
What is the last thing you say to your best general when ordering him into a do-or-die mission? A prayer maybe, if you are religiously inclined. A short lecture, underlining the importance of the mission, if you want to keep it businesslike. Or maybe you’ll wish him good luck accompanied by a clicking of the heels and a final salute.
On the night of 5 July 1977 as Operation Fair Play, meant to topple Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s elected government, was about to commence, then Army Chief General Zia ul Haq took aside his right-hand man and Corps Commander of 10th Corps Lieutenant General Faiz Ali Chishti and whispered to him: “Murshid, marwa na daina.” (Guru, don’t get us killed.)
General Zia was indulging in two of his favourite pastimes: spreading his paranoia amongst those around him and sucking up to a junior officer he needed to do his dirty work. General Zia had a talent for that; he could make his juniors feel as if they were indispensable to the running of this world. And he could make his seniors feel like proper gods, as Bhutto found out to his cost.
General Faiz Ali Chishti’s troops didn’t face any resistance that night; not a single shot was fired, and like all military coups in Pakistan, this was also dubbed a ‘bloodless coup’. There was a lot of bloodshed, though, in the following years—in military-managed dungeons, as pro-democracy students were butchered at Thori gate in interior Sindh, hundreds of shoppers were blown up in Karachi’s Bohri Bazar, in Rawalpindi people didn’t even have to leave their houses to get killed as the Army’s ammunition depot blew up raining missiles on a whole city, and finally at Basti Laal Kamal near Bahawalpur, where a plane exploded killing General Zia and most of the Pakistan Army’s high command. General Faiz Ali Chishti had nothing to do with this, of course. General Zia had managed to force his murshid into retirement soon after coming to power. Chishti had started to take that term of endearment—murshid—a bit too seriously and dictators can’t stand anyone who thinks of himself as a kingmaker.
Thirty-four years on, Pakistan is a society divided at many levels. There are those who insist on tracing our history to a certain September day in 2001, and there are those who insist that this country came into being the day the first Muslim landed on the Subcontinent. There are laptop jihadis, liberal fascist and fair-weather revolutionaries. There are Balochi freedom fighters up in the mountains and bullet-riddled bodies of young political activists in obscure Baloch towns. And, of course, there are the members of civil society with a permanent glow around their faces from all the candle-light vigils. All these factions may not agree on anything but there is consensus on one point: General Zia’s coup was a bad idea. When was the last time anyone heard Nawaz Sharif or any of Zia’s numerous protégés thump their chest and say, yes, we need another Zia? When did you see a Pakistan military commander who stood on Zia’s grave and vowed to continue his mission?
It might have taken Pakistanis 34 years to reach this consensus but we finally agree that General Zia’s domestic and foreign policies didn’t do us any good. It brought us automatic weapons, heroin and sectarianism; it also made fortunes for those who dealt in these commodities. And it turned Pakistan into an international jihadi tourist resort.
And yet, somehow, without ever publicly owning up to it, the Army has continued Zia’s mission. Successive Army commanders, despite their access to vast libraries and regular strategic reviews, have never actually acknowledged that the multinational, multicultural jihadi project they started during the Zia era was a mistake. Late Dr Eqbal Ahmed, the Pakistani teacher and activist, once said that the Pakistan Army is brilliant at collecting information but its ability to analyse this information is non-existent.
Looking back at the Zia years, the Pakistan Army seems like one of those mythical monsters that chops off its own head but then grows an identical one and continues on the only course it knows.
In 1999, two days after the Pakistan Army embarked on its Kargil misadventure, Lieutenant General Mahmud Ahmed gave a ‘crisp and to the point’ briefing to a group of senior Army and Air Force officers. Air Commodore Kaiser Tufail, who attended the meeting, later wrote that they were told that it was nothing more than a defensive manoeuvre and the Indian Air Force will not get involved at any stage. “Come October, we shall walk into Siachen—to mop up the dead bodies of hundreds of Indians left hungry, out in the cold,” General Mahmud told the meeting. “Perhaps it was the incredulousness of the whole thing that led Air Commodore Abid Rao to famously quip, ‘After this operation, it’s going to be either a Court Martial or Martial Law!’ as we walked out of the briefing room,” Air Commodore Tufail recalled in an essay.
