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Archive for category History

Cutting off your nose to spite your face

“The only thing new in the world
is the history you don’t know.”
-Harry S Truman

George Santayana, who, in his Reason in Common Sense, The Life of Reason, Vol.1, wrote “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Georges Clemenceau War is too serious a matter to leave to soldiers.

Clemenceau and the Third Republic (1946) by John Hampden Jackson, p. 228; this has also become commonly paraphrased as: War is too important to be left to the generals.
 
George Clemenceau theory is borne out when military leaders become incharge of conducting wars. An example of such a military leader is US Admiral Mullen, a classic example of cutting off your nose to spite your face: He said, “ Pakistan

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Admiral Mullen statement: a classic example of cutting off your nose to spite your face

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A Rubber band Kind of Year: See You Later Pakistan

Perhaps it is fitting that my last month in Pakistan has been the month of
Ramzan (Ramadan). For those unfamiliar, Ramzan is the month of sacrifice
in the Islamic calendar. Jawad Aslam, my CEO, close friend and resident
expert on all things Muslim, described Ramzan to me as religious boot camp.
On the surface, Ramzan is a month of fasting no food, no water, no
cigarettes, no consumption of any kind from about 4 am to sunset.  Many
shops are closed in the afternoon, and restaurants open around 6 pm to
serve a packed house the moment the fast breaks.
The fast, however, is merely a symbolic (and admittedly difficult) gesture that
represents a deeper sense of sacrifice. Muslims use Ramzan to give up bad
habits, spend more time with themselves & Allah, and seek further enlightenment.
Though Ramzan makes it impossible to schedule goodbye lunches and teas
with the many friends I’ll be leaving behind here in Pakistan, I am glad to
experience it at the end of my year here.
As I look back to the kind of year its been, I see so many parallels with
Ramzan. I gave up a lot to be here, and in the process I have come to
know myself & the world around me in a much deeper way than before.
Jawad jokes that I’ve aged 5 years in 10 months.
At the outset of this journey, I wrote that I expected to be stretched
like a rubber band in the coming year. When a rubber band stretches, it
snaps back, but it ends up larger than it was before.
My hope was that the experience would broaden my horizons, but not so
quickly that I snapped. It seems to have worked out.
Admittedly, the tendons in my knees have tightened because I never quite
felt comfortable running outside in Pakistan, but my perspective has been
stretched beyond expectations.
Pakistan is a land of extremes: from extreme heat to extreme
hospitality. From extreme religious sentiment to extreme devotion to
food. From extremely exaggerated journalism to an extremely undervalued
global reputation.
What most of the world fails to realize is just how beautiful this country
is and how spectacular its people truly are. It is impossible to
overlook the problems: Pakistan is facing lawlessness in Karachi, a
violent political system, jaw-dropping inflation, an insufficient power
supply and terrorists staking claim over the northern areas. These are
real issues that do exist: but they do not define Pakistan as much of
the world would have you believe.
While it may be impossible to overlook the problems, it is (apparently)
quite possible to overlook the splendor that a country like Pakistan offers.
Where else do you greet every stranger with the phrase Peace be with you ?
Where else do you find BBQ Chicken Tikka that melts in your mouth?
Where else is being 20 minutes late considered on-time?
Where else can you see opportunity in every alley?
Where else do motorized scooters (100% of which are red hondas) weave in
between cars which cruise past rickshaws, which veer around donkey-pulled
carts, which are dwarfed by strutting camels?
Where else can you buy seasonal fruit on every single street corner?
Where else do the echoes of a minaret bring an eerie peace to 4 a.m. in the morning?
Where else do you find people who take prayer so seriously, they start every flight with one?
Where else, but Pakistan?
I have come to understand that the world is not as the New York Times
makes it out to be. That terror zones house people too. That 99.9% of
