erix wrote:Jeep wrote:Как человек, проведший в армии около 20 лет
Это многое объясняет.
Ну да, ну да: "Одна извилина и та - от фуражки."

erix wrote:Jeep wrote:Это - факты? Ой...
Не нравятся, давайте свои. А то "пустозвоном" вдруг окажусь не я.
How has Pakistan supported the ‘war on terrorism’?
By becoming a major U.S. partner and staging area for the war in Afghanistan. The United States considers Pakistan one of its most important allies in the “war on terror.” Pakistan granted overflight rights to coalition aircraft, let U.S. forces use two Pakistani airfields, and shared intelligence about suspected terrorists. Pakistan has also worked with the FBI to capture suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives who fled into northern Pakistan—including al-Qaeda operations chief Abu Zubaydah and the alleged September 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Muhammad—and in some cases has committed its own troops to hunt down al-Qaeda holdouts. According to the State Department’s 2004 Country Report, “Pakistan continues to pursue al-Qaeda and its allies aggressively through counterterrorist police measures and large-scale military operations.” Osama bin Laden is widely believed to be hiding in the remote tribal region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border with his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri. Musharraf says Pakistani troops had their best chance of capturing bin Laden from May-July 2004, after the army launched an offensive along the border with Afghanistan. But he says the trail has now gone cold.
After the July 2005 London bombings, in which the bombers were of Pakistani decent—and at least one of the suspects visited a Pakistani madrassa—Musharaff outlined a new approach for cracking down on extremism. He has decided to monitor hate sermons from mosques; require that all madrassas be registered and foreign students expelled; clamp down on inflammatory material; and prohibit militant groups from collecting funds. Pakistan also responded to the bombing by detaining more than 200 suspected Islamist militants.
Jeep wrote:After the July 2005 London bombings, in which the bombers were of Pakistani decent—and at least one of the suspects visited a Pakistani madrassa—Musharaff outlined a new approach for cracking down on extremism. He has decided to monitor hate sermons from mosques; require that all madrassas be registered and foreign students expelled; clamp down on inflammatory material; and prohibit militant groups from collecting funds. Pakistan also responded to the bombing by detaining more than 200 suspected Islamist militants.
http://www.cfr.org/publication/9514/
machineHead wrote:1. "New approach" был результатом бомбежки 2005 г. ,а вовсе не действиями США в Ираке.
2. в 2005 г, спустя 4 года после WTC, Афганистана и 2 года после Ирака Пакистан оставался именно базой террористов.
Дальнейшие комментарии излишни.![]()
Pakistan is a key front-line ally in the U.S.-led anti-terrorism coalition. After
September 2001, Pakistani President Musharraf ended his government’s ties with the
Taliban regime of Afghanistan and has since cooperated with and contributed to U.S.
efforts to track and capture remnants of Al Qaeda and Taliban forces that have sought
refuge inside Pakistani territory.
erix wrote:Ладно, обсуждайте дальше без меня.
Enjoy.
Килькин wrote:Чего-то тролли зачастили, наверно, к дождю
Flash-04 wrote:и тем не менее с фактами трудно споритьа факты таковы:
1. Техническая возможность нанести превентивный удар был у СССР и США.