If Rao Abid even contemplated a court martial, he probably lacked leadership qualities because there was only one way out of this mess—a humiliating military defeat, a world-class diplomatic disaster, followed by yet another martial law. The man who should have faced court martial for Kargil appointed himself Pakistan’s President for the next decade.
General Mahmud went on to command ISI, Rao Abid retired as air vice marshal, both went on to find lucrative work in the Army’s vast welfare empire, and Kargil was forgotten as if it was a game of dare between two juveniles who were now beyond caring about who had actually started the game. Nobody remembers that a lot of blood was shed on this pointless Kargil mission. The battles were fierce and some of the men and officers fought so valiantly that two were awarded Pakistan’s highest military honour, Nishan-e-Haidar. There were hundreds of others whose names never made it to any awards list, whose families consoled themselves by saying that their loved ones had been martyred while defending our nation’s borders against our enemy. Nobody pointed out the basic fact that there was no enemy on those mountains before some delusional generals decided that they would like to mop up hundreds of Indian soldiers after starving them to death.
The architect of this mission, the daring General Pervez Musharraf, who didn’t bother to consult his colleagues before ordering his soldiers to their slaughter, doesn’t even have the wits to face a sessions court judge in Pakistan, let alone a court martial. The only people he feels comfortable with are his Facebook friends and that too from the safety of his London apartment. During the whole episode, the nation was told that it wasn’t the regular army that was fighting in Kargil; it was the mujahideen. But those who received their loved ones’ flag-draped coffins had sent their sons and brothers to serve in a professional army, not a freelance lashkar.
The Pakistan Army’s biggest folly has been that under Zia it started outsourcing its basic job—soldiering—to these freelance militants. By blurring the line between a professional soldier—who, at least in theory, is always required to obey his officer, who in turn is governed by a set of laws—and a mujahid, who can pick and choose his cause and his commander depending on his mood, the Pakistan Army has caused immense confusion in its own ranks. Our soldiers are taught to shout Allah-o-Akbar when mocking an attack. In real life, they are ambushed by enemies who shout Allah-o-Akbar even louder. Can we blame them if they dither in their response? When the Pakistan Navy’s main aviation base in Karachi, PNS Mehran, was attacked, Navy Chief Admiral Nauman Bashir told us that the attackers were ‘very well trained’. We weren’t sure if he was giving us a lazy excuse or admiring the creation of his institution. When naval officials told journalists that the attackers were ‘as good as our own commandoes’ were they giving themselves a backhanded compliment?
In the wake of the attacks on PNS Mehran in Karachi, some TV channels have pulled out an old war anthem sung by late Madam Noor Jehan and have started to play it in the backdrop of images of young, hopeful faces of slain officers and men. Written by the legendary teacher and poet Sufi Tabassum, the anthem carries a clear and stark warning: Aiay puttar hatantay nahin wickday, na labhdi phir bazaar kuray (You can’t buy these brave sons from shops, don’t go looking for them in bazaars).
While Sindhis and Balochis have mostly composed songs of rebellion, Punjabi popular culture has often lionised its karnails and jarnails and even an odd dholsipahi. The Pakistan Army, throughout its history, has refused to take advice from politicians as well as thinking professionals from its own ranks. It has never listened to historians and sometimes ignored even the esteemed religious scholars it frequently uses to whip up public sentiments for its dirty wars. But the biggest strategic mistake it has made is that it has not even taken advice from the late Madam Noor Jehan, one of the Army’s most ardent fans in Pakistan’s history. You can probably ignore Dr Eqbal Ahmed’s advice and survive in this country but you ignore Madam at your own peril.
Since the Pakistan Army’s high command is dominated by Punjabi-speaking generals, it’s difficult to fathom what it is about this advice that they didn’t understand. Any which way you translate it, the message is loud and clear. And lyrical: soldiers are not to be bought and sold like a commodity. “Na awaian takran maar kuray” (That search is futile, like butting your head against a brick wall), Noor Jehan goes on to rhapsodise.
