Showing posts with label US. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2009

The Roots of Terrorism

Among the array of challenges facing Barack Obama in his first year in office will be the ongoing struggle against terrorism, both at home and abroad. As the vicious terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November and the recent Hamas rocket attacks against Israel made clear, no nation involved in international politics and commerce is free from the threat of political violence. The past few years have shown that civilization rests on a much more precarious footing than we might have believed even a decade ago.
But who is the real enemy in the global fight against terrorism? Even to call this conflict a “war on terror” is misleading, given that our enemies are of such disparate origins and intentions. Sweeping generalizations—that our enemy is the Islamofascist, the Muslim fanatic, the anarchist, the ignorant youth—are often harmful in the formation of any effective response to terrorism.
A sincere yet harmful truism is that our real enemy is ignorance, that if our opponents could be freed of propaganda and false conceptions, their rage against Euro-American civilization would abate. But any truthful analysis of terrorist motives requires the concession that the real root cause of their actions is resentment. Often enough, education actually leads not to greater appreciation for Western culture, but to even deeper antipathy. The hijackers of Sept. 11, 2001, are a case in point. Many of the attackers had achieved high levels of education as engineers, scientists and academics. Many studied abroad, and several—ringleader Mohammad Atta among them—would fit the definition of upwardly mobile young professionals. Nevertheless, they were seduced by an ideology that convinced them that their death, and the deaths of thousands of innocents, was the appropriate response to their condition.
While scholars like Lawrence Wright, author of The Looming Tower, the best-selling study of Islamic terrorism, have shown the powerful influence of fundamentalist religious beliefs in terrorist recruitment, groups like Al Qaeda gain from the religious and from the resentful, drawing devotees from those who find that the adoption of Western economic and social practices does not always translate into economic opportunity or social progress. Oftentimes the very technological advances that should have led to greater upward mobility—the Internet and global communications among them—have provided terrorist groups with the means to link up previously isolated cells. Access to the media has two ill effects, offering greater awareness of severe economic disparities and an introduction to a global entertainment environment profoundly at odds with the religious and cultural sensibilities of many peoples.
Another alarming portent of future terror is the real possibility of widespread state failure. In its most recent analysis of global trends, the National Intelligence Council suggested that by 2025, as many as 36 nations (with a total population of 1.4 billion) will face shortages of fresh water and sustainable food supplies. A number of these nations, which are overwhelmingly in Africa and the Middle East, are already unable to provide consistent law and order. These same countries are also experiencing a “youth bulge” of young men and women now entering adulthood.
State failure also represents a failure of compassion on the part of the wealthy and stable nations of the world. Imperiled nations support exactly the populations among whom resentment will be strongest if the world community fails them, if instead of jobs and security they find chaos, disease and suffering. In the past, the international community has failed to intervene effectively when neglected situations became humanitarian catastrophes, with Zimbabwe and Somalia as prime examples. As Pope Benedict XVI noted in his visit to the United Nations last year, the “duty to protect” is not just an internal matter for nations, but an international duty.
It is crucial that the United States abandon the rhetoric that casts the international struggle against terrorism exclusively in terms of a crusade against religious fanaticism. The anger that accompanies the ongoing and worsening social ills among the world’s poorest populations also contributes mightily to terror’s allure. Remedying such widespread resentment will not be easy, and cannot be done alone. A reasonable beginning would include greater international cooperation on sustainable development, renegotiation of lopsided trade agreements, a rethinking of the economics of globalization and an end to military and political unilateralism on the part of the United States. All this will, of course, require money—but far less than the world will spend combating the terror and violence that will otherwise flourish amid the ruins.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

What US did with Japan in 1945: I like it...

Pakistan dismissed as "NOT CREDIBLE" evidence provided by India to it on the Mumbai terror attacks, hours after a Presidential aide termed as "premature" local media reports that suggested the material given by New Delhi was insufficient.They questioned the credibility of the evidence on the Mumbai attacks provided by India.the first thing came in my mind when I came to know that we are planning to give evidence to Pak.. I just laughed..Our country used to be A Tiger..but now you can better guess.... They claimed that India had not given any "credible evidence" about the Mumbai incident. Pakistan wants credible information in accordance with the law.It is crystal clear that this failed nation of terrorists will never accept the Truth.The dossier submitted by India had some details that were "not credible", Bashir said during the session that was open to the media. Pakistan further added that Indian charges of state links to Mumbai attacks diverted focus from terror fight. We should take some action..you know what When Israel can protect it's own people without bothering about the world, why cant we? Why do we need America's permission for our own security? Did America ask us or anyother country before they invaded Iraq? In an apparent reference to India's demand for Pakistan to hand over terror suspects linked to the Mumbai attacks, Bashir said there was no extradition treaty between the two countries.
Referring to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's comments that the Mumbai incident had the support of Pakistan's official agencies, Bashir said the remarks had made the regional situation "more tense". Bashir accused India of pushing the region towards war. If India takes any military action against Pakistan, it would be its "biggest mistake".
Khan and Bashir also charged India with being responsible for escalating tensions on the basis of the Mumbai attacks. He accused India of making efforts to isolate Pakistan in the international community. Pakistan has countered this by "forcefully" presenting its position before the world, Khan added. Khan also claimed that India had not pulled back its forces from forward bases.
He said it was unfortunate that India was pointing a finger at Pakistan's official agencies after initially blaming "non-state actors" for the Mumbai incident. Except Pakistan the whole world knows that Pak citizens are involved and the state machinery was used. There is a saying 'you can noy wake up a person who is pretending to sleep' Are we still waiting for some miracle to happen? It's not gonna haapen? Why can't we learn a lesson from Israel or US? How can a small country like Pakistan dare to comment that it would be India's biggest mistake if it takes any military action against them? You know what US did with Japan in 1945 I like such think...there is saying in Hindi" Na Rahengi Bas Na Bajegi Basuri".

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Washington Lobby Day" on January 27

In a bid to convince US lawmakers to put pressure on Pakistan to take action against perpetrators of Mumbai attacks, a group of Indian Americans have decided to hold "Washington Lobby Day" on January 27. Chairman of US-India Political Action Committee (USINPAC), Sanjay Puri said that the objective of this event is to show the US Members of Congress that Indian Americans and all Americans are expressing their strong support for the victims of the Mumbai attacks and for continued US-India efforts on the war against terrorist organisations based in Pakistan. He added that This coalition of Indian American organizations demonstrates that Indian-Americans are united in the condemnation of the Mumbai attacks and the need for cooperation between the US and India to work together to eliminate terrorism in South Asia. USINPAC and several other Indian American organizations including Asian American Hotel Owners Association (AAHOA) have come together to set up a national task force. The task force aims at raising awareness among US lawmakers and the incoming Barack Obama Administration and garner support for India on the issue of Mumbai terrorist attacks. Soon after the Mumbai terror strikes, USINPAC had launched a petition campaign demanding that the US Congressional funding should be contingent on Pakistan in extraditing Dawood Ibrahim. We believe that in the interests of broader peace, America needs to demand that Pakistan close down all terror camps in its territory or risk losing US funding that has amounted to over USD 10 Billion since 9/11," says the petition, which has so far been signed by thousands of Indian Americans.
It has demanded that Pakistan extradite all suspects in the Mumbai attacks for trial in India; dismantling the terrorist infrastructure and finance network between the Pakistani intelligence services and the Pakistani army.
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