War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

This is what many of us have been saying all along, finally zardari has come to the conclusion after more than 10 years of bloodshed!

War in Afghanistan destabilising Pakistan: Zardari

War in Afghanistan destabilising Pakistan: Zardari
President ASIF Ali Zardari said that war in Afghanistan is destabilising Pakistan.

In an Interview to British newspaper the Guardian, President Zardari said that the war in Afghanistan is destabilising Pakistan and seriously undermining efforts to restore its democratic institutions and economic prosperity after a decade of military dictatorship.

**Zardari also pointed to widespread concern in Pakistan at the slow pace of efforts to end the Afghan conflict, and said some US politicians showed limited understanding of the impact of American policies.
**
**Asked about harsh criticism of Pakistan s co-operation in the “war on terror” published in a White House report last week, Zardari said Pakistan always listened to Washington s views. But he suggested some members of Congress and the US media did not know what they were talking about when it came to Pakistan.
**
Zardari said that he would ask Obama to share drone technology during his visit to Washington

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

see the complete article/interview…
what he is planning…its time to wake up and raise your voice against this brutality happening in Pakistan

http://www.voice.pk/entertainment-news/interview-section/war-in-afghanistan-is-destabilising-pakistan-says-president/

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

Any excuse to criticise Zardari

Give credit where credit is due. He is defending Pak against international media criticism, instead of just keeping quiet to please America.

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

any fool can see joining the American war is going to destroy pakistan in the process.

afghanistan was the western buffer for pakistan now we are spending all our resources on it for who the americans.

zardari is just a cheap talking shop like nawaz sharif the great actor who pretend he had heart attack when raymond davies released.

The pak governments do not work for the interest of the people they work for their own pockets. while the man in street struggle to feed his family these thieves in power are laughing at us stealing the wealth of the land.

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

Do I hear the sound of a RAPIDLY declining vote bank for the PPP?

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

yes every party is now adays talking against drone attacks and effects of the war in afghanistan on pakistan...after 10 years of actively supporting these things!

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

Even if Zardari is saying this to gain vote bank, lets support him, lets push him to actually mean those words and not get away with statements alone.

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

Oops Zardari said it. .that must be slip of the tongue… :chai:..

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

everybody knows it if he didnt knew from the first day than its his promblem

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

The americans are for the first time admitting killing of civilians in the drone attacks but our media does not have the courage to do that…for our media is 4 militants killed, 10 militants killed…

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/04/11/consider-controversial-drone-policy-pakistan-says-ambassador/

U.S. Will Consider Controversial Drone Policy in Pakistan, Ambassador Says
By Dominic Di-Natale
Published April 11, 2011
| FoxNews.com

The United States will reconsider its controversial policy of deploying drones against militants taking refuge in Pakistan, according to its ambassador in Islamabad.

**Cameron Munter revealed that America intends to review using unmanned aerial vehicles in the wake of an angry public and political backlash over high civilian casualties suffered in attacks. **

“That is something on our agenda,” Munter told a gathering of top Pakistani military brass, analysts and academics Monday at an event that was billed by the local U.S. Embassy as a major policy announcement.

The U.S. military and the State Department rarely comment on drones.

Munter’s comment did not come from his prepared speech, but during a question-and-answer session in response to a question from a member of the audience demanding to know when drone strikes would cease permanently. Fearing a hostile reception that would embarrass the State Department and stoke further local anti-U.S. sentiment, television cameras were ordered to leave the room for the question-and-answer session.

“We have habits and tendencies that don’t work for us and get in the way [of its relationship with Pakistan],” Munter said, a reference to drones and undercover C.I.A. operations on Pakistani soil that have enraged Pakistan’s powerful spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence.

The ambassador gave no timeline on when a review of drone policy would be conducted, but Washington will likely want to make it a priority as it attempts to rebuild frayed relations with Pakistan, its most important ally in the war on terror.

Dealings between the U.S. and Islamabad hit rock bottom after Pakistan lost patience with relentless pressure from America to eradicate militants who use Pakistan’s tribal border regions as sanctuaries and training bases from which to launch attacks on NATO troops.

January’s killing of two Pakistanis by a C.I.A. contractor in Lahore invoked the wrath of all sections of Pakistani society, including the I.S.I., politicians, the religious establishment and an increasingly anti-American public.
Just when things could not appear to get any worse, in March a drone attack in Pakistan’s militant-infested northwest killed a gathering of 31 tribal elders and others, in an apparent confusion over the intended target. The death toll added to an already high civilian body count.

**An estimated 600 civilian lives have been claimed by drone attacks in the past 24 months compared to more than 1,000 militants’ killed in four years. **

But Pakistan cannot solely blame America for its losses.

While the drones are launched from NATO bases in Afghanistan and, it is suspected, some from Pakistan soil, ground target intelligence is provided almost exclusively by the Pakistan military to the C.I.A.. To cloud the issue further, the Pakistani military and the government regularly condemn the drone attacks in pubic as a violation of sovereignty, but privately acknowledge they would not be able to kill as many militants without the U.A.V.s.

Pakistan has repeatedly requested to be given its own attack drone technology by the U.S., but Washington has been reluctant to hand it over in fear that Islamabad may use it against its neighbor and arch rival India, also a key strategic partner for America in Asia.

The U.S. is now at pains to patch up a relationship that has been worn threadbare by deep institutional distrust and public scapegoating of each other by their leadership.

A fresh example came Monday when Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari reportedly blamed his country’s destabilization as the result of America’s invasion of Afghanistan.

He told the U.K.’s The Guardian newspaper that the war there was seriously undermining efforts to restore its democratic institutions and economic prosperity after a decade of military dictatorship. The interview demonstrates the uphill struggle the U.S. faces in once more winning over Pakistan, with whom it has had on-and-off relations for 40 years.

Munter described the “renewal” of America’s commitment to Pakistan, and stressed long-term commitment to strengthening Pakistan through investments in education, energy and security programs.
“We are not trying to buy people. We will be here for generations,” he said. But the ambassador indicated that countering militancy and extremism would remain the top priority

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/04/11/consider-controversial-drone-policy-pakistan-says-ambassador/#ixzz1JHgr0MiI

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

^ They are also saying, we are here for generations :chai: ..

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

Yes there is no doubt in that they have Planned their trip to Afghanistan but they will face the same consequences as their predecessors aka Russians and brits

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

But how did Zardari come to know that? :hmmm:

Re: War in Afghanistan destabilising Pak- Zardari

does this mean as president of Pakistan he will finally stop this strategic depth nonsense officially?