For decades, the Army has not only shopped for these private puttars in the bazaars, it also set up factories to manufacture them. It raised whole armies of them. When you raise Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish Mohammed, Sipahe Sahaba, Sipahe Mohammed, Lashker Jhangvi, Al- Badar Mujahideen, others encouraged by the thriving market place will go ahead and start outfits like Anjuman Tahuffuze Khatame Nabuwat and Anjuman Tahuffuze Namoos-e-Aiyasha. It’s not just Kashmir and Afghanistan and Chechnya they will want to liberate, they will also go back in time and seek revenge for a perceived slur that may or may not have been cast by someone more than 1,300 years ago in a country far far away.
As if the Army’s sprawling shopping mall of private puttars in Pakistan wasn’t enough, it actively encouraged import and export of these commodities, even branched out into providing rest and recreation facilities for the ones who wanted a break. The outsourcing of Pakistan’s military strategy has reached a point where mujahids have their own mujahids to do their job, and inevitably at the end of the supply chain are those faceless and poor teenagers with explosives strapped to their torsos regularly marched out to blow up other poor kids.
Two days before the Americans killed Osama bin Laden and took away his bullet-riddled body, General Kiyani addressed Army cadets at Kakul. After declaring a victory of sorts over the militants, he gave our nation a stark choice. And before the nation could even begin to weigh its pros and cons, he went ahead and decided for them: we shall never bargain our honour for prosperity. As things stand, most people in Pakistan have neither honour nor prosperity and will easily settle for their little world not blowing up every day.
The question people really want to ask General Kiyani is that if he and his Army officer colleagues can have both honour and prosperity, why can’t we the people have a tiny bit of both?
The Army and its advocates in the media often worry about Pakistan’s image, as if we are not suffering from a long-term serious illness but a seasonal bout of acne that just needs better skin care. The Pakistan Army, over the years, has cultivated this image of 180 million people with nuclear devices strapped to their collective body threatening to take the world down with it. We may not be able to take the world down with us; the world might defang us or try to calm us down by appealing to our imagined Sufi side. But the fact remains that Pakistan as a nation is paying the price for our generals’ insistence on acting, in Asma Jahangir’s frank but accurate description, like duffers.
And demanding medals and golf resorts for being such duffers consistently for such a long time.
What people really want to do at this point is put an arm around our military commanders’ shoulders, take them aside and whisper in their ears: “Murshid, marwa na daina.”
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Mohammed Hanif is the author of A Case of Exploding Mangoes (2008), his first novel, a satire on the death of General Zia ul Haq
























































OLDER COMMENTS FIRST
49 COMMENTS
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Wonderful article from the author of A case of exploding mangoes !
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Well written and very mature article. I hope there's change coming very soon. Status quo is not a decent option.
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Well written hanif sahab.... But dont u think its too late for the people of Pakistan..OPPSS ..I mean People of PUNJAB( as people of Sindh ,Balochistan knew them VERY WELL since long ago ) to understand what Ahmed Faraz portrayed years ago in his nazam.."PESHAWAR QATLOO TUM SIPAHI NAHI "
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Cutting to a point of absolute honesty, brilliant article
32 years of military rule for a country that's only 63 years old. Something is seriously wrong with that.
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pointless, meaningless & certainly a worst piece..
author didn't even know what he is doing & why....
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Brilliant assessment! please write more often, and for the main stream newspapers in Pakistan. Yours is a refreshing voice of sanity that is desperately needed.
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A great piece Mr. Hanif, you just got the date of Kayani's Kakul statement wrong (regarding the 'breaking the militants' back). It was not two days before the Abbotabad raid but a week earlier, on 23rd April.
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Brilliantly written. And so is your book "A Case of Exploding Mangoes". Satirical, funny and a page-turner.
And oh, loved the "Marwa na daina" bit :-)
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Brilliant, Hanif. Laughter is potent subversion, and you keep taking us forward.
