Saturday, December 31, 2011

Only 78 French Musketeers killed in Afghanistan




78 Soldiers Killed: French Defense Chief In Afghanistan


http://www.pajhwok.com/en/2011/12/31/strategic-pact-france-january-end

 Pajhwok Afghan News
 December 31, 2011

 Strategic pact with France by January end
 By Mir Agha Samimi

 KABUL: President Hamid Karzai and the visiting French defence minister on Saturday discussed a strategic cooperation pact between Kabul and Paris.

 At a meeting with Gerard Longuet, currently on a two-day visit to the Afghan capital, Karzai hinted at concluding the strategic deal with France by the end of the next month.

 ...

 Karzai condoled Thursday's killing of two French troops by a man in the Afghan National Army (ANA) uniform in the Tagab district of central Kapisa province.

 He also thanked France, which has 3,600 troops fighting insurgents in Kabul and Kapisa, for training the Afghan army. Since 2001, 78 French soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan.

 During his visit, Longuet will meet Defence Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak and Gen. John Allen, the commander of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE


Third World War will start from Caucasus or Af Pak



South Caucasus: World's Next Full-Blown War?


http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/indepth/2011-12/26/c_131326753.htm


 Xinhua News Agency
 December 26, 2011

 Is there yet another crisis on the horizon of South Caucasus?
 By Gaochao Yi

 -Georgia and the entire South Caucasus can serve as the bridge to Central Asia and the Middle East for NATO, once U.S.-led international forces pull their troops out of Iraq at the end of year.
 The trans-Caucasian pipeline is already starting to serve as a counterweight diversion of energy to Europe...
 No matter what happens as responses to whatever provocations, the South Caucasus crisis can remain a mere regional battle or develop into a full-blown war.

 TBILISI: South Caucasus, after the Balkans and North Africa, is presenting itself as a hotbed for another crisis which may well involve all the three nations in the region and players from the outside.

 Ethnicity-related territorial disputes that have arisen during and after the Soviet era are the direct causes of the South Caucasus crises long in the making.

 Such disputes have caused a flash conflict between Georgia and Russia in August 2008 in the north of the region and triggered on-again-off-again border sniper warfare between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the south, which claimed thousands of victims.

 The three Caucasian countries combined cover an area of slightly over 186,000 square km, accounting for 0.12 percent of the global land area. Yet on this strip sandwiched between the major and minor Caucasus mountain ranges, there are other dormant conflicts.

 For example, there has been a genocidal conflict between Armenia and Turkey, but the "football diplomacy" between the two nations has done a lot to ease the tension.

 Local players aside, outsiders with energy, security and strategy interests in this region are also trying to take advantage of the situation there, further complicating the Caucasus chaos.

 NATO, for one, is a big player in this region. To cash in its Bucharest Summit promise of eventually allowing Georgia into the military alliance, it may have to reset and perhaps even reinvent its relations with the former Cold War nemesis, not only in the South Caucasus but in all those areas where NATO and Russia have their respective interests to claim and verify.

 Georgia and the entire South Caucasus can serve as the bridge to Central Asia and the Middle East for NATO, once U.S.-led international forces pull their troops out of Iraq at the end of year.

 The trans-Caucasian pipeline is already starting to serve as a counterweight diversion of energy to Europe, and the European Union needs the tally to bargain with Russia for pricing as well as for supplying its own natural gas and oil to the West.

 Russia, another big player in the region, now has its farthest outpost to attend to after Georgia decided in the middle of this year to shut its airspace for Russian transport to its military base in Armenia.

 Even though it may use the bypass via Azerbaijan or Iran or even Turkey, Russia will have to sacrifice or at least trade some of its key interests to secure the passable air route to Armenia, its major ally in the region.

 This year saw another variable in the South Caucasus: Georgia, the one and only of the 153 World Trade Organization members up to now which has barred Russian accession. Yet now Georgia has signed an agreement with Russia which facilitated the conclusion of Russia's 18-year efforts to get into the world trade club.

 The West, be it the European Union or NATO or the United States, may have used quite a few IOU's to get Georgia to sign the accord with Russia in Geneva in November.

 And when the time has come to pay back these debts, and when the timing is not right nor convenient, things can go wrong.

 The scheduled elections in South Caucasus are a case in point.

 Both Georgia and Armenia will hold their parliamentary elections next year and presidential elections the following year. For the election campaigns, both the ruling and opposition parties may resort to strong rhetorics and even symbolic acts, which may also lead to turmoil in the region.

 During his brief visit to South Caucasus in October, French President Nicolas Sarkozy brought forth something which may be the South Caucasus part of his foreign policy manifesto for his French presidential election campaign.

 The "take-for-granted" policy toward the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region may cause another round of heated arguments between Armenia and Azerbaijan and renewed sniper border skirmishes.

 Though Azerbaijan held its parliamentary elections in late 2010, the country will still hold its presidential elections in 2013, which will have to have the incumbent president and potential vying opponent align their foreign policy in and outside the region to strive for a better footing on both regional and international issues.

 No matter what happens as responses to whatever provocations, the South Caucasus crisis can remain a mere regional battle or develop into a full-blown war.


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History



http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE


Recent Ban on Bhagavad Gita in Russia and Ban on Gita, Upanishads & Geetanjali in Turkey in 1970s!



FROM AMBASSADOR GAJENDRA SINGH

I have learnt use of  hyperlink insert , here it is  ; Bulent Ecevit , and  More on Turkish-Hindustani. in last para .You will see more of it in my future posts  .

Ban on Bhagavad Gita in Russia

by K. Gajendra Singh 31 Dec 2011

Ban on Bhagavad Gita in Russia 
and Ban on Gita, Upanishads & Geetanjali  in Turkey in 1970s!

http://tarafits.blogspot.com/2011/12/ban-on-gita-upanishads-geetanjali-in.html

http://www.boloji.com/index.cfm?md=Content&sd=Articles&ArticleID=11739

The current controversy about the ban on Shrimad Bhagavad Gita in the city of Tomsk, Siberia (Russia) by the prosecutor who branded it as 'extremist' literature and its reversal by a Judge on 28 December, brought to my mind a similar ban in Turkey in 1970s.
 
The case against the ban by Hindus in Russia in the city court has been going on since June. The Indian government intervened diplomatically with the embassy in Moscow taking up the matter with the Russian government and Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna speaking to Russian Ambassador Alexander Kadakin in New Delhi on 27December.
 
During the author's posting at Ankara, Turkey ( in 1969-73) one day the media suddenly splashed the news that the government of Turkey had banned Gita, Upanishads, a few other Indian religious books ,apart from Rabindranath Tagore's Geetanjali and some of his other writings. This came as unpleasant surprise to the Indian Embassy then headed by Ambassador KR Narayanan, later to become the president of the Indian Republic.

Naturally there was anger and furor in India with questions raised in the Parliament and the media going ballistic like after the recent banning of the Gita in Siberia.

Of course the ambassador took up the matter at the highest level, but first I went over to see Kaya Toperi, minister and deputy spokesman at the Turkish ministry of foreign affairs dealing with such matters. Kaya, who was counselor in the Turkish Embassy in New Delhi, was recently posted back home. We had known each other well, since I was undersecretary dealing with west and south Europe including Turkey.

After a cup of Turkish coffee, I jokingly asked Kaya that I had read Gita and Upanishads many times in translations and had not been able to fully comprehend its various interpretations and meanings .I was interested in meeting the gentleman, who had read Gita, understood it and then decided to ban it . Kaya, who was aware of the furor in India, laughed and explained that his ministry and censor regularly receive bundles of books to be reviewed for ban, from time to time.

After the 1971 military' half coup followed by crackdown on extremist students in Ankara, Upanishads, Gita, Geetanjali and other Indian books were found along with writings of Karl Marx, Engels and Lenin in leftists den and were sent to departments including foreign ministry in a big bundle .Since no one went through them, and reminders were piling up, the whole lot was returned without any examination for the ban. The censors recommended ban to the Prime Ministry and the whole bundle beginning with Communist writings and including Indian spiritual books and Tagore's writings was banned at a cabinet meeting, which only could take such decisions.

The ban was lifted at the next cabinet meeting in a month or so. 

Most Turkish friends were very embarrassed by the ban, since there was a section of Indology in Ankara university .There were Turkish students and scholars of Indian philosophy and literature, with an Indian teacher of Sanskrit and Hindi at the Ankara University.

