That the criminal enterprise called Pakistan uses terrorists as tools if it's foreign policy and keep India bleeding is as secret as the sky is blue. The root of all Pakistani terrorism lies in Pakistani Punjab where the city of Muridke has the headquarters of LeT. On the door of the HQ are two flags which are used to wipe shoes. One is the Israeli flag and no points for guessing the second flag. Amazingly as long as these terrorists were hurting India and Afghanistan, the world didn't give a damn. But as soon as the sceptre of these terror outfits taking over Punjab and the rest of the Pakistan along with the nuke arsenal became real, the west started to scramble and come up with policies to contain them. Of course they are realising that it is going to be easier wished than done. The following is a good primer of Pakistani Punjabi terrorism for even the seasoned readers.
"In the 1980s, Pakistan's military dictator, General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, nurtured radical Sunni militant groups as terrorist proxies against India over the control of Kashmir, for Pakistan had been defeated in the three conventional wars with India since the 1947 partition."
" In 2002, Islamabad succumbed to U.S. pressure and banned five prominent militant organizations: LeT and JeM, which were responsible for the December 2001 Indian Parliament attack, as well as SSP, Tehrik-e-Jafaria, and Tehrik-e-Nifaze Shariat Mohammadi. Pakistani security arrested over two thousand militants, the majority from Punjab.[6] For militant Punjabis, the arrests were only a hiccup: Pakistani jails have revolving doors, and even high-profile detainees like JeM leader Maulana Masood Azhar and LeT chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed were soon free men. Banned organizations resurfaced under new names or as charities, and several smaller groups split and relocated to the FATA, where they joined Pashtun terrorists and al Qaeda and established their own training camps."
Could the Taliban Take Over Pakistan's Punjab Province?
By Ahmad Majidyar
AEI Online
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Read the rest of the article at;
http://www.aei.org/docLib/02-MEO-June-2010-g.pdf
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