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Mr. Hanif has a very naive and thin knowledge of Pak Army politics. His article here has no focus and aparently no aim except providing popular entertainment by making extraordinary claims and dramatization, something which the Pakistani public likes to read. The word "Murshid" ist more of a hallmark of popular comedy show "hasb e Hal", a Pakistani General refering to his junior as Murshid, is laughable to anyone who has anything to do with the Army.
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Very well written but devoid of facts and acan only be termed as yet another attempt to defame the generals and the Army. I can pity on his thoughts and his example is like the person who was sitting on the same branch he was cutting.
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:-) We miss you as a journalist MH! This is what we call a yummy case of explosive writing! Now to get the "General" Population to read this piece and if nothing else squirm for 11secs in their khaki lowers. We are thoroughly buggered as a nation... all thanks to them n their political sidekicks!
Loved this bit :-) .... the Pakistan Army has caused immense confusion in its own ranks. Our soldiers are taught to shout Allah-o-Akbar when mocking an attack. In real life, they are ambushed by enemies who shout Allah-o-Akbar even louder!
Insightful, enjoyable, Depressing, frustrating and Open-ended all in one! Had fun reading it! Cheers!
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on th money... heartbreakingly so!
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The author also humored quite wifully on army in his book aswell. its a good read.
This article also describes the General' problem quite comprehensively, but lacks one thing - Where is the reign to control this army stead? Surely author being a researcher can see the obvious lack of civilian control over army. Army has been used a home dog for marshal law to subdue opposition by bhutto; skindar mirza brough army in on his own free will. Zardari and Gilani gave free reign to Kiyani to drive wazirstan op, instead of being it driven by civilian controlled strategically.
General problem is there and presented the most comprehensive way here. But the root cause, the political vacuum - is not mentioned. You can trim the branches in hope for the poison ivy to die but it wont. Kill the root - remove political vacuum.
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"Murshaid, marwa diaya!" What about the 10 myths you preached to the Indians not too long ago: http://pakistaniat.com/2009/01/11/mohammed-hanif-myths-pakistan/ PA creating terrorist to kill innocent Indians revelation happened when??? Ab khud jaan pe aa bani, to takleef ki baat? Khuda khair kare!
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The barbaric nature of our forces had already been described by great socialists/ dramatists. Lord Wellington wrote, “The scum of the earth, boasters and illegitimate join the Army”. In a famous comedy ‘Arms and the Man’, George Bernard Shaw stated, “Nine out of ten soldiers are born fools”. They are slaves of their masters and only learn to obey orders irrespective of knowing their legitimacy. They do not possess brain like thing in their skull. They are in fact trained to be secular and have nothing to do with religion and its values. They are so called guards of the nation but unfortunately have no quality of Mujahid as depicted in Islam. Their dress, way of dwelling and behaviour are totally contrary to Islamic Ideology. They have no fear of Allah the Almighty, which made them arrogant, Pharaohs of present era. Off course there are some exceptions but merely of small percentage. The barbarism was a trait of terrorists but now our law enforcing agencies exercised it against unarmed people e.g. Sialkot, Khirotabad and Karachi incidents. This is an indication of great rebellion.
May Allah the Almighty bestow his special blessings, knowledge, guidance and wisdom upon us, especially upon our coward law enforcing agencies involved in barbarism against our own people instead of being courageous, exemplary and pious Muslims, which are the traits of Mujahideen. In fact these parasites, presumably national guards (so called Mujahideens) are humiliating that noble character of Allah fearing people who are inspirational Muslims. May Allah the Almighty bestow his guidance upon them or make them an abhorrent character. They are using militants (Mujahideen) to achieve their goals but they themselves are involved in all cheapness of west. In our country the more duffer is the more powerful.
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Absolutely Brilliant!
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Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant!
I have not read a better analysis of the whole situation..
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Well written although not entirely accurate. Do tell which particular politician should advise the army or guide the nation for that matter.
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A beautifully written article, well articulated and with clear reasoning. It summarizes what we as Pakistanis need to understand here and now: That we have regressed as a nation since our founding 64 years ago. Regressed in almost every element of our daily lives - culturally, socially, economically, certainly religiously and in all matters related to human dignity. How many countries exist on this planet where paying ones taxes requires bribing someone to actually complete the process? How can the citizens of a nuclear powered nation be deprived of clean water and electricity? It is unacceptable and should be punishable by law.
