Afghans Support Karzai On Pakistan Invasions

June 16th, 2008 Posted By Pat Dollard.

2004-9-16-afghan-karzai.jpg

Related: Pakistan Vows To Defend Against Attacks By Afghanistan

Related: Karzai Threatens To Send Troops Into Pakistan

KABUL, Afghanistan - Hundreds of Afghans gathered in eastern Afghanistan Monday in support of President Hamid Karzai’s threat to send troops after Taliban militants inside Pakistan, officials said.

Ghami Mohammad Yar, spokesman for the governor of Paktika province, which borders Pakistan, said hundreds of tribesmen, elders and clerics had gathered at the governor’s compound to express support for Karzai.

“We are ready to sacrifice, like before, for the protection of our homeland borders,” Yar said. Mohammad Akram Akhpelwak, Paktika’s governor, said gatherings of support were being held in three other areas of Paktika.

Karzai on Sunday threatened to send Afghan troops to fight notorious Taliban leaders inside Pakistan in an angry warning that he will no longer tolerate cross-border attacks.

The threat—the first time Karzai has said he would send forces into Pakistan—comes only days after a sophisticated Taliban assault on Kandahar’s prison freed 870 prisoners, including hundreds of militants from the Islamist movement.

Karzai has long pleaded with Pakistan and the international community to confront tribal area safe havens, and U.S. officials have increased their warnings in recent weeks that the sanctuaries in Pakistan must be dealt with.

Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mohammed Sadiq, said Monday his office would issue a formal response to Karzai, but that, “Naturally we think that he did not use his best judgment by making this statement.”

Sadiqul Farooq, spokesman for the second biggest party in Pakistan’s new coalition government, condemned Karzai’s comments.

“Pakistan as a sovereign state will not permit any Karzai to violate the international border,” said Farooq, spokesman for the Pakistan Muslim League-N party of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Last week, U.S. aircraft dropped bombs along the Afghan-Pakistan border, an incident the Pakistan army said killed 11 of its paramilitary forces. The exchange ratcheted up increasingly touchy relations among the U.S., Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Analysts said they doubt military action by Afghanistan is imminent, but Pakistan’s prime minister said the threat “will not be taken well.”

Karzai told a news conference that Afghanistan has the right to self defense, and because militants cross over from Pakistan “to come and kill Afghan and kill coalition troops, it exactly gives us the right to do the same.”

Karzai also warned Pakistan-based Taliban leaders Mullah Omar and Baitullah Mehsud that Afghan forces would target then on their home turf. Mehsud has been accused in last year’s assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.

A spokesman for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said he would not comment. But another ISAF official said he thought Karzai’s comments should be seen as a reflection of frustration with militant safe havens but not as a sign an attack is imminent. He asked not to be identified because he wasn’t authorized to speak on the topic publicly.

The U.S. has spent more than US$3 billion the last two years training and equipping the Afghan army, and Karzai’s comments raise the specter that a U.S.-trained Afghan military could be used to attack Pakistan. The ISAF official dismissed that idea.

A spokesman for Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, Pakistan’s Taliban movement, warned of an escalation in Taliban attacks against NATO and Afghan forces if Karzai sends forces across the border.

Spokesman Maulvi Umar also said the Afghan army would face defeat at the hands of thousands of tribal fighters.

(AP)


4 Responses

  1. CPLViper

    First, is that a cup of piss?

    Second, go get ‘em and this time take no prisoners!

  2. Cridhe Saorsa

    “Pakistan as a sovereign state will not permit any Karzai to violate the international border,” said Farooq, spokesman for the Pakistan Muslim League-N party of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

    Hmmm? A sovereign state controls its citizens actions against other sovereign states. I submit that a government that cannot control the actions of it’s citizens against other governments is neither sovereign nor truely a state.

    In the case of Pakistan, they are a state that borders another state governed by outlaws and bandits that have preyed upon their good neighbor, Afghanistan, for way too long. To ask Afghanis to suffer anymore indiginities at the hands of the murderers that live between them is really beyond pale.

    But hey, decent logic has never really played any meaniful part of the Pakistani political collective that I am aware. In their mind Afghanistan should just roll over and keep taking it as long as corrupt Paki’s can continue to make profits on the bones of the innocent who suffer from this madness.

    Expose and remove the money machine from the Pakistani political class and this whole problem drys up overnight in the region.

  3. Dan (The Infidel)

    Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mohammed Sadiq, said Monday his office would issue a formal response to Karzai, but that, “Naturally we think that he did not use his best judgment by making this statement.”

    “Sadiqul Farooq, spokesman for the second biggest party in Pakistan’s new coalition government, condemned Karzai’s comments.”

    Me: Two words: F*ck you.

    “Pakistan as a sovereign state will not permit any Karzai to violate the international border,” said Farooq, spokesman for the Pakistan Muslim League-N party of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.”

    me: So’s Afghanistan. Afghanistan is sick of your shit butt-wipe. You’re the enemy. So go suck a goat’s dick Talibastard f*cks.

    Time for the old Northern Alliance to do to the Pakis what they did to the Soviets: kill the musifoon takfirs.

  4. Poe

    Looks like a cup of Kahva, Afgani Tea.

    Its funny they dont steep there tea over there, they boil the shit out of it with the leaves in it, strain the leaves out then let it get to room temp (which is around 80+ in most places).

    It is bitter, I mean fuck all bitter keep a jolly rancher in your mouth while you drink it bitter…

    I hope Afganistan doesnt back down on this shit, Pakistan needs some reform, and an afgani tribsman with a ak on your streets might get that point across…

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