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Subject: What the Pakistani and Indian papers say  [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

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What the Pakistani and Indian papers say

The tone of the Pakistani press today is ambivalent, while the Indian
press focuses on Delhi's relations with Washington

Derek Brown 
Monday September 17, 2001

The tone of the Pakistani press today is curiously ambivalent. Most
papers scrupulously avoid mentioning the unpopularity of Islamabad's
policy of cooperation with the US, but they cannot conceal the mood of
high tension. 

The best-known English-language daily in Pakistan, the Karachi-based
Dawn <http://dawn.com/> , reports that some 50 US agents are already
operating in the country: "The majority of the agents arrived overnight
Thursday and early Friday when Islamabad airport was closed mysteriously
for five hours, the sources said. The Americans are involved in advance
liaison work and the selection of Pakistani officers to work with them
in preparation for possible military operations in or against
neighbouring Afghanistan. They are also carrying out research, notably
on the feasibility of getting troops into Afghanistan."


The venerable daily, Jang <http://www.jang.com.pk/> , says Pakistani
forces have been placed on alert and that president Pervez Musharraf is
due to address the nation. The paper says the foreign minister, Abdul
Sattar, will urge the Taliban to act positively: "Abdul Sattar said that
Pakistan would offer the United States full cooperation but that any
decision on specific help for its coalition against global terrorism
would be taken once Washington makes known precisely what action it has
in mind. He said that there was unanimity in Pakistan that it 'must act
in conformity with the principles of international law and justice' and
rejected suggestions of divisions within the government."


In Peshawar, the Pakistani city closest to the Afghanistan border, the
Frontier Post <http://frontierpost.com.pk/>  reports that Saudi Arabian
crown prince Abdullah is due to arrive in Pakistan "within the next
couple of days to add his influence to efforts to persuade the Taliban
to accept US demands for the extradition of Osama bin Laden". The paper
also reports tension on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, with Taliban
forces installing heavy artillery near the Torkham frontier crossing at
the western end of the Khyber Pass: "Informed sources confided to the
Frontier Post that after the assurance of Pakistan government, to
provide all possible help to United States to combat terrorism, the
Taliban government has installed heavy artillery and deployed more than
300 armed personnel at Torkham Border, some 45km from here. The
seriousness of the situation may be deemed from the development that a
scheduled meeting between Khyber rifles and Taliban border forces has
been canceled as the Taliban refused to attend the meeting, which was
scheduled to be held on Sunday at 3 p.m."


Coverage of the unfolding crisis in the Indian press centres on the new
warmth in Delhi's relations with Washington.


In its leader column, the Madras-based daily Hindu
<http://www.hinduonline.com/> welcomes India's potentially central role:
"India's long quest for a meaningful role in world affairs seems to have
acquired a sharper and more relevant focus in the context of the current
international turbulence over the terrorist attacks in the US. The prime
minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, has committed India to 'waging
peace' by acting in concert with the US in a planned fight against
international terrorism. This is probably inevitable, given India's own
painful experience with externally sponsored terrorism [in Kashmir]. It
is also a welcome sign of political maturity that India's major parties
rallied behind the prime minister at a meeting convened in New Delhi on
Saturday to discuss the country's options in the incrementally volatile
international situation."


Columnist A.J. Philip, writing in the Indian Express
<http://www.expressindia.com/> , chides those Indians who sense an
opportunity in siding with the US: "Yet, even before the investigations
reach a conclusive stage, there are people in India who see a huge
window of opportunity in the body blow the US has suffered. They are the
ones who volunteer 'exceptionally strong' support to the US to mount an
offensive against those 'harbouring' terrorism (read Afghanistan).
Whatever be the duplicity and diabolism of the Taliban rulers, they
cannot be faulted when they say there is no installation in their
country costlier than a Cruise missile. In fact, reports from Kabul
suggest that 22 years of internecine war and four successive years of
drought have drained Afghanistan of all its resources, reducing people
there to a primitive existence. While women are forced to remain inside
their homes, even men are afraid to walk on the streets if they do not
sport the right kind of beard. Unlike the rest of the world, they have
not even seen the World Trade Centre collapsing in a heap of rubble and
melted steel as the Taliban had decreed that television was anti-Islamic
and was banned." 


The Times of India <http://www.timesofindia.com/>  says in its leader
column that the country should beware of "jumping headlong" into any
military alliance: "Regrettably, the prime minister's televised address
to the nation hints at precisely that kind of over-enthusiasm on the
Indian government's part. Not content with demanding that the world join
hands militarily to 'overwhelm the terrorists and neutralise their
poison', Mr Vajpayee exhorted every Indian 'to be part of this global
war on terrorism.... Terrorism respects no logic, as India which has had
to pay a horrific price for it knows only too well'. In this case, the
consequences are graver still because it is the subcontinent that is to
act as the theatre for the global war that America and its allies have
planned against terrorism. Unfortunately, rather than adopting a
measured and sober response, official India has chosen to echo the
hysteria and war-mongering resounding across major world capitals."


No such doubt troubles the leader writer of the Pioneer
<http://www.dailypioneer.com/> , who wholeheartedly approves the idea of
India participating in an international campaign against Islamist
fundamentalism: "Since Islamic terrorists have supporters and training
camps in many countries, and the governments of some of these - Pakistan
and Afghanistan, for example - have been providing them with covert or
other assistance, there is need for a a coalition of nations to strike
at them. The prime minister was right in calling for the formation of
such a coalition and in stating: 'The world must join hands to overwhelm
them militarily, to neutralise their poison.' The task should not be
left half-finished."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/wtccrash/story/0,1300,553520,00.html

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