I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&#1722

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Jee aap jo hain fikar karne k liya ..

Uncle, Pakistan is getting out of control. We have mountain of problems and instead of finding solutions we are creating more. The biggest share for these problems are extremists of every kind which are going to make existence of Pakistan quite impossible. Just wait, soon we will have attacks on nuclear installations. The bomb is a liability for us, instead of providing protection we are protecting it.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Kids were born lived and shot unarmed in the park....trained to blew up themselves.....sent to another country to kill innocent civilians on a busy city streets and hospital lobbies.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Good article on the topic

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

You can also enjoy this if you can read Urdu.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

we don't need more trolls, we have more than enough for our supplies.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

:hehe:

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

I somewhat agree with writer here.. So many recent events seem to be the “begining of the end”!!

http://blogs.reuters.com/pakistan/2011/06/11/a-slow-burning-revolution-in-pakistan/

                                                   **A slow-burning revolution in Pakistan**

      Jun 11, 2011 11:01 EDT        
                                                                                                                            
                                         
[http://blogs.reuters.com/pakistan/files/2011/06/lahore-mosque.jpg](http://blogs.reuters.com/pakistan/files/2011/06/lahore-mosque.jpg)Rarely  does the perennial struggle for power between civilian and military  authority punch to the surface quite so openly in Pakistan, yet thanks  to the increasing use of the internet, it is now being played out in  public across websites, Twitter, blogs and online newspapers. It is a  struggle that is every bit as important as those taking place in the  Middle East,  and like those of the Arab spring, one that has the  potential to tip the country into even greater instability or steer it  onto firmer ground.

The renewed and very public debate started with the May 2 raid by U.S. forces which found and killed Osama bin Laden in the garrison town of Abbottabad. That unleashed an unprecedented wave of criticism against the military — both for failing to find the al Qaeda leader, and for apparently failing to detect and react to a U.S. raid in the heart of the country. The anger rose after militants attacked a naval air base in Karachi, and swelled further when the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency was accused of beating to death Pakistani journalist Saleem Shahzad – an allegation it denied.
With one of its own silenced – a man well-liked for his affability and courtesy – the media raised its voice.
Colunnist Ejaz Haider published an open letter to ISI head Lieutenant-General Shuja Pasha challenging the ISI to prove it was not involved with Shahzad’s death and insisting it respect the supremacy of civilian authority. Institutions of state, he wrote, ”are all accountable through two levels of agency. The first and primary level of agency is granted by the people through elections to their representatives; the second, a much more restrictive level of agency, is accorded by the peoples’ representatives to bureaucratic institutions, including the military and its intelligence agencies. You, sir, are therefore a servant twice over, as are all your officers and other personnel. You are answerable to our representatives and those representatives are answerable to us.”
Najam Sethi, a doyen of Pakistani journalism, wrote that ”the indignant argument that any criticism of the military is ‘unpatriotic’ or serves the interests of the ‘ enemy’ doesn’t wash any more. Indeed, the term ‘establishment’, which was hitherto used in the media to refer obliquely to the military so as not to offend and incur its wrath, is rapidly going out of fashion, and the army and navy and air force are being referred to as army, navy and air force, which is, of course, exactly what they are and have always been.”
“The Pakistan military should see the writing on the wall. It must hunker down and become subservient to civilian rule and persuasion,” he said.
“What we saw and read in the media in May has never happened before,” wrote Cyril Almeida at Dawn newspaper. Using archive material on Dawn’s reports on the Pakistan Army’s defeat by India in the 1971 war, he compared the criticism levelled at the military now with the very muted coverage of its humiliating surrender in Dhaka on December 16, 1971.
“The furious words in the media last month were not unprecedented since 1971. They were unprecedented. Period,” he wrote.
“The banner headline in this newspaper of record on Dec 17, 1971? ‘War till victory’. And below it, a small two-column headline, ‘Fighting ends in East Wing’. The accompanying story began: ‘Latest reports indicate that following an arrangement between the local commanders of India and Pakistan in the Eastern theatre, fighting has ceased in East Pakistan and Indian troops have entered Dacca.’
The army has replied with some very public words of its own. In an extraordinarily lengthy statement issued after army chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani met his Corps Commanders, it appealed to the nation to rally behind it and unite to fight terrorism. Kayani almost never speaks in public — when his views are reported in such detail and at such length, it suggests that something important has already changed in Pakistan.
The statement condemned those it said were deliberately trying to malign the armed forces. ”This is an effort to drive a wedge between the Army, different organs of the State and more seriously, the people of Pakistan whose support the Army has always considered vital for its operations against terrorists,” it said.
“COAS (Chief of Army Staff General Kayani) noted that in order to confront the present challenges, it is critical to stand united as a nation. Any effort to create divisions between important institutions of the country is not in our national interest. The participants agreed that all of us should take cognizance of this unfortunate trend and put an end to it.”
The appeal for unity is important. Without national unity, the army says it cannot rally the public support needed to fight Islamist militants, including in military campaigns against its own people in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. It also becomes more vulnerable to disquiet within the ranks about Pakistan’s military strategy and its much-disliked and fragile alliance with the United States.
And to the army’s defenders, it is the only effective national institution, holding together the country while a weak civilian government struggles to master the basics of governance. According to this argument, a sapping of support for the army would also rob the country of its ultimate safety net, based on a long-held view that if the worst comes to the worst, the military can always step in to restore order.
Yet to the army’s critics, it is the centralising and authoritarian tendencies of the military which have created many of Pakistan’s problems in the first place. Leave aside its past tendencies to use militant proxies (that’s a subject for a different post). Without the softening grey areas of democracy and decentralisation which create the space to mediate differences between the diverse ethnic groups in Pakistan, many have turned to violence — from Baluch separatists to Pashtun tribesman. Power has been centralised in Punjab, the traditional recruiting ground of the Pakistan Army and the country’s biggest province. And in the absence of a politicial system which accommodates diversity, Pakistan has had to rely on Islam to hold the country together – a self-defeating excercise, argue some, given the diversity of faith in the country, both within different traditions of Islam and among its non-Muslims.
Before the bin Laden raid, some of that was starting to change, with efforts by the civilian government to devolve power to the provinces through an 18th Amendment to the constitution passed by parliament in April. There was also talk of breaking up provinces into smaller units, including Punjab — a politically difficult move which might never see the light of day, but which nonetheless showed quite how far Pakistan had come in its thinking about how to transform the country from the centralised Punjab-dominated structure which characterised past military rule.
It was a slow-burning and – at the time - a rather quiet, revolution. In more stable times, it might have had a chance of working. It may yet work, barring any fresh crises in Pakistan triggered from without or within. Kayani has made clear that he has no interest in having Pakistan return to military rule, and the army statement reiterated its commitment to democracy. But such a transformation would take time and patience – perhaps more than the United States in particular is willing to give to Pakistan.
“There were times one hoped to initiate a civil-military dialogue with the intention of building bridges,” Ayesha Siddiqa wrote in The Express Tribune. “What we need right now is greater sanity. But more than that we need the capacity to draw rules of engagement in which we can talk sensibly without people losing lives.”

