bin Laden being discovered outside of Islamabad.

'Congress will ask tough questions and go to the bottom. How do we more effectively use that aid, I am sure Pakistan is helping us not only degrade Al Qaeda, but go after groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba,' he said.

In Pakistan, there were more voices of disbelief that American's enemy number 1 was holed up near a Pakistani military academy in Abbottabad even as Islamabad claimed to be chasing the Al Qaeda leadership.

Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) chief Altaf Hussain demanded an apology from the Pakistani government and intelligence agencies for their lapse on allowing Osama to hide deep inside Pakistan.

Dawn newspaper echoed the national despair: 'Right under our military`s nose was found Osama ... living in relative comfort in a compound with stringent security that somehow went unnoticed.

'Add to this the way he was killed, and embarrassment turns into deep shame.'

A Canadian newspaper meanwhile reported that the Pakistan-backed Hizbul Mujahideen, which seeks to end Indian rule in Jammu and Kashmir, owned the Abbottabad mansion where Osama was killed.

It added the HM, as the group is widely known, had the backing of the Pakistani military.

The report added that Hizbul's links to Al Qaeda would 'deepen Pakistan's embarrassment' over Osama's death.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/

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