One reads of other nations pondering about their past and their origins. Usually some reference will be made to their founding fathers with a sense of pride. Todays Pakistan is not even an iota of a reflection on our founding father. A man very clearly not one to lend his life as an example of what has now become fundamental Islam nor someone who would ever force his views upon you. His idea and dream of a secular country wherein it's citizens, irrespective of religion or belief are equally protected under the rule of law must have been based on a terrible misconception.
How he must be turning in his grave!
Let's think of rosier times, to the days when freedom loving Pakistanis could travel the world with visas on arrival like it was in the 60's and mid 70's? The days when our national airline was used as a model for all that was a representation of quality? The days when foreigners actually visited our country because of its impeccable international image, its myriad wonders of the east, its world class cuisine and entertainment?
The scary fact is that those days will never, ever return.
In todays Pakistan, even the cricket team is accused of cheating.
For whatever has happened that has made the proponents of our religion permeate our social fabric in so utterly vitriolic a fashion so that, short of death and maiming, no commonsense compromise is possible continues to weave it's web. Whatever has changed so dramatically in 36 odd years in which fatwas and threats of physical violence are matter of fact conversational tools continues unabated. I remember seeing a documentary of the late Ahmad Deedat who described himself as South African but hailing from the sub-continent where the people are much gentler by nature..
How wrong he was!
How can it be, that as a liberal Pakistani, i feel like an alien whenever I visit home?
I know for a fact that people from my generation feel a humiliating slap in the face when one sees the perception of Pakistanis from the eyes of foreigners all over the world. Our so called diplomatic corps is horribly lacking in the relationship building qualities needed for the job and this once covetted position takes third or fourth position behind other government jobs such as Customs, Exise and Police (read: others which are money making).
So to all our politicians and so-called lawmakers - without exception, and our military machine which takes SO much pride in its shiny medals and brass bugles, our country of 180 million souls has had enough and are struggling with their lives in resignation. Devoid of any sense of self respect, dignity or pride, they face hours of power shortages, lack of sanitary conditions, aerial as well as suicide bombardment and life not fit for citizens of a country with the 7th largest army in the world.
Hitler, in his drive to ignite passionate national fervour to counter the humiliation of the treaty of versailles, told his citizens "Deutschland Erwache" or Germany Awaken. Without the subsequent disaster he brought on his land, I would also like to say: Pakistan - Awaken!
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You don't need a degree in political sciences to see how we always have a General in power when America needs Pakistan to fight a war for them. It's easy to sit and criticize the policies of Zia and Musharraf but it takes guts to say "Yes I believe America had its share in turning Pakistan into what it is today, from Zia to Musharraf... and NO I don't have to be a Taliban or Jihadi or some crackhead extremist militant to be saying this".
Our failure as a nation is also equally simple to understand... we failed to govern this country professionally. Our political system has corruption written all over it and frankly that just shows how we are as people... nations get the leaders they deserve.
We can start demanding a revolution once we revolutionize our individual self... the change has to come from within - enough said!
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Why is it hard for Hanif to remain honest? .... Political orientation aside, why he need to beef up his article with wrong information:
" ... others encouraged by the thriving market place will go ahead and start outfits like Anjuman Tahuffuze Khatame Nabuwat and ... ". The formation of Anjuman Tahuffuze Khatame Nabuwat and its history is totally different and lumping it together with out extremist or terrorist outfits reminds me of the authors like Steve Emerson who categorize ISNA, CAIR and MSA organization also as terrorist and lumped them with the most violent fringe organizations. Why should one feels different about Steve Emerson's approach, but not about Hanif's approach?
Raza
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i liked the heading General Problem.The gentleman who suggested to mop the hungry indian soldiers on the Siachin had precisely the samething in mind.Firing from the Kargil hieghts would have blocked indian supplies to siachin through the Ladakh road leaving indian soldiers at the mercy of the chinese but the wise general did'nt realize US would'nt let India suffer that humilation and mr.Clinton immediately came out with his mantra,"line of control"The generals had to retreat.As for loss of human life.That does'nt matter with these generals.