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

A journalist from Dawn just had this interesting tweet:

"Pakistan tells CIA chief no US boots on the ground. Very noble. But what about expensive Pak Army boots on our stomachs, hein jee?"

Marvelous!! :)

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

There are still 300 US soldiers in Pakistan, so much for no feet on the ground I wonder how many were there before this reduction.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

“Tehreek-e-Namoos-e-ISI” :smiley:

One of the most humorous and sarcastic articles I’ve ever read:

** Tehreek e Namoos e ISI **

by Hakim Hazik  

    ***When  reprobates like Syed Salim Shahzad start casting aspersions on the  holiest of all the Ummah institutions, we cannot just sit back and  watch. We have to take action which is timely, purposeful and shows our  determination to uphold the honour and the glory of the Ummah***

A vicious campaign has been launched to malign the mother of all agencies and against the father of all strategic deterrents. We must fight with determination to protect both. We must start with eating grass and move swiftly to snakes and lizards, with which the Almighty has blessed this land of bounty.
We have to forego the tainted crusader dollars that we receive from the Americans. These infidels have always been our enemies, since the times of Abu Jahal. We should try and develop our own indigenous stone technology so that we can tie them to our midriffs and also the grass technology so that we can feed high quality Sharia compatible Islamic grass to our children.
We can never prosper with the Nazarene dollars. We can only prosper with the brotherly Communist Yuans and the wholesome Wahhabi Riyals. We should not extend the begging bowl to the Americans. This is against the national honour. Instead, we should sell our children to the pious, God fearing, Gulf sheikhs for camel races. The sheikhs are our brothers in Islam. The camels are our brothers in Islam.
The Servitor General has made a start in the Punjab Province. He has returned all the dollars meant for education and health. What good is health and education if it is received at the cost of national honour? These are exciting times. Very soon, the doors of Jati Umrah will be thrown open to the professors who are experts in the Nizami curriculum, including the art of disemboweling the enemies of Islam and advanced medical practices developed by Galen and Avicenna which centre on (indigenous) grass based technologies.
When reprobates like Syed Salim Shahzad start casting aspersions on the holiest of all the Ummah institutions, we can not just sit back and watch. We have to take action which is timely, purposeful and shows our determination to uphold the honour and the glory of the Ummah.
The mission, by the grace of God has been very successful. It is the greatest victory for the Ummah since the battle of the Okara Farms. This time, it started with hobnailed boots applied, with judicious force, to the thoracic cage of the enemy and subsequently, to the endocrine glands of the mobile phone operator. It allowed a rapid diminution of the threat to national security and erasure of the pernicious telephone records. A resounding victory was won for the upholders of the True Faith.
This will teach the whole world, not to trifle with the basic tenets of our faith and the essential pillars of our identity. This will teach them not to take the name of the Lord God, the Creator of the Universe, in vain. This will teach them not to take the name of the Director General in vain. Verily, we believe in the Unity of Command which has no partner and a Minimum Strategic Deterrent.
We cannot allow any foreign power to interfere with our sovereign right to slit our own throats.
Hakim Hazik blogs at justicedeniedpk.com

http://www.viewpointonline.net/tehreek-e-namoos-e-isi.html

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Watched PTV News for 5 minutes. Suddenly, I feel Pakistan is a prospering nation, who's PM & President are Honest & Honorable Individuals.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

We are joking with ourselves.
** Tehreek e Namoos e ISI

Is this a political party?
**

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Almost a political party.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

Nothing is beyond of these intermediate pass intellectuals.

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

no boots on the ground...may b they will put those boots in a cupboard and use chappals instead..lols

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

aunty..... whining never helps..

Re: I am happy today:: ’فوج کو نیچا دکھانے کی کوشش ناکام بنائی&a

You are right,
Read it if you can read Urdu.