Although after the Bolshevik revolution in Czarist Russia (an inveterate enemy of the Ottoman empire) , Socialist Moscow sent financial and military aid to Kemal Ataturk for Turkey's War of Independence against the European Imperialist powers led by Great Britain , which he accepted but he did not allow Communism to take roots in the republic . Communist party remains banned in Turkey even now. Ankara joined NATO was a strategic necessity to counter Moscow's territorial claims on Turkey after WWII.

But the student and academic community in Turkey, situated at the cross roads of ideas from Europe and West and central Asia and Africa acquires diverse and vibrant ideologies and beliefs and are passionate about them. So there has always been vibrant leftist and communist student community which regularly agitated against the US and its policies during the Cold War. The Political Science department of Ankara university has produced Turkey's top civil servants as well as many of its political leaders including Abdullah Ocalan, now imprisoned chief of the Kurdistan Workers' Party aka PKK (Kurdish: Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan) fighting for autonomy and cultural rights for Kurds since1984, which is Communist and Kurdish nationalistic in its ideology.

Thus the leftist intellectuals and students in Ankara and elsewhere in Turkey, apart from Karl Marx and Mao also studied the Naxalbari movement of Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal whose posters were found in student dormitories. They were also interested in Indian and other philosophies and literature.      
      
 
It is pertinent to recall that Tagore's writings were very popular in Turkey. In fact , late
 Bulent Ecevit, then head of the Republican peoples' party (RPP), established by the republic's founder and father, Kemal Atatürk, and later prime minster a few times had translated not only many poems of Tagore's Geetanjali but even had learnt Bengali and Sanskrit to better understand Gita. 

More on Turkic Languages and Hindustani 
 
 

31-Dec-2011

 
http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE



Pakistani Intelligence Don Quixote's in Pakistani Politics

A candidate from the North Punjab ideally suits Pakistani military .That explains Nawaz Sharifs ascent to power in 1985-99.

Ironically Imran Khan may be Pakistans prime minister with half of Pakistan in civil war or already seceded from Pakistan.

Imran Khan will be most distrusted by the Baloch population.

The key lesson of Baloch history is "  NEVER TRUST A PUNJABI OR HIS JUNIOUR PASHTUN PROXIES"

This is what the Baloch learnt in 1948 , 1958 , 1960-68 , 1974-76 , 2005 to date.


Agha .H. Amin

 

December 23, 2011

 

Dear All;

 

Several questions especially regarding military's role in political engineering in recent context, establishment's support of Imran Khan, droves of politicians joining his party especially former foreign minister, military's posturing etc. were asked.  I summarized the answers in following piece although subject matter is quite vast.  I have very little information about political forces and my main area of interest is military and militancy therefore I have focused on these areas.

 

Warm Regards,
Hamid

 

Smoke and Mirrors

Hamid Hussain

 

"Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex and more violent; but it takes a touch of genius and lots of courage to move something in the opposite direction." Albert Einstein

 

General Pervez Mussharraf ousted Nawaz Sharif government in 1998 and in the prevailing international situation it was difficult to continue under direct military rule.  Domestic and international circumstances dictated some kind of democratic set up to avoid complete international isolation as well as internal dissent.  General Mussharraf got advice from different sources including serving and retired senior officers and intelligence community.  Some suggested that politics should be completely kept out for few years and administration run by a team of technocrats under direct supervision of generals.  One advice was complete quarantine of two major political parties; Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz Sharif (PML-N) faction while supporting a new and younger political set up.  Others advocated picking off 'low hanging fruit' from old parties and presenting it in a new basket.  One advisor; a retired Lieutenant General argued that despite all their flaws country finally had two main political parties that were national.  He warned that any attempt to fracture these parties will only strengthen regional and ethnic parties that will be a bad omen for the federation. 

 

In 1999, analysis wing of Military Intelligence (MI) authored a report arguing for supporting a new set up.  Report recommended that new entrants with clean slate should be groomed and argued that by virtue of this quality of never being in government will make them acceptable to a major section of the population.  Imran Khan was considered to be a suitable candidate and it was in this background that General Pervez Mussharraf had meeting with Imran Khan.   This was MI's assessment and does not imply that MI officers had meetings with Imran Khan or frank discussions on the subject.   The downside of this recommendation was the fact that military had to directly build the infrastructure of the new set up to make it a national and credible alternative.  The other option of weaning off 'electable' known entities from different political parties and putting them under the umbrella of a new faction of Muslim League was much easier.  General Mussharraf opted for the later option and several representatives of the army including Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), MI and some serving and retried generals (Director General of Punjab Rangers was one of these officers) were assigned this task.  Twin instruments of rewards and threat of prosecution under the new set up of National Accountability Bureau (NAB) were used to get in line several politicians.  A large number of politicians from PML-N formed Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid-e-Azam (PML-Q) and this new set up was 'elected' to work directly under General Mussharraf.  Some dissidents from PPP and many independents also joined the new government (one candidate who won as an independent was summoned by DG Rangers Punjab to his official residence and pointing to the guards with tall headgears threatened the honorable member that sometimes these guards throw the offenders right across the border).  This set up was in place for five years and there was no role for Imran Khan. He continued as a 'lone ranger' crusading against corruption and presenting his own case. 

 

Change of guard at General Head Quarters (GHQ) in late 2007 with General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani taking command of the army, increasing unpopularity of now civilian Mussharraf and 2008 elections ultimately resulted in departure of Mussharraf.  Military was in a tough spot and they could not stop the wily Asif Ali Zardari to occupy the President House in the aftermath of the tragic assassination of his wife Benazir Bhutto.   GHQ never accepted Zardari as President and tried to quarantine him resulting in rapid deterioration of relations and this set the stage for byzantine intrigues.  President Zardari and General Kayani were both responsible for the dysfunctional relations at the highest level and Wiki leaks cables from U.S. ambassador in Islamabad give an insight into the thought process of Pakistan's highest decision makers. 

 

GHQ's problems with both major political parties, general disgust about corruption of all major political players and increasing popularity of Imran Khan opened the possibility of 'Khan Option' again in 2011.  Rapidly deteriorating security situation including assassination of senior military officers, attack on army headquarters and poorly conducted military operations resulted in deterioration of army's image among general population.  Killing of Osama bin Ladin by U.S. forces right under army's nose and brazen attack of militants on Mehran Naval base resulted in open and quite severe criticism of army.   Clash with United States over Afghan policy was just the icing on the cake.  Army tried to deflect some of these criticisms by deploying 'civilian human shields'.  It started to list all good deeds and credits on its own ledger while throwing all debts on the civilian books.  The script of current clash between civilian and military leaders was written long time ago. 

 

Army is happy that judiciary is taking care of their main headache; President Zardari.  Zardari's own credibility and popularity of less than single digit is not a mean achievement of the 'champions of democracy'.  GHQ is careful not to overtly get involved in the political mess but happy to give signals to relevant parties at appropriate time to have some influence on the political scene post 2013 elections.  PML-Q leader Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain remarked that "Those Q-League leaders who want to join PTI (Imran Khan's party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf) will go through a dry-clean plant in Rawalpindi" referring to political engineering done by ISI.  In the next few weeks, several politicians from all political parties flocked to PTI banner.  Background of several of the politicians now joining PTI is well known and self interest may the guiding principle without any late night call from any military official.  I'm not sure how much sugar military is putting in the PTI pot but involvement of half a dozen former intelligence officials in the affairs of PTI both overtly and covertly raises many suspicions.  One report suggested that a secret committee consisting of former intelligence officials is 'dry cleaning' some of these familiar faces before launching them into PTI fold.  If this is true it fits into the pattern as mediocre souls in the 'spooky world' have never been known for any finesse.  Few years ago, NAB 'dry cleaned' a former PPP leader Aftab Ahmad Sher Khan Sherpao so speedily and he was inducted as interior minister in such a haste that NAB didn't have time to remove his name from the Exit Control List (ECL) maintained by none other than the interior ministry.  A sad and ridiculous situation was created where country's sitting interior minister responsible for law and order of the land was on the ECL; prohibited from leaving the country as he was wanted in corruption cases.  If after 2013 elections, it looks like that Imran Khan is essentially presiding PML-Q with new title and Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) joins in as coalition partner then it will be quite clear that the major ingredients of the new wine were added in army's own brewery.  However, one year can be an eternity as far as Pakistan's political prediction is concerned.

 

Party politics based on political manifesto and grass root organization is not established in Pakistani political system.  Most parties are run by few families and many candidates get elected due to their own local influence.  It is in this context that major political parties entice 'electable candidates' to their folds.  Majority of politicians frequently change their party affiliations depending on power dynamics.  In this background it is not surprising to see many familiar faces joining Imran Khan's PTI.  PTI can now boast to have former foreign minister of General Mussharraf and former foreign minister of PPP in its folds.  The supporters of these politicians call this 'pragmatism' and their opponents call it 'opportunism'.  An important element of power politics is safeguarding self interest and it happens everywhere whether in first world or third world democracy. 

