Militant operating in Jammu and Kashmir are terrorist,not freedom fighter ...Pakistan President said....

by pankaj kumar | October 4, 2008 at 11:56 pm
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Militant operating in Jammu and Kashmir are terrorist,not freedom fighter ...Pakistan President said....

Militant operating in Jammu and Kashmir are terrorist,not freedom fighter ...Pakistan President said....

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This is the great statement thal wil tame the moral of rerrorist operating in J&K with the name of freedom fighter under the moral and other support from pakistan.Probably the pressure is speaking as the voice of president.This is the most welcoming statement that Indian wil likes .Is this the change of stance of pakistan on J&K time wil tell... by  
New York, Oct 05: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has admitted that India is not a threat to his country and described the militants operating in Jammu and Kashmir as terrorists, a statement made perhaps for the first time by a top Pakistani leader.

"India has never been a threat to Pakistan. I, for one, and our democratic government is not scared of Indian influence abroad," Zardari told 'Wall Street Journal' in an interview.

He spoke of the militant groups operating in Kashmir as "terrorists," the paper said, noting that former President Pervez Musharraf would more likely have called them "freedom fighters."

Replying to a question, Zardari said he had no objection to the India-US nuclear co-operation pact so long as Pakistan is treated "at par".

"Why would we begrudge the largest democracy in the world getting friendly with one of the oldest democracy?" he said.

Asked whether he would consider a free-trade agreement with India, the paper said he responded with a "string of welcome, perhaps even historic, surprises".

While seeking better ties with New Delhi, he noted that "there is no other economic survival for nations like us. We have to trade with our neighbours first."

About Pakistan's economic crisis -- the central bank has about two months' worth of foreign currency reserves left to pay for the country's imports of oil and food -- Zardari said he looks to the world to "give me USD 100 billion".

The paper says he imagines Pakistani cement factories being constructed to provide for India's huge infrastructure needs, Pakistani textile mills meeting Indian demand for blue jeans, Pakistani ports being used to relieve the congestion at Indian ones.

Against the backdrop of the US-Pakistan row over the cross-border raids in the restive tribal belt by coalition forces from Afghanistan, Zardari said, "I am not going to fall for this position that it's an unpopular thing to be an American friend. I am an American friend."

About the Pakistani security forces firing on the US aircraft, he said it was merely an incident, "and while incidents do happen, they are not important."

However, he admitted that the US is carrying out Predator missile strikes on the Pakistani soil with his government's consent, the paper claimed.

"We have an understanding, in the sense that we're going after an enemy together," he said.

Zardari also acknowledged the problem that had bedeviled past efforts at US-Pakistani co-operation, particularly in intelligence sharing: the widely held suspicion that Pakistani intelligence services continue to co-operate with, and even arm, the Taliban.

"You know, you keep an uglier alternative around so that you may not be asked to leave," he said, in reference to allegations that while Musharraf was fighting Islamic radicals with one hand, he was protecting them with the other.

Zardari refused to go into further detail other than to say he "solved the problem"; the head of Pakistani intelligence agency ISI Nadeem Taj was replaced earlier this week by Ahmad Shuja Pasha.

"We want to be able to share (US) intelligence," he said. "We need helicopters, we need night goggles, we need equipment of that sort."

He stressed the need for precision and finesse in fighting Islamic militants, rather than large-scale military force. "My eventual concept is that we should be taking them on as they are, as criminals."

Of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, he said "the minute I make anybody my enemy, he becomes as big as I am."
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gauraw gupta
gauraw gupta
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 00:11 on October 5th, 2008

pankaj kumar, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
gauraw gupta

The changing voice of pakistan is a very good step towards the controling the milintency in jammu and kashmirs.This statement wil throw great impact on the polity of the region.

jiwant
jiwant
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 00:19 on October 5th, 2008

pankaj kumar, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
jiwant

Thanks for this wonderful highlight.

now pakista has started realizing the condition of J&K.

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pankaj kumar

jiwant,Thanks for your comment.

I agree with your openion.Now pakistan is realizing themselves and also facing global pressure to act against the terror.They are defamed themselves by helping seperatist groups of jammu and kashmir and also on the western front that is Taliban.Now they are taking the test of their own medechine .

0
vishvendu

Great news pakistan changrd their stand greatttttttttt.India won another battle

rahul
rahul
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 03:45 on October 5th, 2008

pankaj kumar, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Fairbanks
Fairbanks
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:34 on October 5th, 2008

Once again the discussion of terrorist versus freedom fighter is renewed.  How about a different approach?

0
Kashif Mehmood Mughal

Mr. 10% ohhhh sorry Mr. Zardari is now follow all Mush (Gen. Musharaf) policies, i think our president learning from INDIAN's so thats why saying same like indian toungu, we must pray for our Politiciens and pray for KASHMIRI's who're fighting for indepandance.

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