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Commentary: Pakistan's Schools For Scandal

File photo: An opium field.
by Arnaud De Borchgrave
UPI Editor at Large
Washington (UPI) Sep 05, 2006
The good news from Afghanistan is the 18,500-strong coalition, now under NATO command, is good at finding and killing Taliban and al-Qaida fighters. The bad news, according to a recently returned U.S. Army commander, is "as fast as the guerrillas are killed, they are replaced by new recruits -- from camps in Pakistan," whose existence the Pakistani government keeps denying.

Last weekend, coalition forces killed 200 Taliban for a loss of 20 of their own. A Dutch F-16 fighter-bomber and a four-engined British Nimrod recon aircraft crashed killing all aboard.

Part-time beneficiaries of Afghanistan's record opium harvest that produces 95 percent of Europe's heroin consumption, Taliban fighters are now equipped with the best money can buy on the international arms black market. The annual poppy crop is now at an all-time record of 6,000 tons, an increase of 50 percent from last year.

Since the liberation of Afghanistan in November 2001, the area under opium cultivation has grown by almost 60 percent to 400,000 acres. And this despite draconian eradication campaigns by Britain and the United States. Now well over half the country's GDP is derived from narcotics trafficking. Warlords and drug lords -- frequently one and the same -- are represented surreptitiously in President Hamid Karzai's central government, which also includes a minister for "counternarcotics."

Taliban's resurgency in southern Afghanistan has impacted five provinces where crop substitution was abandoned to the exigencies of counter-guerrilla operations. Taliban also encourages poppy farming for levied protection.

Some of the opium bounty greases the relays for Taliban to operate in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas, which Pakistan also denies despite having lost at least 700 soldiers fighting Taliban and their al-Qaida allies in these same areas.

Pakistan first tipped British intelligence about the August plot to down the same day ten airliners flying from London to U.S. cities. Many of the British suspects arrested are of Pakistani origin. Almost 1,000 British Muslims are now under observation by MI5, Britain's internal intelligence service. The overwhelming majority are 1st, 2nd and 3rd generation Pakistani Brits.

A quarter of Britain's 1.8 million Muslims, according to a recent opinion survey, are sympathetic to violent jihad (holy war), and a third of them would rather live under Sharia (Islamic) law than British law. British Home Secretary John Reed says Britain faces "the greatest danger since the Second World War."

For many would-be suicide bombers all roads seem to lead to Pakistan. What is it about Pakistan that still holds a special appeal among those who harbor virulently anti-Western feelings, especially among Pakistani offspring in Britain?

Taliban was originally a Pakistan-based student movement nurtured, if not instigated, by the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence agency, a combined FBI/CIA agency with a license to "terminate with maximum prejudice," rig elections, and recommend civilian candidates for posts in military governments. ISI assisted Taliban in its conquest of Afghanistan (1992-96).

Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the UAE were the only three countries to recognize the Taliban regime that took the country back several centuries and gave sanctuary to Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorist organization.

ISI's latest successful assignment was to locate Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, an aristocratic octogenarian tribal chief and leader of Baluchistan fourth insurgency in the past 70 years, this time to get a fair share of massive gas and mineral deposits. Government troops attacked the cave where this former cabinet minister was hunkered down. An artillery shell buried him alive.

ISI is yet to locate Bin Laden, widely believed to be headquartered in Pakistan's FATA, protected by fiercely loyal tribes that are clearly disinterested in a $25 million U.S. reward.

The Aug. 26 blunder sparked violent protests and shut down most of the country in a general strike to protest Bugti's "assassination." Even retired generals called on President-Gen. Pervez Musharraf to take the army out of politics and return Pakistan to civilian rule.

Pakistan is frequently described as the most dangerous country in the world. One-third of 165 million Pakistanis survive below the local poverty line of $2 a day. Per capita income is $800. Half the population is still illiterate. Two of its four provinces -- that share a 1,400-mile border with Afghanistan -- are governed by politico-religious coalitions that are friendly to Taliban and admire Osama bin Laden.

And Musharraf himself reckons one per cent, or 1.6 million people, are violence-prone extremists whose organizations are banned from time to time only to reopen a few blocks away with a new shingle.

But Pakistan is also a nuclear power with some 60 nuclear weapons and missiles to deliver them as far as Mumbai in India. And the country's most popular figure after founder-father Ali Jinnah is Dr. A. Q. Khan, the father of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, and the international racketeers who sold nuclear secrets to America's enemies -- North Korea, Iran and Libya.

Pakistan is also the country of some 12,000 madrassas, the free-board Koranic schools for boys whose single discipline is learning the holy book in Arabic by heart, heavily larded with hate messages for the United States, Israel and India. Before their teens, they are examined on the meaning of holy war and martyrdom.

Thousands of foreign madrassa students from Muslim countries, as well as Britain, the United States, Canada and Australia, have been ordered out of the country. But local police, loyal to local mullahs, tell the foreigners they can stay.

Musharraf has talked frequently about madrassa reform, but five years after he switched alliances from the medieval Taliban to the United States, following President Bush's post 9/11 are-you-with-us-or-against-us phone call, little has been done.

To survive, Musharraf concluded early in his so far seven years in the driver's seat he had to pander to the mullahs. And the mullahs tell government regulators to butt out. Nothing seems to shake their conviction President Bush's war on terror is a war on Islam.

Outside of the main cities, rape victims, who traditionally remain silent, have to produce at least four male "eyewitnesses," failing which they wind up on trial for the serious crime of fornication. A recent "reform": only three of the eyewitnesses are required to be Muslim males.

Source: United Press International

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Britain Admits Forces Stretched As Troops Die In Afghanistan And Iraq
London (AFP) Sep 04, 2006
Britain's new army chief warned Monday that the country's military forces are stretched to the very limit, as three soldiers died in a grim day for Britons on the frontline in Afghanistan and Iraq. General Richard Dannat, who took over from General Mike Jackson as head of the British army last week, told the daily Guardian that the army can barely cope with the demands placed on it.







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