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Dirty men at work!
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Brilliant!! And happy to see so many Pakistanis agree to the view. There is still hope for a better, peaceful, enlightened South Asia.
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There are two sides of every story. I look at the other side. I dont say what army do is right but you cann't deny that our poloticians after Quiad E Azam were bunch of monkeys who started jumping around on trees to keep themselves in power. Bhutto no doubt was a great leader but he was a human being too. We can see his human errors at different jalsas where when he lost the lections he started calling Pakistanis in Bangladesh as ' Sour ke Bache'. So killing of thousands in East Pakistan ------core problem was bhutto himself because he didnt want to leave his chair. Then comes "Makafat E Amal'. Bhutto was wrong so was Zia. But to teach Bhutto a lesson, Zia was naturally the most suitable person. It wasn't a human error but it was a decision by Supreme Authority and BHutto reap what he sow.
About Generals this will never end unless we the people of pakistan come out of our homes and start compaigning for a better pakistan. I dont think so it will happen either because we are selfish, greedy and self centered nation. We as an individuals give a shit about any other person. You can see this in day to day business. We vote for money or on the basis of our family. Never thought about Pakistan or country development. The only thing that can change this is education but corroupt awam elects corroupt politicians who know that as long as this nation is illetrate they will get into power.
My advice instead of writing books, articles for 5% of the whole population please come out of your house and start spreading education and knowledge to 95% who cannot read you. Rest I know that this will all go in vein. You may be very educated but you are not patriot at all.
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Just read this Article by Mohammad Hanif, it seems he had a run-in with the army or a classic case of being sponsored from abroad as his article seems to send a message to the reader that the root cause off all evil in Pakistan is the Army. I wish he had done a bit more research than just quoting others. It wasn’t the Army who took billions in aid, nor the Army that amassed millions in loans. Its nor the generals who plundered national wealth nor the commanders who twisted the law in their own favour, took bribes, paid bribes, rigged the elections and never fulfilled the promises made to the public, the very public that voted for them. The author mentioned Kargil, and how conveniently labelled it as a misadventure. Wish he had read some military journals, specially from India. It took the Indian army by surprise, and had it not been for Nawaz sharief bowing under US pressure, India would have ended up losing a large part of Occupied Kashmir. As far as the recent attack on PNS Mehran, one wonders why would MILLITANTS want to destroy anti submarine reconnaissance jets, as far as I know, no militant or jihadi outlet anywhere in the world possess a submarine!! some sense can be made about the tone in which this article is written by the fact that when I went on to send a response to this article, the editors email endid with .IN!
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Dawn is a medium which is used by west and america to demoralize PAKISTAN ARMY..our media is feeding on american n indian money so wat ever they said is a lie, they only want to make money who cares abiut people of PAKISTAN,...not a single day they appreciated JAWANS OF PAKISTAN....
but we the kids of PAKISTAN used to say PAKISTAN ZINDABAD ,PAKISTAN ARMY ZINDABAD.
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Great article, although I was not aware of all the facts given here but have some hints , really it is appreciable.
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Magnificent!
Just validated my long held view that Pakistan produces better writers and journalists than my country, India.
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Outstandilngly written,
best term "Laptop Jiahdis"
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wow .. amzing article, the army has ruined this country's next few generations by creating these militant fighters ... we need a blood bath of revolution to change all this damaging mindset prevelant in the masses. we need an internal solution rather than looking towards the west for help they will only exploit our weaknesses further !
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Dear Mr Hanif.
For some one who is a fan of 'a Case of exploding mangoes', and considers your writing to restructure thought processes of the masses , and expand mental horizons, this is deeply disturbing. This piece sadly doesn’t challenge any perceptions, and is as distracting as the crap regurgitated on OUR tv every single day!!
What has been said here that hasn’t been said before in a different vocabulary and is representative of a section of pakistani society infatuated with melodram, of its politics. the same that the politicians playup to it and the public eats it with both hands.
you prove that we are parts of an ungrateful, melodramatic whole. Despite your imagery The fact remains that Pakistan has paid a price for the judgmental weaknesses and idiosyncrasies of its leaders.