 

The case of family of Shah Mahmood Qureshi is a good example of how this works.  Qureshi's of Multan are hereditary custodians (Pirs) of two important shrines of Shah Rukn-e-Alam and Bahauddin Zakariya.  In southern and western Punjab this populist Islam has been part of the local culture and custodians of shrines have lived on the tribute paid by the disciples.  During British Raj a unique experiment was done where Pirs were welded to the landed gentry by award of large land grants.  This was further cemented by intermarriages between Syed Pirs and tribal landed aristocracy; twin pillars of rural elite.  Mutual beneficial relationship between the state and rural elites strengthened the bonds and retarded political consciousness.  In addition to religious and economic resources, they were also inducted into administration first as honorary magistrates and tehsildars and later with introduction of electoral politics secured important positions in municipal committees and provincial legislature.  Their leadership was secured due to hold on spiritual, economic and administrative domains.  Combination of a number of factors have gradually eroded influence of many traditional rural elites but in some areas they are still local power holders. 

 

Qureshi's ancestor and name sake Shah Mahmood Qureshi supported British during 1857 rebellion and victory of British ensured state patronage that continued for almost a century.  Shah Mahmood's father Sajad Hussain Qureshi joined Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto during latter's meteoric rise in early 1970s.  When Bhutto was overthrown and later hanged by General Muhammad Zia ul Haq, elder Qureshi joined Zia ul Haq and was appointed Governor of Punjab province.  Shah Mahmood was elected in 1985 in non-party based elections and then joined PML-Junejo group which was B-team of General Zia.  After Zia's death, he joined PML-N and served as provincial minister under Nawaz Sharif.  When Sharif's rival Manzoor Watto became Chief Minister, Shah Mahmood jumped on the new wagon and was appointed provincial Finance Minister.  In 1993, when PPP came to power, he joined Benazir Bhutto and appointed Minister of State.  In 1997 when he lost national assembly election, he was happy to serve as district Nazim of Multan. He served as president of PPP in Punjab and after winning elections on PPP ticket in 2008, he was hoping to get the top slot of Prime Minister but was given foreign minister portfolio.  When he was downgraded further and offered Water and Power ministry, he called it quits and left PPP.  The new rising star of PTI gave him new hope and in a dramatic turn of events immediately after joining the party he was appointed Vice Chairman essentially number two to Imran Khan.  In view of significant local influence, when such politicians switch parties and jump on new ships, they don't start from the boiler room and work their way up.  They immediately get access to the 'Captain's Deck' and Qureshi's case in nothing new as far as Pakistani politics is concerned.

 

The surge of youth prompted almost all old politicians to launch their young sons and daughters into the field.  Shah Mahmood's son Zain Qureshi (he served as Legislative assistant to Senator John Kerry when his father was foreign minister) along with many other young scions of old families have joined PTI.  Two sons of former President Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari and grandson of Pir of Pagara have jumped on PTI train that is picking up steam and racing towards Islamabad.  If this is the change then only God Almighty knows the meaning of status quo.  

 

Imran Khan is sincere and wants to solve many problems but like other parties the whole party revolves around his personality and no sustainable grassroots organization exists.  He can not wait any longer and feels that his time has come.  It is this factor that forced him to accept 'electable entities' in his party.  The biggest asset for Imran is that he is starting with clean slate and he does not have any political baggage and people may be willing to give him a chance.  He has given hope to general public and this is a big plus as country needs a positive approach.  However, this needs to be carefully calibrated as 'Messiah complex' both on part of the public and the leader risks a deep disappointment and despair.  Country's problems are complex and deep rooted and it will take a lot of hard work and sacrifices as well as time to address the issues of collapsing economy, energy crisis, law and order and severe strain on all segments of the society. 

 

Careful balance between populist slogans and clear understanding of  challenges is must and while giving hope for better future a good dose of reality needs to be communicated to general public.  Two major political parties PPP and PML-N will try to counter PTI by accusing it of taking 'turncoats' into its fold at the behest of the establishment.  If large numbers of party tickets are awarded to these old hands, it may cause enough dejection among party's main base of youth.  If this apathy is significant enough to keep them away from the polling stations, then PPP and PML-N can hope to tackle rival candidates at their own merits.  On the other hand if Imran is able to have a careful balance by giving fifty percent of tickets to 'familiar faces' allowing them to use their personal influence in the constituencies and asking them to keep a low profile overall.  The other fifty percent tickets are awarded to younger middle class candidates and keeping them in the media limelight.  He may be able to win the first round with this strategy although the real test will be once he sits on the throne of thorns. 

 

Real threats to Imran are not from 'usual suspects'.  He has been careful so far and he is fighting only on one front and that is political with almost exclusive focus on corruption of politicians.  He has been quite on militancy as well as role of army in country's affairs.  Only when accusations of 'establishment's support' are hurled at him, he responds by stating that he will rein in ISI and not allow generals to call the shots.  It is easier said than done.  For the uninitiated the example of late Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto should be enough.  Bhutto learned his political skills by calling country's dictator Field Marshal Ayub Khan 'daddy'.  He came to power in the aftermath of humiliating defeat of the army when army's stock was lowest and his own powers unchecked as Civilian Chief Martial Law Administrator.  He also had the legitimacy of winning the majority of the seats in the remaining Pakistan.  At the pinnacle of his power he publicly ridiculed senior generals and in his usual abrasive style insulted many.  One general sent an application for extension of his service and Bhutto while approving wrote in his own handwriting on the general's file 'let the bastard die with his boots on'.  In less than six years, military removed him from power and hanged him. 

 

In current circumstances, Army's hope is that even if Imran comes in with decent majority, known entities now in PTI will have a sobering effect.  Most of these politicians have either directly worked with the military or have background channels with GHQ therefore their advice will be to work with the military.  Current circumstances of the country including over stretch of the military fighting insurgencies, lot of pressure from below especially from junior officers, open media and assertive judiciary are not conducive for overt military involvement.  Military brass will be perfectly comfortable with the set up where it has the veto power over certain decisions while letting the civilian leaders take all the heat due to growing number of problems faced by the country.  The momentum is in Imran Khan's favor and it depends on how he handles his new role. 

 

The risk of assassination is a clear and present danger and in my view the probability of Imran dying unnatural death before next election is now over sixty percent.  In that case the leadership of PTI will automatically shift to Shah Mahmood Qureshi and everybody will live happily after.   Religious militant groups have no love lost for the 'contaminated' and 'polluted' Muslims.  Their version of Sharia has no room for leadership role for people like Imran Khan.  So far Imran has not openly criticized militants and if by mistake he opens this front before getting into the corridors of power or when faced with the reality of armed groups scattered allover the country after getting the levers of power will bring him in conflict with militants.  In that case, militants will go for the decapitation and they have the will and the resources to achieve their aim in a very short period of time. 

 

In Pakistan, very little attention has been paid to rapidly changing social scene.  Social gulf is widening at an alarming rate and these social pressures are contributing to worsening law and order in the shape of increasing cadres for militant groups as well as violent crime.  Regardless of the party or individual at the helm of the affairs, these social issues need urgent attention.  I have not seen any serious research on social aspect of the militancy.  Most Pakistanis simply label them as angry, misguided and criminal element, on the payroll of some foreign country or a reaction to U.S. policy in the region but completely ignore the social aspect.  The case of Swat is particularly alarming where youth of poor, marginalized and disenfranchised Gujar community provided the bulk of foot soldiers to the meteoric rise of local militant commander Mullah Fazlullah.  The core agenda of Fazlullah was not any extra territorial ambitions but overthrow of the existing local order and he promised these youth a better future under his guidance no matter how misguided.  Underlying anger and hatred manifested in the form of extreme forms of brutalities perpetrated on Swatis especially on those seen as part of the existing order; land holding elite, police, pirs etc.  Existing order was preserved only when state came in with a very heavy coercive arm resulting in thinning of the militant ranks.  Coercion is an essential element in extreme situations but coercion alone will not do the trick as underlying serious social problems need to be addressed.  Similar trends are visible in southern Punjab and if not addressed in a timely fashion can cause serious troubles for the state down the road. 

 

In different parts of the country, these social stresses generate violence under different banners.   The boundaries between power, politics, economic disparity and criminality are blurred.  In Pushtun belts of Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa, it is visible in the form of religious militancy, in southern and western Punjab as sectarian violence, in Karachi the platform is linguistic and in Baluchistan it is visible as ethnicity based insurgency.  This is the real challenge for rulers of Pakistan no matter of what political or ideological persuasion. 

