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Mumbai Attacks

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Lol who doesnt have problem , name one country .. but we all know which country is labeled as on the brink of failed state .. so rather you should focus on taking care of inferiority complex .

Well, atleast we did have Al Qaida... You guys kill your own people... Gujarat?
 
why isi is so pain in the butt for indians?
 
Terrorism expert Prof Rohan Gunaratna tells BBC World News: "The attacks bear all the hallmarks of al-Qaeda. Certainly, those attackers were inspired by al-Qaeda methodology."
 
So we are (just like the western specialists) less then 10th standard Indian kid? You must be kidding...?:chilli:



I did not say or mean that.........

But i asked about biased media, and the reply i got was of misreportings.... u know it has no connection...............

There is a diference between a MISTAKE and a MISCHIEF.....
 
It reminds me of LionKing....


Mufassa Mufassa Mufassa...


So in India it is:

ISI... ISI... ISI...

It scares them.
:devil:
 
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Your General Mehmood, head of ISI transferred $10,000 in the account of mohammad atta, the chief 911 suspect............

Y would the chief of respected intelligence agency like ISI would do that?
I have heard on this forum that ISI has no links with terrorists.....Really?

Yes the money was transferred to Atta and it was $100.000, not just $10.000. Initially the trnsfer was mentioned in 9/11 comission report but later removed when they found out the money origibated from CIA funds.
There's a lot more to 9/11 report than you know, but leave it for some other thread.
 
Well, atleast we did have Al Qaida... You guys kill your own people... Gujarat?

are you equating a riot with the bankrupt scenario of your state ?
someone talked about inferiority complex and 10th standard .
 
Iam really amazed that Indian media keep saying Pakistani Pakistani but why these media outlets dont call RAW cheif Ashok Chaturvedi and ask him y such a massive intel failure?
 
It reminds me of LionKing....


Mufassa Mufassa Mufassa...

So in India it is:

ISI... ISI... ISI...

It scares them.
:devil:


Thats is why ISI chief is coming here...to scare us...
 

28 Nov 2008

PARIS - The carnage wreaked by Islamic militants in Mumbai has cemented South Asia’s status as the most dangerous place on earth, the world’s media said Friday, urging India not to rush to blame Pakistan.

While domestic newspapers lashed the government over the intelligence lapses which led to the attacks, the international press cautioned that any response must not further destabilise the region.

“The Terrorist Escalation,” said the front-page headline of France’s left-leaning Liberation, whose editorial spoke of “an arc of crisis that stretches across South Asia, the most dangerous region in the world.”

Spain’s El Pais daily said while it was tempting for India to blame its arch rival Pakistan for “its worst nightmare”, the attacks appeared to be symptomatic of a wider malaise in the region.

“Everything suggests that India, which is used to fighting local separatists and guerrillas, is facing its own Islamic terrorism,” said the top-selling daily.

India’s Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Friday that preliminary information pointed to “some elements in Pakistan” being responsible for the attacks which have left at least 130 people dead.

However Britain’s left-leaning Guardian newspaper said the attacks must not derail recent moves to put troubled Indian-Pakistan ties back on track.

“India, naturally shaken by the slaughter of its civilians, must not allow the rapprochement with Pakistan to be derailed, for this is exactly what the militants want, it said.

“The governments of India and Pakistan will need to strain every sinew to stay on the path of detente.”

Papers in the Arab world also urged India not to play into the hands of extremists with its reaction.

“It (India) has proved time and again that its democratic principles of tolerance are deeply rooted,” said the Dubai-based Gulf News.

“Many religious extremists would like to stop this, but India has remained true to its liberal and secular self.”

In Pakistan itself, the local English-language daily The News led with the headline, “India gives Pakistan a dirty look.”

“Indian intelligence, under fire for failing to pick up on the threat, is anxious to lay blame elsewhere,” the newspaper said.

The country’s influential English-language daily Dawn also urged New Delhi and Islamabad to cooperate in investigations without apportioning blame.

India’s newspapers meanwhile focused on the failures which allowed the militants to strike at the heart of the country’s financial capital without warning.

The Mail Today said “the country’s intelligence agencies had no clue of the impending attack” despite huge spending on anti-terror measures.

The Times of India questioned why intelligence agencies had failed.

“How well do we run them, how well-resourced are they, and is there proper coordination among them to maximise and collate information?” it demanded.

“What are the intelligence mechanisms that failed to pick up a terrorist plan with as much micro-planning as this one?” The Indian Express demanded.

The New York-based Wall Street Journal blamed India’s leaders for making the country “an easy target.”

“Its intelligence units are understaffed and lack resources. Coordination among the country’s 28 state police forces is poor. The country’s anti-terror legal architecture is also inadequate,” it said.

“A lack of political leadership is to blame,” it concluded.

Under the banner headline “Massacre in Mumbai,” the Sydney Morning Herald also described Mumbai as a “soft target.”

It said the nature of the attacks and the singling out of US and British nationals suggested a wider agenda than usual militant attacks in India.

Japan’s Asahi Shimbun described the attacks as “nothing but an intolerable act of brutality,” while the Yomiuri Shimbun voiced concern that the bloodshed in the Indian financial capital could affect Japan’s relations with India.

The Nikkei business daily said security concerns could “block investment of foreign capital and slow down the Indian economy further.”

All major Chinese dailies carried front page reports on the attacks.

The Beijing News in a commentary blamed the Indian government for being slow to react to events. “Faced with the growing menace of terrorism, India’s anti-terrorism measures are lagging behind,” the commentary said.
 
are you equating a riot with the bankrupt scenario of your state ?
someone talked about inferiority complex and 10th standard .

No worry now it has been averted,PK wasnt only country affected by high oil prices,better worry about ur country
 
yes it is pain in the butt for indians and even Americans .. but it is biggest pain for Pakistan ..

It is not the biggest pain for pakistan, its their pride, every kid want to be in it.....


But if everything continues, it will for SURE become pain for pakistanis......
 
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