Our Announcements

Not Found

Sorry, but you are looking for something that isn't here.

Archive for category Foreign Policy

Comments by Pakistan’s Distinguished Defense and Security Analyst Brig (Retd) Usman Khalid, Secretary General of Rifah Party The story of vast mineral wealth of Afghanistan is very similar to the tales spun in the Western media about the mineral wealth of Baluchistan. The story does not focus on the fact that minerals are soil or stone and need sophisticated technology and huge amounts of energy and capital investment to convert into sellable goods. The mining of metal ores or non metals is profitable when there are buyers ready to pay more than the cost of production and transportation. What the country gets is royalty and wages of employees, which is much smaller than what the investor gets. Oil has made some states rich because its cost of production in several countries is much lower than the selling price and their national companies own the oil wells. That is no yet the case with mineral products – metals or non-metals. Those who produce meat, grain and vegetables get better reward than those who work underground in mines. However, the warped expectation of wealth in Baluchistan and Afghanistan sustains insurgency in both places. That at least is the hope and intent of those who plant such stories in the media.

New York Times report announcing the US has found $1 trillion-worth of mineral deposits in Afghanistan has some observers wondering if the news is part of a public-relations effort to bolster support for the Afghanistan war as the mission’s death toll continues to climb.

An article in Sunday’s New York Times announces that “previously unknown deposits

No Comments

AN ASSESSMENT OF THE US STRATEGIC PLAN IN AFPAK

No Comments

Time for the UN to assemble a force to lift the Siege of Gaza or its members should pack up in New York and relocate the UN in Europe

Time for the UN to assemble a force to lift the Siege of Gaza or its members should pack up in New York and relocate the UN in Europe

No Comments

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP: Steps Towards Peace: Putting Kashmiris First

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP

Steps Towards Peace: Putting Kashmiris First

alt Islamabad/Brussels, 2 June 2010: Even if India and Pakistan appear willing to allow more interaction across the Line of Control (LOC) that separates the parts of Kashmir they administer, any Kashmir-based dialogue will fail if they do not put its inhabitants first.

Steps Towards Peace: Putting Kashmiris First,* the latest briefing from the International Crisis Group, identifies the key political, social and economic needs of Kashmiris that should be addressed on both sides of the divided state.

No Comments

GWOT- Solution to Afghan Conundrum

GWOT- Solution to Afghan Conundrum

By Zaheerul Hassan

No Comments