Atif F Qureshi, PKKH Editorial Team | Edited by Talha Mujaddidi PakistanKaKhudaHafiz.com
Can Pakistan resist Pax Pox Americana?
When it is said to them: “Make not mischief on the Earth,” they say: “Why, we only want to make peace!” Holy Qur’an (2-11)
Wherever the Americans go, their policies spread poison. Under the pretext of ‘freedom and democracy’ US policy-makers trample over weaker nations, placing and replacing puppet rulers on a whim and propagandising against all aspirations for true independence. (Stephen Kinzer’s Overthrown is a must book to read in this context).
With total control of global media, and their weapons of mass distraction, they are able to crush resistance at the very root – before it even forms in the mind. Just as Noam Chomsky said, “If the Nuremberg laws were applied, then every post-war American president would have been hanged”.
Yet in spite of the ‘fasad-fil-ardh’ that America has unleashed around the world, we still see an unseemly obsession with all things American. Suffering from a mass psychosis akin to Stockholm-syndrome, even nations traumatised and brutalised by America see only America as possible salvation. Clearly, American propagandists have done their work well.
Not in Pakistan. In what can only be described as a clear and hopeful sign that this nation is awakening, recent polls have revealed that the Pakistani public categorically denounces American policies. A recently conducted poll by PakistanKaKhudaHafiz.com revealed that 89% of over 1,000 participants were of the opinion that the United States should be declared as a hostile state.
Our army is busy fighting a bitter war against foreign funded terrorists, over 3 million of our people have been made homeless and we’re facing what could potentially be the worst crisis in our history if not dealt with properly. Our politicians on the other hand just cannot grasp the seriousness of the situation.
The Federal Information Minister feels it important to entertain himself with a $15,000 lapdance from an Indian hooker while on a begging round. Is begging that stressful? Maybe he should learn something off his President who doesn’t seem to mind it at all.
38 Pakistanis Killed By CIA Drones Every Month Since 2006
Not only killing Pakistanis, but the U.S. is quietly increasing the number of its soldiers based in Balochistan and NWFP, and is building a massive military fortress right behind the Presidency and PM House in Islamabad that will cost one billion dollars. The arrival of the Americans comes with increased separatist chatter inside Sindh, Balochistan, NWFP, and the Northern Areas. The silence of the Zardari government has been bought for US $ 1.5 billion. Gradually, America will turn Pakistan to a mess like Iraq, with sectarian killings and proxy wars. The Pakistani people and the military need to wake up.
A role that our media ought to be playing but isn’t, Zaid Hamid exposes the covert war which CIA is waging against Pakistan, as he explains the current domestic scenario of Pakistan and the threats to our nationals security that we face
…Not very big – or terrifying – or a plot, admit British Police.
As nine brown men were deported for having beards, the police blamed the Home Office, the Home Office blamed MI5 and MI5 warned everyone it could kill them with its thumb.
An inquiry will now be launched into why the prime minister was allowed to scare the sh*t out of everyone, though experts insist it may just have had something to do with the news agenda.
A police spokesman said: “We were hoping to charge them with conspiracy to go to the shops to buy crisps and Tizer, but according to our lawyers that that’s not an actual offence, as yet.
“We have therefore taken the precautionary step of sending these men and their potentially explosive beards back from whence they came.”
He added: “Come to think of it, Bob Quick must be absolutely f**king livid. Whadya reckon?”
A spokesman for home secretary Jacqui Smith said: “Embarrassed? No, we’re way, way beyond embarrassment at this stage.
“That’s a bit like asking a streaker if he’s embarrassed because he hasn’t shaved.”
The west can no longer afford to impose its values and notions of democracy on countries that neither want nor need them
Pakistan has very grave problems. In the last two years, I have reported on bloody ethnic and political riots, on violent demonstrations, from the front line of a vicious war against radical Islamic insurgents. I spent a day with Benazir Bhutto a week before she was assassinated and covered the series of murderous attacks committed at home and abroad by militant groups based in Pakistan with shadowy connections to its security services. There is an economic crisis and social problems – illiteracy, domestic violence, drug addiction – of grotesque proportions. Osama bin Laden is probably on Pakistani soil.