 

Differences of opinion about any given policy is norm and even in well established democracies there is some friction between civilian and military leaders.  A minimum working relationship with the spirit of compromise is must to avoid confrontations.  This is the basic lesson Pakistani politicians and generals need to learn by heart.  If civilian leaders insist on simply occupying the seats of power without any responsibility and generals insist on veto power over all issues, the country will stumble from crisis to crisis.  If cabinet members happily serve as 'moles' for GHQ and army insists on using Military Secretaries to President and Prime Ministers as 'informants', the byzantine intrigues will continue.  Civilians leaders should at least show the concern that they are trying to address serious problems and generals should stick to military matters.  The least military brass can do is to stop detonating 'time bombs' under the seats of civilian rulers.  If both civilians and generals can stay in their 'own lanes' that will be better not only for the country but their own institutions. 

 

"Courage among civilized peoples consists in a readiness to sacrifice oneself for the political community."        G.W. Hegel

 

Author thanks many for their valuable input although conclusions as well as all errors and omissions are author's sole responsibility.

 

Hamid Hussain

December 23, 2011

coeusconsultant@optonline.net

 


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE

 

 


Pashtun soldiers regarded as lesser being than regular Pakistan Army soldiers

ANALYSIS: Discrimination against FC soldiers — I —Farhat Taj

What matters is who killed the soldiers. If the killer is the US, they will condemn with all they have. If the killer is the Taliban, they will forgive and forget. Many will even blame the US for the acts of terror committed and publicly owned by the Taliban

In November, 24 Pakistani army soldiers were killed by the Afghanistan-based US and NATO forces in a border attack at Salala checkpost in FATA. The Pakistani media, banned militant organisations, religious political parties and urban middle class as well as liberal Pakistanis continue to condemn the attack on a daily basis. More than a month since the incident the public demonstrations against it continue to take place in the country. Pakistan has sought an apology from the US for the attack. The incident has worsened Pak-US relations, which were already at one of the lowest points in history. 

Compare this grandiose response with the response given to the killing of almost the same number of Frontier Corps (FC) paramilitary soldiers killed by the militants in Tank and Bannu a month after the US killing of the Pakistani army soldiers. The difference could not be starker. The government, the military, the media, militant organisations, right-wing political parties, middle class and liberal Pakistanis stand united in silence over this incident as if it never happened or is not worth paying attention to. Neither the government has asked for an apology from the Taliban nor has it expressed the resolve to bring the killers of the FC soldiers to justice. If the past record of the government is anything to go by, one must forget about justice for the affected FC families. In May 2011, over 70 FC recruits were most brutally killed in twin suicide attacks in Charsadda district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. By 2010, over 700 FC soldiers have been killed in the war on terror. It seems justice for the FC soldiers killed or injured by the Taliban or for their families have never been even an issue. Are the FC soldiers less worthy than the soldiers of the Pakistan Army? Are the sufferings of the families of the FC soldiers any less than the sufferings of the families of the army soldiers? What reasons explain the totally different Pakistani response to the two equally brutal killings? 

One explanation can be that the killing of the soldiers, whether FC or the Pakistan Army, really does not matter for those Pakistanis who continue to protest the border incident at Salala checkpost. What matters is who killed the soldiers. If the killer is the US, they will condemn with all they have. If the killer is the Taliban, they will forgive and forget. Many will even blame the US for the acts of terror committed and publicly owned by the Taliban. This is the logical outcome of Pakistan's role as a hostile ally in the war on terror whereby it fights with the US against the militant groups but at the same time nurtures the militants as proxies against the US. It is obvious that this dubious role is neither capable of pleasing the US nor all of the proxies as some among them might feel cheated and violently react, especially those who are no more wanted by the military establishment that has tried to eliminate them in the US drone attacks or in mysterious targeted killings by Pakistani spies. The bottom line is that publicly anti-Americanism has to be kept going to support the Pakistani Generals in dealing with the US no matter how many Pakistani soldiers or innocent Pakistanis have been killed by the disgruntled proxy elements or by 'design' by their state handlers to show to the world that Pakistan is really paying the price for participation in the war on terror. This is because the US and Pakistan are not on the same page in terms of strategic objectives in Afghanistan. 

The other reason that explains the silence over the brutal killings of the FC soldiers is their Pashtun identity. Let me say at the outset that many soldiers of the Pakistan Army are Pashtuns who have been giving their lives in the line of their professional duty along with their colleagues from other ethnicities. There has been an ethnic profiling of the Pashtun soldiers and officers of the Pakistan Army in a malicious manner whereby their sympathies have been associated with the Taliban while absolving the non-Pashtun soldiers and officers of any pro-Taliban views, especially the Punjabis in the army. They were portrayed as the only soldiers and officers in the army who have refused to perform their professional responsibilities or have hindered the army high command from taking action against the Taliban due to their Taliban sympathies. Well known Pakistani journalists have been promoting this misleading as well as degrading view about the Pashtuns in the Pakistan Army. As far as I know, the ISPR never came forward to reject this propaganda against the Pashtun soldiers and officers. This leaves one wondering whether the army was endorsing the propaganda against the professional loyalties of its own soldiers and officers from a specific ethnic group. I will come back to this issue on some other occasion. Now I will only focus on the FC soldiers, whose rank and file and non-officer cadre, unlike the Pakistan Army, are exclusively drawn from the Pashtun tribes in FATA and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, while its officer cadre is exclusively drawn from the Pakistan Army. 

The FC is split into two independent forces: FC Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FC Balochistan. Both FCs are individually led by senior level military officers from the Pakistan Army. The force is under a strict military discipline and its immediate command remains in the hands of the commissioned army officers appointed on deputation from the Pakistan Army. In theory, the FC is meant to be assisting the regular armed forces of Pakistan on need basis. In practice, however, the FC remains part and parcel of the powerful military-intelligence complex of Pakistan that has remained beyond the control of any civilian government of the country. On the one hand the FC is used to brutally suppress any opposition to the military establishment of Pakistan, no matter how genuine the opposition may be, such as the use of FC in suppression of the ongoing nationalist resistance in Balochistan. On the other hand, the FC soldiers are mercilessly exposed to the worst kinds of brutalities from the battle-hardened militants in pursuit of the strategic objectives in Afghanistan, such as the war on terror, while at the same time they are subjected to a malicious propaganda linking their sympathies with the Taliban rather than the Pakistani state.

(To be continued)

The writer is the author of Taliban and Anti-Taliban


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE

Adultery and Stoning to Death "nowhere in the whole of the Quran

FROM MR KALIM IRFANI

"The punishment for adultery in the Quran is lashes, not stoning. In
fact, nowhere in the whole of the Quran is stoning prescribed for any
crime."

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/07/08/stoning-a-woman-in-iran-for-adultery.html

The Gory Truth About Stoning
Jul 8, 2010 6:57 PM EDT
After celebrities and activists alike protested the stoning of an
Iranian woman for adultery, the government announced it would not
enforce the sentence. Reza Aslan on the absurd, and oddly specific,
rules of a draconian punishment.
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Amnesty International

News that Iran has suspended the stoning of a 43-year-old mother of
two, Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, for the crime of adultery certainly
came as a relief. But the case has once again focused international
attention on a barbaric and draconian form of punishment that, in some
Muslim states, has become an effective and horrific tool of misogyny.

Stoning is a brutally precise punishment with a host of specific
procedures and regulations. The convicted person is wrapped in a
shroud, placed into a pit, and buried either to the waist if a man or
the chest if a woman. If the adultery was proven in court by
confession, the judge has the responsibility of throwing the first
stone. But if the case was proven through witnesses, they start first,
followed by the judge, and then by any others who are present, the
number of which cannot be less than three. The stones are then hurled
one by one until the accused is killed. And if the person manages to
wriggle out of the pit, she or he is set free (which explains why
these pits are so often little more than loosely packed holes in the
ground).

The punishment for adultery in the Quran is lashes, not stoning. In
fact, nowhere in the whole of the Quran is stoning prescribed for any
crime.

The Iranian Penal Code is chillingly explicit regarding the proper
stones to use. Section 119 states: "The stones for stoning to death
shall not be so big that one or two of them shall kill the convict,
nor shall they be so small that they may not be called 'stones.'"

