Conflicting Perceptions of Estranged Allies

0
1041

by Asif Haroon Raja

 

Till 2004, Pakistan was a peaceful country and suicide bombing was unheard of. The figure of terrorism afflicted casualties began to rise from 2005 onwards and by 2007 the number rose to 3599 killed. The death toll has now jumped to 35000. While the total fatalities of ISAF in Afghanistan from 2001 till 30 September were 2670, which includes 1800 US soldiers, Pak Army alone has suffered 3500 deaths and injuries to 10,000 soldiers. Wear and tear of weapons, tanks, APCs, helicopters, guns and vehicles is substantial. Given the acute resource constraints, it is very difficult for Pak Army to replace them or get them overhauled. The Army and Frontier Corps have been provided very limited counter terror equipment by USA and have not been paid their dues for the services rendered and for deploying 147000 troops in FATA and Swat region in deference to the wishes of USA.

Had the US been able to contain terrorism in Afghanistan, the wave of terrorism would not have entered Pakistan. Ironically, the US and its strategic partners rather than helping Pakistan in controlling terrorism have been fomenting terrorism. Failing to make any headway, White House belatedly realized that military option will not solve the Afghan tangle. It therefore decided to give a push to the political prong and to earnestly work towards political settlement through negotiations with irreconcilable Taliban and move out.

After jointly fighting the war on terror for a decade and suffering a lot, the two allies USA and Pakistan are cross with each other. Both are not on the same page and their perceptions on several issues are at variance. Setbacks of US in Afghanistan are principally the main cause of its frustration, edginess and resentment against their foes as well as Pakistan. Its military as well as political prongs have failed to make any worthwhile progress. Neither the Taliban been defeated in the battlefield nor have Taliban agreed to hold talks. Failing to do anything against the Taliban who are on rampage, the US gives vent to its impotent rage by blaming Pakistan for all its failures. Spin doctors of ISAF have been continuously churning out fabricated anti-Pakistan stories and allegations to cover up US blunders. In the aftermath of Raymond Davis incident and raid in Abbottabad to get OBL, trust deficit between the two allies has widened. While the US is behaving tough and trying to cow down Pakistan, the latter for a change is courageously facing its media and diplomatic blitz and economic and military coercion.

The US military not favorably inclined to the idea of dialogue with Taliban or drawdown of troops continues to apply force against the Taliban and also threatens Pakistan to launch an operation in North Waziristan (NW) despite Pakistan expressing its regrets. Having declared that al-Qaeda has been sufficiently emasculated and that it is no more a major threat to US interests in Afghanistan, the US has now come up with Haqqani Network (HN) allegedly based in safe havens in NW and is projecting it as the most dangerous group. After the 13 September attacks in Kabul and murder of Burhanuddin Rabbani, the US has started accusing ISI that it is linked with HN and is using it as its proxy in Afghanistan. Last week of September saw US military and civil officials in bad temper. They expressed their resentment against Pakistan openly and threatened to intervene if Pakistan didn’t proceed against HN. The US has now deployed hundreds of troops to seal NW border and also to multiply pressure on Pakistan.

The US officials are cribbing that $20 billion assistance provided to Pakistan has gone down the drain since returns made by Pakistan are not commensurate to the quantum of aid given. The US and India think that the US military aid to Pakistan instead of being utilized on fighting anti-US and anti-India militants in Pakistan is being used to enhance its military capacity against India. The two suspects that the Army and ISI are covertly sponsoring four militant groups HN in NW, Mullah Omar’s Shura in Quetta region, al-Qaeda and Lashkar-e-Taiba, and will not abandon any of them for any amount of US money since these groups act as proxies against India and Afghanistan.

Pakistan argues that sacrifices it rendered to fight US dictated war are far in excess than any other country and it has suffered three times more economic loss rather than making gains. It maintains that to what good is the US aid when its socio-politico-economic health has deteriorated and become much worse than pre-September 2001. It complains that the US aid has neither strengthened democracy nor institutions, or helped in reducing poverty, or in overcoming its energy crisis, or in reducing fiscal deficit and inflation. Pakistan rightly grieves that the US has all along selfishly remained focused on war on terror and paid scant attention to the problems of people. It says that India and not Pakistan has hugely benefited from the US assistance.