Before criticizing gen zia and deeming him the sole culprit of history, donot forget that there was a history of Pakistan before him TOO. He (like Taliban) was just a by product of a very nurturing coldwar atmosphere. Specially hand picked (bypassing all laws and orders n promoted over 7 senior army generals) by a very khushaamdi zulfi Bhutto, who was fully aware of his religious inclinations. But thats Just what the doctor ordered then.
Perhaps the general problem OF Pakistan is that we aren’t as "democrazy" as we pretend to be, constructive consensus building just isn’t in our blood. We like “someone” to tell us what to do and we do it better.
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"Dawn is a medium which is used by west and america to demoralize PAKISTAN ARMY..our media is feeding on american n indian money so wat ever they said is a lie,"
-- Sounds familiar. A handful of Hindutwits have the same opinion about Indian media... foreign sponsored, pseudo-secular, anti-national et al...
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Well written article.
Media has good and bad sides and it is stupid to compare Indian media in democratic India to Pakistani media in a military controlled Pakistan.
It takes lot of balls to write such articles, especially killing of journalists who speaks the truth is a way of life for Pakistani government.
As far as Pakistani people are concerned, especially like the one who commented before me, well, you cannot expect much from people are fed with lies since 1st grade in school.
Wake up Pakistani people, this is your real Pakistan.
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Great article.nation must should read and think.its not a non serious thing to avoid its part of our lives and directly about our future.http://www.justaju.com
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In general, every country has an army.
In Pakistan the army has a country.
Good luck getting your country back.
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All this is true but the greater blame lies with the Pakistani people.
Lashkars are nothing new. They were unleashed by Jinnah against Hindu's in Calcutta to fulfill his threat of Direct Action Day in 1946.
Once again in 1948 Lashkars were sent into Kashmir to loot and plunder and terrorize fellow Muslims in Kashmir.
In 1971 Lashkars (called Al-Badar, Al-Ansar, Razakar) were allied with the Pak Army in their slaughter of Bengalis.
During all this mayhem not a tweet from the population. No demonstrations, no indignation - only the silence of the accomplice.
This is a long, sordid tale.
M
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Very interesting article, and as always is the case with intellectual dishonesty in Pakistan, this also tries to narrowly focus on only one era of Pakistan's traumatic history. What started by Sikandar mirza/Ayub Khan et.al., evolved into Zia and Musharaf. Nawaz was creation of Zia as Bhutto was creation of Ayub Khan. Ayub Khan along with his cronies was responsible for the "near disaster" of 1965 war and seeds of the "real disaster" of 1971 were implanted during his rule. And after using the turmoil in East Pakistan to his political advantage ( If Pakistan had stayed united, there was no path for Bhutto to become prime minister in a democratic system), what did he do? He appoints "Butcher of Bengal" AKA Genral Tikka Khan as the COA. Was it pay-back for a job well-done? Why was there no outrage in current Pakistan over what happened in East Pakistan? Why is there no outrage in Punjab for what's going on in Baluchistan? A nation that forgets the crimes of past'll only live to re-live them again and again. The un-holy alliance of Generals and Feudal lords has to end, and army'll have to be brought under full civil control if we have any hopes of a stable and prosperous Pakistan.
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I very much doubt if the young men of Pakistan want to listen to the old people in the Pakistan Army.
That force is looking increasingly discredited - especially post Lal Masjid and Abbotabad.
The Army leadership keeps telling the young men that India cannot repeat Abbotabad, but it isn't clear who believes them.
Rumor has it that questions faced by Gen. Kayani on his recent rath yatra through the cantonments revolved around two topics - what will you make the Pakistan Army do for American payoffs? and will the Pakistan Army at least be able to pretend to resist India?
Given the extraordinary license given to extremism in Pakistan, it is not clear what if anything can be done to wean younger people away from it.
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We do also to collect the fact, why trible were asked fight for kashmir in 1940s. and the disastrious returned of mujahids
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After reading all that non-sense targeted towards the army, I would like to ask mr. hanif to give me a straight forward answer, not a long end-less maze like the non-sense above: Where would this country be without the army?