Islamic law considers adultery, or zina, to be one of six
Quran-mandated offenses whose punishment is prescribed by God (the
other five are false accusations of adultery, theft, robbery with
violence, apostasy, and drunkenness). These are essentially a random
collection of crimes whose only connection is that their punishment is
mentioned somewhere in the Quran. Consequently, these "crimes" receive
special treatment in Islamic law.

But the punishment for adultery in the Quran is lashes, not stoning.
In fact, nowhere in the whole of the Quran is stoning prescribed for
any crime—though this is a point of endless debate for legal and
religious scholars.

Although zina literally means adultery, in practice it refers to any
unlawful sexual act, whether adultery (illicit sex between married
persons), fornication (sex between unmarried persons), sodomy, rape,
or incest. However, even the simplest definition of zina can become
hopelessly entangled in the complexities of Muslim sexual ethics. For
instance, some legal scholars suggest that zina should not be applied
in instances in which a married person is unable to enjoy his or her
spouse due to legally acceptable conditions, such as prolonged travel
or life imprisonment. Then there is the problematic relationship
between adultery and rape in some Islamic penal codes. Rape victims
can themselves be charged with adultery if they are unable to
definitively prove sexual coercion. Indeed, there have been some cases
in which the victims of rape, rather than the rapists, are convicted
of zina and stoned to death for adultery.


The trailer for The Stoning of Soraya M., based on a true story.


Adding to all of this confusion is the fact it is nearly impossible to
legally convict someone of zina in Islamic law. Without exception,
zina must be proven in a court of law either by four clear and
unambiguous confessions made in four separate meetings with a
qualified judge, or by the attestation of four men of "blameless
integrity" who must all profess to be direct eyewitnesses to the
crime. (If four men are not available, three men and two women will
suffice.) Where one finds four blameless men who happen to have
simultaneously witnessed the very private act of sexual intercourse
between two people is another matter.

It is for this reason that even those countries that still have
stoning in their penal codes go to such lengths to work around the
punishment. After Zia al-Haq instituted the Islamic Penal Code in
Pakistan, over 95 percent of adultery convictions between 1980 and
1987 were overturned on legal technicalities. In Iran—a country that,
to this day, applies a strict interpretation of Islamic law—a
temporary moratorium was placed on the practice of stoning a decade
ago, due in part to a vigorous debate in the courts over the legality
of the punishment.


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE


Baloch will for Independence is alive despite selective genocide


 
"I know that I am prejudiced on this matter, but I would be ashamed of myself if I were not."
Mark Twain
 

"A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will produce in time a people as base as itself." - Joseph Pulitzer


COMMENT: Washed away by the tide of history —Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur

The Baloch, Sindhi and Pashtun children are made to read and revere Mohammad bin Qasim, Mahmud Ghaznavi, the Mughals and the heroes of Pakistani wars with India while nothing is taught about their own history, heroes or culture as if these nations had no history, no heroes, and no culture prior to August 14, 1947

When colonisers occupy a place, as in Australia, the Americas, Balochistan, Kurdistan and Palestine, the indigenous people are dispossessed and denied their inherent rights exercised since eons. The colonists rely primarily on force; however, to ensure permanent supremacy they try to eradicate their indigenousness, culture and history. They employ the lethal tool of demographic changes to physically occupy, dominate and exploit the new land. Needless to remind that Jinnah ordered forcible annexation of Balochistan in March 1948.

February 2008 saw Kevin Rudd, the Australian prime minister, apologise specially for the removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families, communities and country; ostensibly to civilise them. John Moriarty, an aboriginal activist, termed that forcible removal a 'cultural genocide'.

Apologising to the Aborigines, Kevin Rudd expressed sorrow for "the pain, suffering and hurt of these Stolen Generations, their descendants and for their families left behind, for the mothers and the fathers, the brothers and the sisters, for the breaking up of families and communities, and for the indignity and degradation thus inflicted on a proud people and a proud culture." However, this apology did not go far enough because it overlooked the whole sorry mess of colonialism in Australia based on 'terra nullius' (unoccupied or un-owned land) principle.

He articulated the agony of the sufferers thus: "There is something terribly primal about these first-hand accounts, the pain is searing, it screams from the pages, the hurt the humiliation, the degradation and the sheer brutality of the act of physically separating a mother from her children is a deep assault on our senses and on our most elemental humanity." To understand the pain of the mothers and families of those who are abducted, tortured beyond recognition and dumped every day in Balochistan and those who have been repressed, killed, maimed and tortured during the last 64 years, multiply this pain a million times over.

The colonisers' legal systems abet in their crime. In Australia until 1994 the courts continued to uphold the notion that the Aboriginal peoples had possessed no property rights in 1788, thus upholding Britain's right to declare sovereignty over it under the legal fiction of terra nullius. Greed makes the colonisers simply disregard people and their rights to see only the bounty of the land.

Native title claims in Australia have been effectively limited by the racist demand that Aboriginal claimants prove that their cultural traditions of land inheritance have remained in place, unchanged, over the entire period of colonisation. Yet when evidence proves it, they are still brazenly denied rights. In 2002, the mixed-ancestry Yorta Yorta people lost their native title case on the dehumanising grounds that any entitlement they had to claim Aboriginal traditions had been "washed away by the tide of history".

Unremitting repression, discrimination and rejection permanently scar the victims' psyche. Lorna Lippmann, a social historian and Aboriginal rights advocate, observes that the Aboriginal peoples expect to be despised, rejected, or ignored, resulting not only in their distrust of the whites but also in a low self-image, with long-term negative consequences for social, psychic, and physical well-being. Can any apology ever undo such detrimental effects on the victims' psyche?

Canada also apologised to the 'natives' in June 2008 for more than a century of abuses at boarding schools set up to assimilate its indigenous peoples. Beginning in 1874, 150,000 Indian, Inuit and Métis children in Canada were forcibly enrolled in the 132 boarding schools run by Christian churches on behalf of the federal government in an effort to integrate them into society. Prime Minister Stephen Harper admitted: "These objectives were based on the assumption that aboriginal cultures and spiritual beliefs were inferior and unequal."

Many survivors alleged abuse by headmasters and teachers, who stripped them of their culture and language. This left them disconnected from their families, communities and feeling 'ashamed' of being born native. Chief Phil Fontaine of the Assembly of First Nations (the body representing Natives) said, "They tried to kill the Indian in the child, to eradicate any sense of Indian-ness from Canada. The attempts to erase our identities hurt us deeply."

If you take a deeper look at what Pakistan has been doing here since 1947, it is exactly what the Australian and Canadian Governments did then. Turkey and Iran practice the same. The Baloch, Sindhis and Pashtuns have not been put into special schools as was done there because the education system here is in its entirety a special school. It is designed to kill the indigenousness in the child; to erase the indigenous culture so that the rulers' culture can be imposed. This is what is being practiced here. Jinnah had cast the first stone when he imposed Urdu on the Bengalis, Baloch, Sindhis and Pashtuns.

The Baloch, Sindhi and Pashtun children are made to read and revere Mohammad bin Qasim, Mahmud Ghaznavi, the Mughals and the heroes of Pakistani wars with India while nothing is taught about their own history, heroes or culture as if these nations had no history, no heroes, and no culture prior to August 14, 1947. The Pakistani state has imposed its ideology, culture and language at the cost of the indigenous people and this blatantly is cultural genocide.

Ironically, the Pakistani state — instead of regretting this transgression — considers it an achievement. Forced to learn in alien languages, the Baloch, Sindhi and Pashtun masses' children are massively handicapped and therefore cannot compete with the elite education system's products. Hence an ever widening gap between different regions and strata of the population is created, which also exacerbates the sense of alienation that initially arises from repression and economic discrimination.

Demographic changes were relentlessly attempted but the Baloch people's resistance thwarted them. In November 2010, the Speaker of the Balochistan Assembly Aslam Bhootani disclosed that the federal government pressurised the Balochistan government to lease 70,000 acres to Arab princes. Had the Baloch not physically resisted since 1948, Balochistan would have been swamped by all and sundry. Only the fear of a backlash keeps demographic changes in abeyance.

The Baloch have decided to not to docilely accept the position that their rights have been "washed away by the tide of history" and this is exactly what they are fighting for here and in Iran. Because of the fierce determination with which they have resisted the attempts to curb their human, political, cultural, historical and economic rights, the tide of history will not be able to wash away Baloch rights.

