pak hi pak
Citizen
Even as deadly terror attacks continue in Pakistan, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan chief, Hakimullah Mehsud, has offered the government to make the country an Islamic state to get the outfit's target shifted towards India.
The young new leader of Taliban in Pakistan, whom the US considers dead, has assured the government that he will devote his life to bleed India if it accepts his offer.
In a television interview Hakimullah said, "We want an Islamic state. If we get that then we will go to the borders and fight the Indians."
If the US thought it had broken the Taliban's back by eliminating its dreaded leader Baitullah Mehsud, they couldn't have been more wrong. The new leadership of the Taliban seems stronger than ever and has no shortage of weapons and fighters willing to go into battle.
Persuading the government to snap ties with the US, Mehsud said, "We are fighting the Pakistan Army, the police and the frontier corps because they are following American orders. If they stop following their orders, we will stop fighting them."
He claimed to have mounted a string of attacks in Pakistan in the past week including the 22 hour siege of the Pakistani army headquarters in Rawalpindi the last weekend.
Twenty eight-year-old Hakimullah commands a strongly re-energised Taliban in Pakistan, which is not just baying loudly for Indian blood but biting the hands that has fed it for years mounting attack after attack against the Pakistan military establishment.
Hakimullah lives under the constant shadow of death with American drone attacks on the one side and a marauding Pakistan Army on the other.
The young new leader of Taliban in Pakistan, whom the US considers dead, has assured the government that he will devote his life to bleed India if it accepts his offer.
In a television interview Hakimullah said, "We want an Islamic state. If we get that then we will go to the borders and fight the Indians."
If the US thought it had broken the Taliban's back by eliminating its dreaded leader Baitullah Mehsud, they couldn't have been more wrong. The new leadership of the Taliban seems stronger than ever and has no shortage of weapons and fighters willing to go into battle.
Persuading the government to snap ties with the US, Mehsud said, "We are fighting the Pakistan Army, the police and the frontier corps because they are following American orders. If they stop following their orders, we will stop fighting them."
He claimed to have mounted a string of attacks in Pakistan in the past week including the 22 hour siege of the Pakistani army headquarters in Rawalpindi the last weekend.
Twenty eight-year-old Hakimullah commands a strongly re-energised Taliban in Pakistan, which is not just baying loudly for Indian blood but biting the hands that has fed it for years mounting attack after attack against the Pakistan military establishment.
Hakimullah lives under the constant shadow of death with American drone attacks on the one side and a marauding Pakistan Army on the other.