people on this earth want to do good by each other. That I, a white dude
from San Francisco, can become friends with Aftab, a fellow engineer from
far northern Pakistan (we are facebook friends too, in case you are
scoring at home). I met Aftab on a trip to Chitral, where he builds
micro hydro power plants in beautiful remote villages just a few miles
from the Afghanistan border so that the poor can have lights at night.
There is so much opportunity in communities such as these; its staggering
that the world chooses not to see it.
I have seen the dark side as well: and yes, it is far from pretty, but it
is not something to be afraid of.  I am not afraid of bombs or
kidnappings or shootings rather, I am deeply, deeply saddened by them.
Terrorists are called terrorists because its their job to terrify you.
Let them do that, and they win.
Do you know what terrifies the terrorist? Education and economic
development.  Opportunity. Terrorists have chosen their path usually
because they didn’t have a shot at economically bettering themselves,
but I’ll say more about that in another post another time.
Pakistan is not a country of terrorists, but rather a country afflicted by terrorists.
Earlier this week I was driving to the Karachi airport, when the driver heard on
the radio that there had been shootings nearby. If the news hadn’t alerted us,
the ambulances flying past every two minutes probably would have.
As we approached, I noticed we were closely following a Toyota pickup
truck carrying four sketchy characters, decked out in jet black shalwar
kameez and carrying equally dark AK-47s. It was precisely the
stereotypical scene that crosses people minds when they think of PK or
a war zone. The men were strapping on ammunition vests and loading
cartridges into their guns.
One man looked the part of a new-age pirate, with long black hair flowing
out from under a tan & black checkered bandana. I’ll never forget the evil
glint that I saw in his eyes.
By my count, he was not Pakistani not in the true sense. No there is a
reason that I saw this kind of man only once in an entire year.
Real Pakistanis are the opposite of the stereotype in just about every way
possible. And I meet them every day.
Pakistanis are hospitable. I’ve spent my entire time here living with a host
family. At first I was a guest, but Jean, Wilburn, Asim, Maria, Susie, John,
Ben, Thomas, Annie, Tashu and Ethan made me feel so welcome that they
became family. I know I have a home here forever. Anywhere you go in
Pakistan, people will welcome you with open arms (and probably a even
a hug from strangers too).
Pakistanis are loyal. I mean crazy loyal. When you make a Pakistani
friend, you’ve created a serious bond. Leaving is so hard because I
feel such powerful ties with people here. For my farewell dinner, a
co-worker (but really a new best friend), Jamshaid, made two 9 hour trips
between our site in the flood affected areas and Lahore just to join for
dinner. Another friend of mine who had moved out of Lahore months ago
made a 250 Km round trip to meet me for Sehri breakfast at 3 am.  I’ve
never felt so honored.
Pakistanis love tea. If this isn’t self-evident, I don’t know what is.
Pakistanis love to sit down, stir their chai and chat. Spending time
with others and building quality relationships is so important.
Back home people tend to fly through their days, but in Pakistan, every
moment with another is cherished.
Pakistanis are optimistic. I’ve never been somewhere where young people
were as energized about opportunities in their own country as here.
There is a bright future ahead and Pakistan’s youth are driving it. A few
friends of mine – Ali, Babar, Zehra, Saba, Jimmy, Khurram have inspiring
aspirations for change in PK.
This is the Pakistan that the world needs to come to know. Yes, there
are terrorists and violence, and that can’t be forgotten, but if that is
your perception, then you are judging a book by the headlines.
Sure, there are probably safer ways I could have spent this year, but then
I wouldn’t have been stretched in the way that I have been.
Pakistan has become a part of me; it has forever changed me, my
perspective on the world, and my trust in humanity.
Here is to you Pakistan.
Shukria, Allah Hafiz. (Thank you, may God protect you).
~Bryan

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Indian Lies in 1971: Dead Reckoning by Sarmila Bose redefines 1971 history