The writer has an association with the Baloch rights movement going back to the early 1970s. He can be contacted at mmatalpur@gmail.com
 
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\01\01\story_1-1-2012_pg3_2



http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE


Dialogue among civilizations



Dear All,

This time the theme is dialogue among civilizations. There were some typing errors in what I submitted as the review,  I have corrected. those errors.  Comments are welcome.
Once again my best wishes to you for 2012.
Ishtiaq

The writer has a PhD from Stockholm University. He is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Stockholm University. He is also Honorary Senior Fellow of the Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He can be reached at billumian@gmail.com


Daily Times, Sunday, 1 January 2012

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\01\01\story_1-1-2012_pg3_3


IEW: Dialogue among civilisations —Ishtiaq Ahmed

Faiz Ahmed Faiz's imagery of the tarnished rays of the Dawn of Freedom and his advocacy of a Taxila University, Abdur Rahman Chugtai's defence of harmony between religion and art, and Eqbal Ahmad's powerful critique of western notions of terrorism and Islamic versions of it add further depth and breadth to the standpoints on civilisational dialogue and tensions

My dear friend and old-class fellow from St Anthony's High School, Lahore, Ambassador (Retd) Toheed Ahmad belongs to the category of intellectuals who are convinced that Islamic civilisation in general and the Pakistani experience of it especially has been amenable to dialogue since ancient times. His edited work, A Large White Crescent: Readings in Dialogue Among Civilisations: The Pakistani Experience (Lahore: Apa Publications, 2011), includes original texts of experts in the fields of archaeology, theology, history, poetry, law, political practice and sports to illustrate his standpoint. Pakistan, he asserts, is heir to continuous civilisation since the pre-historic Mohenjo Daro and Harappa period. The selection is broad-minded and inclusive. So what do we learn?

The famous archaeologist Sir Mortimer Wheeler found evidence of continuous civilisation in the riverbeds of the Indus Valley going back several millennia. Wheeler recognised that the non-Muslim inhabitants of this region contributed to civilisation as much as the Muslims who came later. We also learn that the young Arab general, Mohammad bin Qasim, who arrived in Sindh at the head of an Arab Army in 711 AD to chastise Raja Dahir, established good government and promoted economic activity, thus bringing about prosperity. He acquired an amazing ruling from Islamic scholars at Damascus, the capital of the Ummayads, to let the Hindus freely practice their religion and repair their temples. 

Al-Beruni (973-1048) who stayed in India for a long time was the first Indologist, according to Toheed Ahmad. In his Kitab-al-Hind, Al-Beruni critiqued the self-righteous belief of the Hindus that their civilisation and religion were superior to all others. He based his findings on scientific procedures of observation and verification. As a true social scientist, he attributed the negative trends in Hindu society largely to the demoralisation and despondency that followed defeat at the hands of the Muslims. Al-Beruni asserted that if both Hindus and Muslims interacted more regularly, better understanding could develop between them.

Let me say, it is a very interesting point indeed, because contemporary Pakistan displays the tendency towards self-righteousness and self-celebration and a resistance to reform and progress. The reason is the same: progress that the western civilisation has made and now by India has induced a negative state of mind among the Muslims. In such circumstances, a tendency to defend the indefensible becomes part of the knee-jerk response of those speaking on behalf of a civilisation in decline.

Toheed then introduces Amir Khusrau (1253-1325) whom he reckons as "the greatest genius produced by the Indo-Muslim civilisation" (page 35). Khusrau praised Hindus for some of their outstanding qualities while maintaining his pride as a Muslim. Such a train of thinking was consummated in the writings of the heir-apparent to the Mughal throne, Dara Shikoh (1615-1659) who translated many Hindu classics of religious nature asserting that both Hindus and Muslims ultimately believed in the same God.

The inclusion of Shah Waliullah (1703-1762) among the proponents of dialogue is interesting. Waliullah wanted good government and economic justice and was critical of the tradition-bound ulema who were opposed to change. Waliullah, however, was not seeking dialogue with Hindus but among Muslims to carry out reforms. Maulana Altaf Hussain Hali (1837-1914) was a populariser of past Muslim glory and condemned fanaticism and obscurantism. Sir Syed (1817-1898) pleaded for dialogue with Christian civilisation and a rapprochement between Indian Muslims and the British. 

A very interesting inclusion is Maulana Ubaidullah Sindhi (1872-1944), whom the editor describes as a revolutionary Islamic scholar. Born into a Sikh family, Ubaidullah converted to Islam and became a close affiliate of the Deoband anti-imperialist scholar Maulana Mahmud Hassan. He settled in Sukkur, Sindh, where he established a seminary. On Mahmud Hassan's advice in 1915, he moved to Afghanistan and formed the Provisional Government of India and started the 'Silken Letters' movement that aimed at the overthrow of British rule. Sindhi remained a steadfast believer in the need for Muslims and Hindus to cooperate to liberate India.

Thenceforward, we enter familiar territory. Allama Iqbal's 'Principle of Movement in the Structure of Islam' from 1924 and his 1930 address at the Muslim League's annual session at Allahabad are listed. The first is of course impressive in terms of Iqbal's review of Muslim intellectualism, but despite emphasis on ijtihad [the making of a decision in Islamic law by personal effort] Iqbal overrules a secular-democratic state in favour of a 'spiritual democracy' — an idea, quite honestly with poor anchorage in contemporary democratic theory and even more poorly corroborated by the Pakistani experience. His Allahabad address suggests that he proposed a loose federation in union with India. Toheed Ahmad also includes the literary-minded civil servant Dr S M Ikram in his list of advocates of dialogue. Ikram reviewed Hindu-Muslim interaction and syncretic movements. He concluded that the differences remained unbridgeable. 

With regard to Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the editor includes Jinnah's March 1940 presidential address at Lahore. This is a bit surprising, because although there are many of his speeches from the pre-1930 period that represent the spirit of dialogue, his 1940 speech epitomises the opposite: the relentless campaign he embarked upon to emphasise differences, nay irreconcilability, between Hindus and Muslims. However, the inclusion of the August 11, 1947 speech, famously speaking of equal rights of all citizens irrespective of their religion, sect and caste, balances that and we learn that in his heart of heart Jinnah was in favour of what is recognised by all educated people as a secular state, though not by the Pakistani establishment, which is not shy in pointing out that Jinnah did not use the word or term secularism in the speech; hence, it is asserted, he was speaking of an ideal Islamic state — whatever that means.

Nobel Laureate Dr Abdus Salam (an Ahmedi) is cited passionately arguing about the harmony between science and Islam and for the revival of science among Muslims while Justice A R Cornelius (a Roman Catholic) argues in favour of Islamic law as opposed to secular democracy. The irony involved in such argumentation need not be overemphasised.

Faiz Ahmed Faiz's imagery of the tarnished rays of the Dawn of Freedom and his advocacy of a Taxila University, one of the cradles of Buddhism and the Pali language, Abdur Rahman Chugtai's defence of harmony between religion and art, and Eqbal Ahmad's powerful critique of western notions of terrorism and Islamic versions of it add further depth and breadth to the standpoints on civilisational dialogue and tensions.

A few specimens on dialogue in the list include Pakistani achievements in sports indicating that Pakistan wants to partake in friendly competition with other nations. 

On the whole, the selection of writings by Toheed Ahmad is profoundly impressive. It is an expression of his broad-minded and enlightened approach to life. We get insights into the scope and limitations as well as confusion and contradictions in the Pakistani experience of civilisational dialogue.

The writer is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Stockholm University. He is also Honorary Senior Fellow of the Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He can be reached at billumian@gmail.com



http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE

Stiglitz: Financial Crisis Observations

FROM AMBASSADOR GAJENDRA SINGH


"Keynes's collective work amounted to a powerful argument that capitalism was by its very nature unstable and prone to collapse. Far from trending toward some magical state of equilibrium, capitalism would inevitably do the opposite. It would lurch over a cliff," --- Hyman Minsky.

Below is a very perceptive and lucid article on the current ills of the US economy by well known economist Joseph Stiglitz.US is like the runaway train rogue engine and the Indian compartment is being manned by MMSingh and Ahluwalia.

 Some of the main points are;

 "America's conception of itself as a land of opportunity is already badly eroded. Unemployed young people are alienated. --They will be scarred for life by what is happening today. Drive through the industrial river valleys of the Midwest or the small towns of the Plains or the factory hubs of the south, and you will see a picture of irreversible decay.

"Monetary policy is not going to help us out of this mess. Ben Bernanke has, belatedly, admitted as much.-- The private sector by itself won't, and can't, undertake structural transformation of the magnitude needed—even if the Fed were to keep interest rates at zero for years to come.—

"What's needed is to get banks out of the dangerous business of speculating and back into the boring business of lending. But we have not fixed the financial system. Rather, we have poured money into the banks, without restrictions, without conditions, and without a vision of the kind of banking system we want and need. We have, in a phrase, confused ends with means. A banking system is supposed to serve society, not the other way around."

