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Terrorism & Rule of Law / Comment

The Afghanistan-Pakistán nexus

20/10/2008 By Robert Matthews

Pakistan, a  country that Newsweek headlined in late 2007 as  “the most dangerous country on earth”, has become perceptibly more dangerous.  When on September 20  a ton of explosives was detonated by a suicide bomber inside the security gate of the Marriot hotel in Islamabad, killing at least 53 people and injuring 266 more,.

it was the worst bombing ever in Islamabad and came eleven months after the most deadly attack in Pakistan’s history when on October 18 2007 a suicide bomber killed 136 people and wounded another 450 as Benazir Bhutto arrived in  Karachi.

The blast this time occurred within a few hundred meters of the prime minister’s house, where Pakistani government  leaders were dining after the president’s address to Parliament. Many analysts believe that the bombing was probably a retaliation for recent Pakistani  military operations which killed scores of Islamic extremists in the district of Bajaur in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. 


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Keywords

Afghanistan Conflict Pakistan Terrorism War on terror

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Bio author: Robert Matthews

Robert Matthews, Associate Fellow of FRIDE, holds a Ph.D in Latin American history from New York University, where he was a teacher at the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. For twenty years was a collaborator with the Peace Research Center - Centro de Investigación para la Paz (CIP) - in Madrid, specializing in United States foreign policy.