http://www.dawn.com/weekly/mazdak/mazdak.htm

Excerpt:

The existence of these dangerous groups, and the impunity with which they have 
been operating for two decades, all serve to underline the steady meltdown of 
the Pakistani state. Instead of treating the cancer of terrorism as a law and 
order issue, the army has viewed it as a political and military opportunity. 
Lacking legitimacy and a constituency, both Zia and Musharraf depended on 
religious groups for support. These parties, in turn, gave militants cover. 
Thus, the Islamic coalition of the MMA allowed the Taliban to flourish when 
they governed the Frontier province between 2002 and 2007. We are now 
struggling with the fallout of their policies.

As we are caught up in this vortex of ideology and violence, we often shoot 
ourselves in the foot. For instance, when Prime Minister Gilani declared that 
he would send the head of the ISI to India, this move was widely welcomed. All 
too soon, however, the reality of the power balance in Pakistan raised its ugly 
head, and the offer was withdrawn. Clearly, the army did not relish one of its 
own being placed on the mat in New Delhi. Nevertheless, the instinct was the 
right one, and had the PM been able to prevail, General Pasha’s mere presence 
in India could have helped defuse much of the tension.

Many Pakistanis have become so accustomed to terrorist attacks on their soil 
that they have forgotten that this is not the norm elsewhere. Instead of asking 
“What’s the big deal?” they should be putting themselves in the place of the 
victims. If, as seems very likely, the group that attacked Mumbai was trained 
and armed by the Pakistan-based Lashkar-i-Taiba, it is a very big deal indeed.


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