The Book of Jobs

Forget monetary policy. Re-examining the cause of the Great Depression—the revolution in agriculture that threw millions out of work—the author argues that the U.S. is now facing and must manage a similar shift in the "real" economy, from industry to service, or risk a tragic replay of 80 years ago.

By Joseph E. Stiglitz

December 28, 2011 "
VF" -- It has now been almost five years since the bursting of the housing bubble, and four years since the onset of the recession. There are 6.6 million fewer jobs in the United States than there were four years ago. Some 23 million Americans who would like to work full-time cannot get a job. Almost half of those who are unemployed have been unemployed long-term. Wages are falling—the real income of a typical American household is now below the level it was in 1997.

We knew the crisis was serious back in 2008. And we thought we knew who the "bad guys" were—the nation's big banks, which through cynical lending and reckless gambling had brought the U.S. to the brink of ruin. The Bush and Obama administrations justified a bailout on the grounds that only if the banks were handed money without limit—and without conditions—could the economy recover. We did this not because we loved the banks but because (we were told) we couldn't do without the lending that they made possible. Many, especially in the financial sector, argued that strong, resolute, and generous action to save not just the banks but the bankers, their shareholders, and their creditors would return the economy to where it had been before the crisis. In the meantime, a short-term stimulus, moderate in size, would suffice to tide the economy over until the banks could be restored to health.

The banks got their bailout. Some of the money went to bonuses. Little of it went to lending. And the economy didn't really recover—output is barely greater than it was before the crisis, and the job situation is bleak. The diagnosis of our condition and the prescription that followed from it were incorrect. First, it was wrong to think that the bankers would mend their ways—that they would start to lend, if only they were treated nicely enough. We were told, in effect: "Don't put conditions on the banks to require them to restructure the mortgages or to behave more honestly in their foreclosures. Don't force them to use the money to lend. Such conditions will upset our delicate markets." In the end, bank managers looked out for themselves and did what they are accustomed to doing.

Even when we fully repair the banking system, we'll still be in deep trouble—because we were already in deep trouble. That seeming golden age of 2007 was far from a paradise. Yes, America had many things about which it could be proud. Companies in the information-technology field were at the leading edge of a revolution. But incomes for most working Americans still hadn't returned to their levels prior to the previous recession. The American standard of living was sustained only by rising debt—debt so large that the U.S. savings rate had dropped to near zero. And "zero" doesn't really tell the story. Because the rich have always been able to save a significant percentage of their income, putting them in the positive column, an average rate of close to zero means that everyone else must be in negative numbers. (Here's the reality: in the years leading up to the recession, according to research done by my Columbia University colleague Bruce Greenwald, the bottom 80 percent of the American population had been spending around 110 percent of its income.) What made this level of indebtedness possible was the housing bubble, which Alan Greenspan and then Ben Bernanke, chairmen of the Federal Reserve Board, helped to engineer through low interest rates and nonregulation—not even using the regulatory tools they had. As we now know, this enabled banks to lend and households to borrow on the basis of assets whose value was determined in part by mass delusion.

The fact is the economy in the years before the current crisis was fundamentally weak, with the bubble, and the unsustainable consumption to which it gave rise, acting as life support. Without these, unemployment would have been high. It was absurd to think that fixing the banking system could by itself restore the economy to health. Bringing the economy back to "where it was" does nothing to address the underlying problems.

The trauma we're experiencing right now resembles the trauma we experienced 80 years ago, during the Great Depression, and it has been brought on by an analogous set of circumstances. Then, as now, we faced a breakdown of the banking system. But then, as now, the breakdown of the banking system was in part a consequence of deeper problems. Even if we correctly respond to the trauma—the failures of the financial sector—it will take a decade or more to achieve full recovery. Under the best of conditions, we will endure a Long Slump. If we respond incorrectly, as we have been, the Long Slump will last even longer, and the parallel with the Depression will take on a tragic new dimension.

Until now, the Depression was the last time in American history that unemployment exceeded 8 percent four years after the onset of recession. And never in the last 60 years has economic output been barely greater, four years after a recession, than it was before the recession started. The percentage of the civilian population at work has fallen by twice as much as in any post-World War II downturn. Not surprisingly, economists have begun to reflect on the similarities and differences between our Long Slump and the Great Depression. Extracting the right lessons is not easy.

Many have argued that the Depression was caused primarily by excessive tightening of the money supply on the part of the Federal Reserve Board. Ben Bernanke, a scholar of the Depression, has stated publicly that this was the lesson he took away, and the reason he opened the monetary spigots. He opened them very wide. Beginning in 2008, the balance sheet of the Fed doubled and then rose to three times its earlier level. Today it is $2.8 trillion. While the Fed, by doing this, may have succeeded in saving the banks, it didn't succeed in saving the economy.

Reality has not only discredited the Fed but also raised questions about one of the conventional interpretations of the origins of the Depression. The argument has been made that the Fed caused the Depression by tightening money, and if only the Fed back then had increased the money supply—in other words, had done what the Fed has done today—a full-blown Depression would likely have been averted. In economics, it's difficult to test hypotheses with controlled experiments of the kind the hard sciences can conduct. But the inability of the monetary expansion to counteract this current recession should forever lay to rest the idea that monetary policy was the prime culprit in the 1930s. The problem today, as it was then, is something else. The problem today is the so-called real economy. It's a problem rooted in the kinds of jobs we have, the kind we need, and the kind we're losing, and rooted as well in the kind of workers we want and the kind we don't know what to do with. The real economy has been in a state of wrenching transition for decades, and its dislocations have never been squarely faced. A crisis of the real economy lies behind the Long Slump, just as it lay behind the Great Depression.

For the past several years, Bruce Greenwald and I have been engaged in research on an alternative theory of the Depression—and an alternative analysis of what is ailing the economy today. This explanation sees the financial crisis of the 1930s as a consequence not so much of a financial implosion but of the economy's underlying weakness. The breakdown of the banking system didn't culminate until 1933, long after the Depression began and long after unemployment had started to soar. By 1931 unemployment was already around 16 percent, and it reached 23 percent in 1932. Shantytown "Hoovervilles" were springing up everywhere. The underlying cause was a structural change in the real economy: the widespread decline in agricultural prices and incomes, caused by what is ordinarily a "good thing"—greater productivity.

At the beginning of the Depression, more than a fifth of all Americans worked on farms. Between 1929 and 1932, these people saw their incomes cut by somewhere between one-third and two-thirds, compounding problems that farmers had faced for years. Agriculture had been a victim of its own success. In 1900, it took a large portion of the U.S. population to produce enough food for the country as a whole. Then came a revolution in agriculture that would gain pace throughout the century—better seeds, better fertilizer, better farming practices, along with widespread mechanization. Today, 2 percent of Americans produce more food than we can consume.

What this transition meant, however, is that jobs and livelihoods on the farm were being destroyed. Because of accelerating productivity, output was increasing faster than demand, and prices fell sharply. It was this, more than anything else, that led to rapidly declining incomes. Farmers then (like workers now) borrowed heavily to sustain living standards and production. Because neither the farmers nor their bankers anticipated the steepness of the price declines, a credit crunch quickly ensued. Farmers simply couldn't pay back what they owed. The financial sector was swept into the vortex of declining farm incomes.

The cities weren't spared—far from it. As rural incomes fell, farmers had less and less money to buy goods produced in factories. Manufacturers had to lay off workers, which further diminished demand for agricultural produce, driving down prices even more. Before long, this vicious circle affected the entire national economy.

The value of assets (such as homes) often declines when incomes do. Farmers got trapped in their declining sector and in their depressed locales. Diminished income and wealth made migration to the cities more difficult; high urban unemployment made migration less attractive. Throughout the 1930s, in spite of the massive drop in farm income, there was little overall out-migration. Meanwhile, the farmers continued to produce, sometimes working even harder to make up for lower prices. Individually, that made sense; collectively, it didn't, as any increased output kept forcing prices down.

Given the magnitude of the decline in farm income, it's no wonder that the New Deal itself could not bring the country out of crisis. The programs were too small, and many were soon abandoned. By 1937, F.D.R., giving way to the deficit hawks, had cut back on stimulus efforts—a disastrous error. Meanwhile, hard-pressed states and localities were being forced to let employees go, just as they are now. The banking crisis undoubtedly compounded all these problems, and extended and deepened the downturn. But any analysis of financial disruption has to begin with what started off the chain reaction.