The evil which resides in India is embedded in the Hindu psyche.  This Hindu cult (based on myths and superstitions), which masquerades as a religion has no ethical and moral values. It is an animistic cult, whose objects of worship range from the male organ or phallus (lingam), the fear of lunar eclipse as evil omen, cow urine drinking as an elixir for good health health and as an an aphrodisiac, worship of monkeys (which are off-limits to population control and often compete for food with humans). In the Hindu cult, practice of hymen mutilation is common,.  Young females are forced to insert the stone phallus of  a Hindu “god.’  The West looks at India with rose-colored lenses and like an ostrich or the three monkeys, see no evil, hear no evil, or speak no evil about India. The wily Mr.Gandhi, who loved to sleep with vigins to excercise his “self-control,” is a Western demi-god.  Westerners never bother to dig deep into Mr.Gandhi’s character.  Though Mr Gandhi  preached non-violence, he incited an emotionally naive and politically charged East Punjab’s Sikh Janta to go on rampage against their Muslim neighbours.  But, Karma did not spare the Sikhs either, several thousand young Sikhs were killed in genocidal massacre by Hindus, following the assasination of India Gandhi. Even though, Jesus (PBUH) gave a message of non-violence 2000 years ago, the West or Christiansi totally ignored it, and creat violence around the globe.  But, Gandhi, who stole this message and propagated it, as if he originated it, is lionized in the West.  Gandhi’s message was stolen from Jesus’s teaching.  But, the West still gives Mr.Gandhi credit for it and lionizes him as, if Gandhi, belongs in the same category as Jesus or even, Mother Teresa.  Hindus have mastered the art of lying and presenting old wine in new bottles, from the chicanery of Chanakiya. The West has been duped by the secular fascade of the largest Hindu country, on the globe.  India is a hindu nation.  West needs to understand India from that perspective, and not fall for the balderdash of a secular India.  If India was secular, then why are  Dalits, Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs. are discriminated against in Indian society.   In the cult of Hinduism, lying is an acceptable norm. Chanikiya, the Hindu savant, gave lies an acceptable role in Hinduism.  But, truth always comes out in the end. So, here we present a Hindu lie, perpetrated by Indian Hindus, beeing debunked by a woman of conscience, who also happens to be Hindu.  This is the  true story of the so-called, “bengladesh war of liberation.” A war spearhed by India, inspired by an Indian agent Mujib-ur-Rahman, and executed by Indian Army with the collaboration of East  Pakistani hindus. In the so-called Bengaladesh War of Independence, Hinduism and Nationalism Won, Islam lost!  But, one also cannot forget the incompetance of Pakistani leadership of 1971, where Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s lust for power acted as a catalyst for the break-up of United Pakistan. However, as Karma will play its own part, in not too distant future, Indian Hindus, will get the taste of their own medicine, as the saying goes, “what goes around, comes around.” History repeats itself.  Time is always on history’s side. Balkanization of India is already begining to happen, if not de jure, but de facto.
Dead Reckoning by Sarmila Bose redefines 1971 history
Posted on 05 November 2010
Image via Wikipedia
This ground-breaking book chronicles the 1971 war in South Asia by reconstituting the memories of those on opposing sides of the conflict. 1971 was marked by a bitter civil war within Pakistan and war between India and Pakistan, backed respectively by the Soviet Union and the United States. It was fought over the territory of East Pakistan, which seceded to become Bangladesh. Through a detailed investigation of events on the ground, Sarmila Bose contextualises and humanises the war while analysing what the events reveal about the nature of the conflict itself. The story of 1971 has so far been dominated by the narrative of the victorious side. All parties to the war are still largely imprisoned by wartime partisan mythologies. Bose reconstructs events via interviews conducted in Bangladesh and Pakistan, published and unpublished reminiscences in Bengali and English of participants on all sides, official documents, foreign media reports and other sources. Her book challenges assumptions about the nature of the conflict, and exposes the ways in which the 1971 war is still playing out in the region.
Product code: 455601, ISBN13: 9781849040495, 288 pages, paperback
Published by C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd in 2011
SARMILA BOSE is Senior Research Fellow in the Politics of South Asia at the University of Oxford. She was a political journalist in India and combines academic and media work. She was educated at Bryn Mawr College and Harvard University.
Ms. Sharmila Bose in her paper entitled

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Use of Chemical Munitions in Drone Attacks?

Use of Chemical Munitions in Drone Attacks

Based on media news Pakistani doctors and experts reported the US uses chemical munitions in the drone attacks about the country

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