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On Aug. 12, FRONTLINE producer Martin Smith, his co-producer Marcela Gaviria, and cameraman Scott Anger set out on a two-month journey that will take them from London to the Persian Gulf to Pakistan and Afghanistan in an effort to find out what has become of Osama bin Laden's terrorist network, Al Qaeda, since the U.S. launched its war on terrorism. In the weeks ahead, we'll be posting regular email dispatches from Smith and Gaviria as they report back to us on their progress, offering an unprecedented behind-the-scenes perspective on a FRONTLINE documentary in the making. Smith's report will air in mid-November. ![]() | ||||||||||||||
![]() "Nuclear Neighbors"
While Scott and I are having a very "civilized" meal at the U.N. Club, a place reminiscent of a gentleman's club in the colonial subcontinent, India attacked Pakistan. I find out about the latest skirmish twelve hours after dinner as we try to track down General Musharraf's closest aide, General Rashid Qureshi. He is swamped with calls, so we figure that the only way to trap him into meeting us is by attending the special press briefing. "Late last night India launched a totally unprovoked attack on a Pakistani outpost in Northern Kashmir," General Qureshi told a couple dozen Pakistani journalists crammed in a space that looks much like my grandmother's old living room. It's an old conflict -- this part-time war between India and Pakistan -- one that has lasted for more than 20 years. Ironically, it seems to flare up every time an American dignitary comes to town to mediate the dispute between the two uneasy nuclear neighbors. Tomorrow, Richard Armitage, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State, will arrive from Delhi. And so to mark his arrival, Pakistan says, the Indians have bombarded one of their outposts using aircraft. It's strange hearing talk of "sorties" and "maximum restraint" and "escalation of the conflict" in a war that has nothing to do with terrorism or Al Qaeda. In fact, it seems Pakistanis are far more wrapped up in the fate of "Indian occupied Kashmir" than with the coalition's mission in the Tribal Areas. Kashmir is an obsession in this country. Kashmir matters to the Pakistanis because it's a Muslim area being occupied by Hindu infidels. Pakistan is fiercely religious. It is, after all, called the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Here there are hundreds of madrassas, or religious schools, and a mosque every few hundred yards. Men walk about in their Shalwar Kameez and prayer hats. Beige and light blue seem to be the colors in vogue. One rarely sees women on the streets, and if you do, they are wrapped from head to toe in a colorful medley of cotton fabrics. Scott and I took a walk through a middle-class neighborhood today. Men sat on benches having their beards trimmed by roadside barbers. Others held hands in friendly embrace. And a few prayed on straw mats in a courtyard. Vendors were deep-frying batter in pools of grease sprinkled with a few dead gnats. Piles of dung were scattered here and there. The smell was so odious, I felt nauseous. Martin has arrived and once again he's lost his luggage. Tomorrow, Inshalla, we will go to Peshawar. < (previous dispatch) · (next dispatch) > ![]() web site copyright 1995-2014 WGBH educational foundation |
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