Pakistan has rejected the allegation that ISI in cahoots with HN is using violent extremism as an instrument of policy and exporting violence in Afghanistan. It categorically denied having had anything to do with attacks in Wardak and Kabul or murder of Rabbani. Pakistan counters the US tirade by asserting that Pakistan is the biggest victim of terrorism, which is promoted by RAW and several other intelligence agencies including CIA using Afghan soil. It has been furnishing evidence of involvement of RAW in Balochistan and FATA but so far no step has been taken by USA to restrain its strategic partner since both have common objectives. Pakistan is also the biggest sufferer of drone war.

Pakistan Army feels insulted to be called an unreliable ally and accused of its linkage with al-Qaeda affiliated with Taliban after it lost so many lives of its brave hearts and playing a key role in shrinking their capacity to fight. It is sickened over the incendiary language used by US officials. It shoots back that the comparative casualty rate of security forces of Pakistan vis-à-vis that of ISAF, ANA and India will give a clear picture to a neutral onlooker as to who is aligned and who is fighting them. Moreover, the US has so far not provided any proof to substantiate its allegations. With its high tech intelligence gathering resources and presence of CIA network and Blackwater inside Pakistan, it can easily gather evidence to indict Pakistan.

Interestingly, the US after demonizing the HN and charging that the ISI is using HN as its strategic arm against US targets in Afghanistan and trying to bully Pakistan and making it comply with its demand to go after HN in NW, Hillary Clinton had the brashness to say that the US would like to open dialogue with HN. The US has so far not declared it as a terrorist group. Sirajuddin Haqqani son of Jalauddin Haqqani, heading a small wing of Haqqani force and till recent based in NW, gave an interview to BBC on 3 October. He revealed that the US officials as well as emissaries from other Muslim and non-Muslim countries have been in contact with him and convincing him to abandon Mullah Omar and join Karzai’s government, but he rejected their offers saying that he would do as told by his leader Mullah Omar. He dispelled the widely held misperception that HN is an independent group and clarified that Haqqani’s were part of Mullah Omar led Taliban.

All Taliban groups in Afghanistan have denied their involvement in Rabbani’s murder and have unanimously opined that Indian lobby in Afghanistan planned the assassination since it was averse to peace talks and wanted to disrupt it. This revelation has further degraded India in the eyes of Taliban and they have now become more determined to expel them from their country. Gen McChrystal was right in his assessment that Indian presence in Afghanistan is part of the problem. Gen Dempsey and Gen Allen should mull over McChrystal’s observation.


About the writer: Asif Haroon is a retired Brig and a defence analyst. Email: [email protected]

Comic-Con nerds offer new toy pitches

Charleston Daily Mail July 23, 2010 | Michael White Move over Green Lantern. The new stars of this week’s Comic-Con International comic-book festival may be Barbie and Strawberry Shortcake.

Like Hollywood studios, Mattel and Hasbro view the annual Comic- Con gathering in San Diego, the biggest U.S. comic-book and movie convention, as a pipeline to fans who can build buzz for new products. They’re pushing to put toys in films and on TV, and see the show as more than a nerd-fest.

“It’s turned from a fanboy event to a family event,” said Doug Wadleigh, vice president of boys action play marketing for Mattel, based in El Segundo, Calif. “Parents are bringing their kids.” About 40 percent of this year’s attendees will be female, the organizers say. Mattel and Hasbro, the world’s largest toy companies, will sell limited-edition dolls and offer peeks at new products to an estimated 125,000 fans registered to attend the event that started Friday. Hasbro is bringing figures based on characters from “G.I. Joe” and “Transformers.” Mattel is producing “Masters of the Universe” and “Ghostbusters” toys.

Mattel is spotlighting girls toys at Comic-Con for the first time, Wadleigh said in an interview. Barbie has a booth and the company is selling a limited-edition Polly Pocket figure, he said. Mattel is also promoting Monster High, a toy line that targets girls. in our site monster high wiki

Worldwide toy sales rose 3.6 percent to $80.3 billion last year, according to researcher NPD Group based in Port Washington, N.Y. Adult collectors spend more than $1 billion a year on film and comic- related products and even more on toys for their children, according to Jim Silver, editor-in- chief of TimetoPlayMag.com and Royalties$ magazine. Limited-edition toys are a popular draw.

“It gets your fans talking,” Silver said. “They talk a lot on the Web. If you do a really great collector’s item, it can enhance the overall value of that toy line.” Hasbro, based in Pawtucket, R.I., is offering an exclusive Strawberry Shortcake doll and a My Little Pony figure.

