Here we go again. The Pakistanis have once again stepped up and decided to slit their own throats. Pakistan's Army top spokesman has made it clear that no American troops or special forces will be allowed on Pakistan soil to chase, kill, or capture terrorists and jihadists.
Knock, knock Pakistan - do you LIKE what has gone on in your NW territories? Did you not just see the assassination of Bhutto and a near collapse of the government?
Did you not just call in Scotland Yard onto YOUR soil to figure out who killed Bhutto? You will let islamic jihadists onto your soil from every Arab country but you won't allow a special ops team from the U.S. in to make your life easier?
I guess you do want to be exterminated.
Here's the story from Breitbart.
Knock, knock Pakistan - do you LIKE what has gone on in your NW territories? Did you not just see the assassination of Bhutto and a near collapse of the government?
Did you not just call in Scotland Yard onto YOUR soil to figure out who killed Bhutto? You will let islamic jihadists onto your soil from every Arab country but you won't allow a special ops team from the U.S. in to make your life easier?
I guess you do want to be exterminated.
Here's the story from Breitbart.
US forbidden from hunting militants
Pakistan said that it will not let American forces hunt al Qaida and Taliban militants on its soil.The move came after a news report said Washington was considering expanding US military and intelligence operations into Pakistan's tribal regions.The Foreign Ministry dismissed as "speculative" a story in the New York Times saying US President George Bush's top security officials discussed a proposal on Friday to deploy American troops to pursue militants along the Pakistan-Afghan border."We are very clear. Nobody is going to be allowed to do anything here," said Major General Waheed Arshad, the army's top spokesman."The government has said it so many times," Mr Arshad said. "No foreign forces will be allowed to operate inside Pakistan."
Recent reports indicate al Qaida and the Taliban are "intensifying efforts" to destabilise Pakistan's government, the newspaper said.It said Mr Bush's security advisers' discussion on the proposal was part of an assessment of Washington's strategy following the December 27 assassination of populist opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, a moderate pro-US politician who had vowed to fight Islamic extremists if she was elected in an upcoming parliamentary vote.The Pakistan-Afghan border area has long been considered a likely hiding place for al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and his top deputy Ayman al-Zawahri, as well as an operating ground for tribal Taliban sympathisers.
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