I don't understand what people, like you, want? Talking against Ulema, linking terrorists to Pak army. Who knows? They might even gradually start talking against the father of the nation and the great thinker, and they won't even stop at that, maybe at some stage they could talk against God just to satisfy their troubled minds.
This collection of a one-line-sentence en-coated in fancy words just conveys a single message: Army raises terrorists, rebel against army.
I pity his lack of research, for if he had done research, he would've known that the government, police and judiciary put in a combined effort to breed terrorist on our green land. And he just ignores the fact that while he was sitting in the comfort of his room writing this non-sense, the so-called sold "puttars" of the army are defending this country and its citizens on the borders with their lives.
Mr. Hanif, do this country a favour: change your nationality and go rest your troubled mind far far away from a country that had had more than enough of its share of opinion-enforcers.
Wassalam,
Emmad
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An Excellent article unleashing the reality about the dirty Pak Army.Thumbs up Mr hanif.you are really great.
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A totally disappointed article.The onus of responsibility for the worst situation we are living and passing through rest with every body.The main cause for our down fall is that we do not fulfill our obligation,duty towards the nation/country and blame others for the wrong. This will benefit no one except the enemies of Pakistan,therefore its high time we should look inward ,stop the blame game and lit our own candle.When thosand and one candle will lit the darkness will finish by itself,It can not be done away only by cursing alone.
pakistan is a resourceful country with dynamic people .We started from Zero in 1947 and reached to the skies despite all odds and poor leadership.ZARA NUM HU TO YE MUUTY BARI ZAKHAIZ HEY SAAQI. May Allah Taala bless our nation and country in this holy month of RAMADAN.Aameen
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Mohammed Hanif is absolutely brilliant...can't wait to read his second novel lady of alice bhatti
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There was a method behind Musharraf's madness in Kargill - this was his way of sabotaging the meeting between two elected prime ministers seeking to bring peace in the sub-continent.
Musharraf may escape justice in this world, but there is a special place in hell reserved for him and Zia and their generals and the rogue maulvis to whom they "outsourced" their dirty work. And no amount of namaz and roza and hajj will help them avoid Allah's Justice that awaits them. In the meantime, it would be good to bring Musharraf justice and hang him like Saddam - to deter future jernails from seeking to follow in the evil footsteps of Zia and Musharraf.
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hope people of Pakistan realize that there army is there No1 enemy , not India if they join hands with India army is not required at all the whole of saarc region will prosper, Indian market will pull up all these countries out along with itself but the army will not allow this .
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Hope to see an equally creatively written article about the Indian army by Haneef mian. Unlikely to find such excellent and penetrating analysis by Indians who also treat their army like a holy cow.
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pakistan is also suffering from MANUVADI mind set like we indians. they have their ASHRAF high caste which is more or less like indian high caste people like brahmins etc. the entire Caste of SC ST in punjab and Sind province has long back converted to roman catholic Church. and it is pleasing to note that now they are progressing well and leaving life of self respect. our Liberator Dr Ambedkar has preached seperation of THREE things from their oppressors (1) seperation of religion (2) seperation of culture (3) seperation of politics. in INDIA also many of our SC St people get liberated by crossing over to islam or Christianity. as regards communalism, fascism corruption it is present in all ARMIES OF THE WORLD. only few says ago the Indian express newspaper of India highlighted the fact that during peace operations in CONGO under UNO supervision many indian soldiers raped african women. on 2nd JULY 1998 WORLD HISTORY is created when a serving admiral of indian army moved an application in calcutta High Court against his chief Bhagwati. his argument is that wife of his naval chief is a muslim therefore loyalties of naval chief is questionable. many stories of MANUVADI corruption inside security system of India can be quoted. but the master or the MOTHER of ALL the books on this subject is written by RETIRED I.G. of police maharashtra . this IPS officer is really brilliant and thoroughly honest. he wrote the book proving manuvadi fascist elements inside security system of INDIA. kindly long on to the book --> www.whokilledkarkare.com
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