Friday, May 27, 2011

Anti-Americanism Is Pakistan’s Only Hope...and Mike G. Vickers is a Nuclear Terrorist.

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Anti-Americanism Is Pakistan’s Only Hope...and Mike G. Vickers is a Nuclear Terrorist.

It is no conspiracy theory that Pakistan is being targeted by outside interests. The Special Forces type of soldiers being killed in the latest assaults are all highly trained professional killers. Who is supplying them? The only obvious answer is: the United States, India, Israel, Britain, and very possibly, Russia. It is Clinton's job to sell the lies being fronted to the world by the Western disinformation machine. I guarantee that Hillary's meetings were "tense." She is lucky she made it out of there alive. The US govt. had better rethink its plans for Pakistan and for world domination.

Tell Mike Vickers that his "plan to takeover the world" has failed (SEE: Mike Vickers Author of Anti-Soviet Strategy Now Plots the “Take-Over-the-World Plan”)....
Pakistani activists from Jamiat Ulama e Islam (JUI) burn a US flag during a protest in Karachi.
Anti-Americanism will help Pakistan: Clinton is a jack-ass...

ISLAMABAD — US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday told Pakistan that the country needed to understand that anti-Americanism and conspiracy theories will not end its problems.

"Pakistan should understand that anti-Americanism and conspiracy theories will not make the problem disappear," Clinton told a news conference following talks with Pakistan's military and civilian leaders.

Pakistan was left humiliated and angry after an American raid killed Osama bin Laden two hours' from the capital on May 2.

The unilateral operation has fuelled widespread anti-American sentiment in the country, which has long been high over a covert CIA drone war against militant commanders in the country's northwestern tribal belt.

The chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, who accompanied Clinton in her meetings pleaded for greater co-operation between the two wary allies in the war against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

Clinton denied that the meetings, held under blanket security, were tense and said she had heard Pakistan commit to "some very specific action", saying the country deserved more credit for its efforts in the war on militants.

"I return to Washington ever more committed," to the relationship, she said.