For many developing nations, all this would signal the state’s total disintegration. This partly explains why Pakistan’s collapse is so often predicted. The nation’s meltdown was forecast when its eastern half seceded to become Bangladesh in 1971, during the violence that preceded General Zia ul-Haq’s coup in 1977, when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, when Zia was killed in 1988, during the horrific sectarian violence of the early Nineties, through sundry ethnic insurgencies, after 9/11, after the 2007 death of Bhutto and now after yet another political crisis. These predictions have been consistently proved wrong. The most recent will be too. Yesterday, tempers were already calming.
If this doesn’t convince you what Sherry Rehman is all about, nothing will.
Ms. Rehman came out to defend Indian Air Force’s incursion into Pakistani territory, citing a ‘technical error’ on behalf of the Indian Air Force pilots – when infact it was a squadron of Indian Aircraft that had crossed over in an attempt to bomb Muridke and Muzaffarabad, in the aftermath of the Mumbai drama.
Pakistan did not start the proxy wars in the region. The first proxy militia – Mukti Bahini in East Pakistan – was created and used by India in 1971 to invade Pakistani territory. And again, in Balochistan, India and the Soviets created and armed a Baloch ‘liberation army’. Then in 1989 the Americans left Afghanistan and ran away, leaving Pakistan to worry about the results. Pakistan had to act. And it did. If we sympathize with the Afghan Taliban or with Kashmiri groups that antagonize India, there is a legitimate reason for it. Pakistan can’t be expected to drop its legitimate interests just because India wants so.
February 8th, 2009 We are proud to present another eye-opening program by Zaid Hamid of Brasstacks which was not aired by NewsOne for reasons of his impromptu speech and bluntly true response on current political scenario of Pakistan and the plans of our enemies.
We request you to please forward these links to your friends and relatives throughout the world to strengthen our nation and prepare them to deal with traitors and enemies. If you cannot see the Google Video embedded player above, please use the following links to watch the video: PART 1 | PART 2
There is no doubt left that we are fast approaching a point where some form of military intervention will become a necessity, in a way that is diametrically different from the past. We, the civilians, will need to borrow the organizational capabilities of the Pakistani military to help civilians in power reshape the Pakistani state domestically and in terms of foreign policy.
In the recent months, a number of young people have come forward expressing their desire to serve Pakistan. This is extremely encouraging, and inspite of all the difficult times ahead, Zaid sahib is very confident that our nation has great potential to face all kinds of situations.
If you have listened to Zaid sahib’s programs, you may have noticed that he heavily stresses the importance of the ideology of Pakistan. First and foremost, it is very important for our younger generation to identify itself with Pakistan, understand our history and place in this world, and reclaim our national identity and pride. Pakistan will insha Allah serve as a stepping stone in the renaissance of the Ummah, and we must understand and participate in this mission.
Once this ideological direction has been established in the minds and hearts of our young people, there are a number of ways of actually contributing and participating for Pakistan’s development, and we do not want to restrict your options by recommending any one specific way. e.g. you can remit your zakat and charitable donations to philaphtronic organizations back home. You can see how your professional skills can be used for the benefit of Pakistan. You can act as guardians of our national ideology and interests in your sphere of influence, and not let any false propaganda and disinformation come in the way. Also, you can keep yourself ready to serve this country as and when the motherland needs you.
But perhaps most important of all, it is important for each of us to educate ouselves on strategic national issues, and be able recognize the external and domestic threats that we face, and learn how we can work in unison to overcome them. This is the specific task that Zaid sahib and BrassTacks has taken up: To create awareness in our people on key issues, and provide thought-leadership to our nation by guiding them on how to react and overcome the difficulties that we face today. This is very important, and Pakistanis overseas can help us by spreading this message among the expatriate community, so we can act as guardians of our national resources and defence. You can do this by letting other people know about the issues and their solutions which Zaid sahib has proposed in his lectures. Once we all get an understanding of these issues, we, as a nation, can constructively influence the decision makers on adopting the correct stance on foreign, economic and domestic policy.
Thanks,
Brasstacks Team
PKKH Management:Please forward this message to your friends, family, colleagues. We must spread the message among the expat community.