The Agriculture Adjustment Act, F.D.R.'s farm program, which was designed to raise prices by cutting back on production, may have eased the situation somewhat, at the margins. But it was not until government spending soared in preparation for global war that America started to emerge from the Depression. It is important to grasp this simple truth: it was government spending—a Keynesian stimulus, not any correction of monetary policy or any revival of the banking system—that brought about recovery. The long-run prospects for the economy would, of course, have been even better if more of the money had been spent on investments in education, technology, and infrastructure rather than munitions, but even so, the strong public spending more than offset the weaknesses in private spending.

Government spending unintentionally solved the economy's underlying problem: it completed a necessary structural transformation, moving America, and especially the South, decisively from agriculture to manufacturing. Americans tend to be allergic to terms like "industrial policy," but that's what war spending was—a policy that permanently changed the nature of the economy. Massive job creation in the urban sector—in manufacturing—succeeded in moving people out of farming. The supply of food and the demand for it came into balance again: farm prices started to rise. The new migrants to the cities got training in urban life and factory skills, and after the war the G.I. Bill ensured that returning veterans would be equipped to thrive in a modern industrial society. Meanwhile, the vast pool of labor trapped on farms had all but disappeared. The process had been long and very painful, but the source of economic distress was gone.

The parallels between the story of the origin of the Great Depression and that of our Long Slump are strong. Back then we were moving from agriculture to manufacturing. Today we are moving from manufacturing to a service economy. The decline in manufacturing jobs has been dramatic—from about a third of the workforce 60 years ago to less than a tenth of it today. The pace has quickened markedly during the past decade. There are two reasons for the decline. One is greater productivity—the same dynamic that revolutionized agriculture and forced a majority of American farmers to look for work elsewhere. The other is globalization, which has sent millions of jobs overseas, to low-wage countries or those that have been investing more in infrastructure or technology. (As Greenwald has pointed out, most of the job loss in the 1990s was related to productivity increases, not to globalization.) Whatever the specific cause, the inevitable result is precisely the same as it was 80 years ago: a decline in income and jobs. The millions of jobless former factory workers once employed in cities such as Youngstown and Birmingham and Gary and Detroit are the modern-day equivalent of the Depression's doomed farmers.

The consequences for consumer spending, and for the fundamental health of the economy—not to mention the appalling human cost—are obvious, though we were able to ignore them for a while. For a time, the bubbles in the housing and lending markets concealed the problem by creating artificial demand, which in turn created jobs in the financial sector and in construction and elsewhere. The bubble even made workers forget that their incomes were declining. They savored the possibility of wealth beyond their dreams, as the value of their houses soared and the value of their pensions, invested in the stock market, seemed to be doing likewise. But the jobs were temporary, fueled on vapor.

Mainstream macro-economists argue that the true bogeyman in a downturn is not falling wages but rigid wages—if only wages were more flexible (that is, lower), downturns would correct themselves! But this wasn't true during the Depression, and it isn't true now. On the contrary, lower wages and incomes would simply reduce demand, weakening the economy further.

Of four major service sectors—finance, real estate, health, and education—the first two were bloated before the current crisis set in. The other two, health and education, have traditionally received heavy government support. But government austerity at every level—that is, the slashing of budgets in the face of recession—has hit education especially hard, just as it has decimated the government sector as a whole. Nearly 700,000 state- and local-government jobs have disappeared during the past four years, mirroring what happened in the Depression. As in 1937, deficit hawks today call for balanced budgets and more and more cutbacks. Instead of pushing forward a structural transition that is inevitable—instead of investing in the right kinds of human capital, technology, and infrastructure, which will eventually pull us where we need to be—the government is holding back. Current strategies can have only one outcome: they will ensure that the Long Slump will be longer and deeper than it ever needed to be.

Two conclusions can be drawn from this brief history. The first is that the economy will not bounce back on its own, at least not in a time frame that matters to ordinary people. Yes, all those foreclosed homes will eventually find someone to live in them, or be torn down. Prices will at some point stabilize and even start to rise. Americans will also adjust to a lower standard of living—not just living within their means but living beneath their means as they struggle to pay off a mountain of debt. But the damage will be enormous. America's conception of itself as a land of opportunity is already badly eroded. Unemployed young people are alienated. It will be harder and harder to get some large proportion of them onto a productive track. They will be scarred for life by what is happening today. Drive through the industrial river valleys of the Midwest or the small towns of the Plains or the factory hubs of the South, and you will see a picture of irreversible decay.

Monetary policy is not going to help us out of this mess. Ben Bernanke has, belatedly, admitted as much. The Fed played an important role in creating the current conditions—by encouraging the bubble that led to unsustainable consumption—but there is now little it can do to mitigate the consequences. I can understand that its members may feel some degree of guilt. But anyone who believes that monetary policy is going to resuscitate the economy will be sorely disappointed. That idea is a distraction, and a dangerous one.

What we need to do instead is embark on a massive investment program—as we did, virtually by accident, 80 years ago—that will increase our productivity for years to come, and will also increase employment now. This public investment, and the resultant restoration in G.D.P., increases the returns to private investment. Public investments could be directed at improving the quality of life and real productivity—unlike the private-sector investments in financial innovations, which turned out to be more akin to financial weapons of mass destruction.

Can we actually bring ourselves to do this, in the absence of mobilization for global war? Maybe not. The good news (in a sense) is that the United States has under-invested in infrastructure, technology, and education for decades, so the return on additional investment is high, while the cost of capital is at an unprecedented low. If we borrow today to finance high-return investments, our debt-to-G.D.P. ratio—the usual measure of debt sustainability—will be markedly improved. If we simultaneously increased taxes—for instance, on the top 1 percent of all households, measured by income—our debt sustainability would be improved even more.

The private sector by itself won't, and can't, undertake structural transformation of the magnitude needed—even if the Fed were to keep interest rates at zero for years to come. The only way it will happen is through a government stimulus designed not to preserve the old economy but to focus instead on creating a new one. We have to transition out of manufacturing and into services that people want—into productive activities that increase living standards, not those that increase risk and inequality. To that end, there are many high-return investments we can make. Education is a crucial one—a highly educated population is a fundamental driver of economic growth. Support is needed for basic research. Government investment in earlier decades—for instance, to develop the Internet and biotechnology—helped fuel economic growth. Without investment in basic research, what will fuel the next spurt of innovation? Meanwhile, the states could certainly use federal help in closing budget shortfalls. Long-term economic growth at our current rates of resource consumption is impossible, so funding research, skilled technicians, and initiatives for cleaner and more efficient energy production will not only help us out of the recession but also build a robust economy for decades. Finally, our decaying infrastructure, from roads and railroads to levees and power plants, is a prime target for profitable investment.

The second conclusion is this: If we expect to maintain any semblance of "normality," we must fix the financial system. As noted, the implosion of the financial sector may not have been the underlying cause of our current crisis—but it has made it worse, and it's an obstacle to long-term recovery. Small and medium-size companies, especially new ones, are disproportionately the source of job creation in any economy, and they have been especially hard-hit. What's needed is to get banks out of the dangerous business of speculating and back into the boring business of lending. But we have not fixed the financial system. Rather, we have poured money into the banks, without restrictions, without conditions, and without a vision of the kind of banking system we want and need. We have, in a phrase, confused ends with means. A banking system is supposed to serve society, not the other way around.

That we should tolerate such a confusion of ends and means says something deeply disturbing about where our economy and our society have been heading. Americans in general are coming to understand what has happened. Protesters around the country, galvanized by the Occupy Wall Street movement, already know.

Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University, a Nobel laureate in economics, and the author of Freefall: Free Markets and the Sinking of the Global Economy.
 


http://www.scribd.com/doc/61839666/Indo-Pak-Wars-A-Pictorial-History


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21686885/TALIBAN-WAR-IN-PAKISTAN-AFGHANISTAN-A-WRITERS-PERCEPTIONS-FROM-2001-TO-2011


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22457862/Military-Decision-making-and-leadership


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22151765/History-of-Pakistan-Army-from-1757-to-1971-PRINTING-ENABLED-Do-acknowledge-to-the-author


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22455178/Letters-to-Command-and-Staff-College-Quetta-Citadel-Journal


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23150027/Pakistan-Army-through-eyes-of-Pakistani-Generals


http://www.scribd.com/doc/23701412/War-of-Independence-of-1857


http://www.scribd.com/doc/22107238/HISTORY


http://www.scribd.com/doc/21693873/Indo-Pak-Wars-1947-71-A-STRATEGIC-AND-OPERATIONAL-ANALYSIS-BY-A-H-AMIN-THIS-BOOK-CAN-BE-PRINTED-FROM-THIS-SITE