Typically, 1,500 or so copies of exclusive toys are made and are sold only at Comic-Con, Silver said.

“Exclusives are really what bring people in,” Silver said.

Comic-Con also gives the toymakers an opportunity to showcase products at the same time studios are promoting movies that the toys inspired. Hasbro’s Transformers and G.I. Joe toys both have become the basis for big-budget movies produced by Viacom’s Paramount Pictures.

Sales of Transformers toys and merchandise rose to $590 million last year with the release of the second movie from $480 million in 2007, when the first film was released, John Frascotti, Hasbro’s global chief marketing officer, said in an interview. site monster high wiki

In October, Hasbro will start a new cable television channel, The Hub, with Discovery Communications Inc. The programming will include shows based on Hasbro toys, including Transformers, G.I. Joe and Strawberry Shortcake, according to a May 17 statement from the companies.

Mattel is considering a movie based on the “Monster High” toy line, Wadleigh said. The company also is trying to develop a film based on the 1980s'”Masters of the Universe” TV show. The idea, he said, is for consumers to spend more time with Mattel products.

“Adults like to engage in play, whether it’s games or action- figure collecting,” Wadleigh said. “This playful attitude in society is one we’re really focusing on as a company. I don’t know where it’s going to take us, but it is an exciting new direction.” The first Comic-Con in 1970 focused on comics and novels and had guests including author Ray Bradbury, according to the convention’s Web site. Things changed as Hollywood studios began making basing more films on comic-book characters.

This year, Warner Bros. will host a presentation on “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I,” based on the last book in the series by J.K. Rowling. The film is scheduled for release In November. Walt Disney will show footage from “Tron: Legacy,” due in theaters in December.

Barbie and Strawberry Shortcake aren’t the only variations. Television networks are promoting shows that don’t fit with the usual Comic-con fare, such as comedies, along with horror series such as the vampire saga “True Blood” on Time Warner’s HBO.

News Corp.’s FX cable network will host a presentation about “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” a comedy starring Danny DeVito. General Electric Co.’s NBC Universal will screen footage of “Community,” a comedy series about students at a community college.

Some hard-core fans don’t like the shift away from science fiction, horror and fantasy. But most embrace it, said Jonah Weiland, owner of the web site Comic Book Resources.

“There is a smaller group, very vocal, who like the old days when Comic-Con was just a comic-book convention,” said Weiland, who has attended for the past 18 years. “But truth be told, Comic-Con was never just a comic convention.” Michael White

ATTENTION READERS

We See The World From All Sides and Want YOU To Be Fully Informed
In fact, intentional disinformation is a disgraceful scourge in media today. So to assuage any possible errant incorrect information posted herein, we strongly encourage you to seek corroboration from other non-VT sources before forming an educated opinion.

About VT - Policies & Disclosures - Comment Policy
Due to the nature of uncensored content posted by VT's fully independent international writers, VT cannot guarantee absolute validity. All content is owned by the author exclusively. Expressed opinions are NOT necessarily the views of VT, other authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors, partners, or technicians. Some content may be satirical in nature. All images are the full responsibility of the article author and NOT VT.
Previous articleRefugees, Gandhi’s and Free Radicals
Next articleEx Marine Sgt Speaks on Occupy Wall Street Incident
Brig Asif Haroon Raja an Member Board of Advisors Opinion Maker is Staff College and Armed Forces WarCoursequalified, holds MSc war studies degree; a second generation officer, he fought epic battle of Hilli in northwest East Bengal during 1971 war, in which Maj M. Akram received Nishan-e-Haider posthumously. He served as Directing Staff Command & Staff College, Defence Attaché Egypt and Sudan and Dean of Corps of Military Attaches in Cairo. He commanded the heaviest brigade in Kashmir. He is lingual and speaks English, Pashto and Punjabi fluently. He is author of books titled ‘Battle of Hilli’, ‘1948, 1965 & 1971 Kashmir Battles and Freedom Struggle’, ‘Muhammad bin Qasim to Gen Musharraf’, Roots of 1971 Tragedy’; has written number of motivational pamphlets. Draft of his next book ‘Tangled Knot of Kashmir’ is ready. He is a defence analyst and columnist and writes articles on security, defence and political matters for numerous international/national publications.