Read Pakistan: A Hard Country Online

Authors: Anatol Lieven

Tags: #History / Asia / Central Asia

Pakistan: A Hard Country

BOOK: Pakistan: A Hard Country
12.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Table of Contents

 

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgements
Acronyms

PART ONE - Land, People and History

Chapter 1 - Introduction: Understanding Pakistan

PAKISTAN, AFGHANISTAN AND THE TALEBAN

TOUGHER THAN IT LOOKS

WEAK STATE, STRONG SOCIETIES

‘FEUDALS’

HOW PAKISTAN WORKS

THE NEGOTIATED STATE

A GAMBLE ON THE INDUS

THE PAKISTANI ECONOMY

LIVING IN PAKISTAN

A NOTE ON KINSHIP TERMS

Chapter 2 - The Struggle for Muslim South Asia ‘ISLAM IN DANGER’

RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR RESPONSES

THE GENESIS OF PAKISTAN

THE NEW PAKISTANI STATE

ATTEMPTS AT CHANGE FROM ABOVE

ZULFIKAR ALI BHUTTO

ZIA-UL-HAQ

 

PART TWO - Structures

Chapter 3 - Justice
THE CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY

THE POLICE

THE COURTS

THE LAWYERS’ MOVEMENT

THE SHARIAH

NOT QUITE AS BAD AS IT LOOKS

Chapter 4 - Religion
FEUDING THEOLOGIANS

THE LIMITS TO RADICALISM

SAINTLY POLITICIANS

SHRINES AND SUPERSTITION

PURITANS, FUNDAMENTALISTS, REFORMISTS: THE

JAMAAT ISLAMI

MILITANTS

Chapter 5 - The Military
AN ARMY WITH A STATE

THE MILITARY FAMILY

HISTORY AND COMPOSITION

INTER-SERVICES INTELLIGENCE, KASHMIR AND THE

MILITARY – JIHADI NEXUS

THE PAKISTANI NUCLEAR DETERRENT

Chapter 6 - Politics
THE MILITARY AND POLITICS

HOW THE SYSTEM WORKS

A POLITICIAN’S LIFE

THE MEDIA

THE PAKISTAN PEOPLE’S PARTY (PPP)

THE PAKISTAN MUSLIM LEAGUE (NAWAZ) (PML(N)) THE MUTTAHIDA QAUMI MAHAZ (MQM)

 

PART THREE - The Provinces

Chapter 7 - Punjab

PAKISTAN’S PROVINCIAL BALANCE

DIFFERENT PUNJABS

LAHORE, THE HISTORIC CAPITAL

PUNJABI HISTORY AND THE IMPACT OF MIGRATION

PUNJAB’S REGIONS

INDUSTRIALISTS

SECTARIANS AND TERRORISTS

MULTAN

Chapter 8 - Sindh
THE HISTORY OF SINDH

INDEPENDENCE AND MOHAJIR – SINDHI RELATIONS

RISE OF THE MQM (MOHAJIR QAUMI MAHAZ OR MOHAJIR

PEOPLE’S MOVEMENT)

KARACHI’S ETHNIC FRONT LINES

INTERIOR SINDH

HUNTING BOAR AND LEADING TRIBES

‘FEUDAL’ DOMINATION

EXISTENTIAL THREATS?

Chapter 9 - Balochistan

DISPUTED HISTORY, DISPUTED POPULATION

THE BALOCH INSURGENCY AFTER 2000

BALOCH TRIBALISM

THE TREATMENT OF WOMEN

VISIT TO A BUGTI

PAKISTAN AND BALOCHISTAN

Chapter 10 - The Pathans
THE MOUNTAINS AND THE PLAINS

THE PATHAN TRADITION AND PATHAN NATIONALISM

THE FEDERALLY ADMINISTERED TRIBAL AREAS (FATA) PATHAN POLITICAL CULTURE

THE AWAMI NATIONAL PARTY (ANP)

JAMIAT-E-ULEMA-E-ISLAM (JUI, COUNCIL OF ISLAMIC

CLERICS)

 

PART FOUR - The Taleban

Chapter 11 - The Pakistani Taleban

THE RISE OF THE PAKISTANI TALEBAN

THE NATURE OF THE PAKISTANI TALEBAN

THE LINEAGE OF THE PAKISTANI TALEBAN

THE MOHMAND AGENCY

Chapter 12 - Defeating the Taleban?

PUBLIC OPINION AND THE TALEBAN

THE ANP AND THE TALEBAN

THE POLICE AND THE ARMY

THE TURNING POINT

THE BACKGROUND TO REVOLT IN SWAT

VISIT TO SWAT

MINGORA TO DOROSHKHEL

 

Conclusions

Notes

Books Consulted

Glossary

Appendix One: Chronology of Muslim South Asia Appendix Two: Pakistani Statistics Index

Copyright Page

In memory of my grandparents,

George Henry Monahan,

Indian Civil Service

 

Helen Monahan (née Kennedy)

 

and their son,

 

Captain Hugh Monahan MC,

5th Royal Gurkha Rifles (Frontier Force)

and in honour of their successors in the civil and military services of Pakistan, India and Bangladesh

Acknowledgements

This book would not have been possible had it not been for the immense kindness and hospitality of many Pakistanis, who invited me to their homes and talked to me frankly about their lives and their opinions – so many that the great majority wil have to go unthanked.

I am especial y indebted to Ashraf and Ambrin Hayat and their family in Islamabad. I hope that my prolonged stays with them did not disrupt their lives too much.

Syed Fakr Imam and Syeda Abida Hussain have been most gracious hosts over the years in their various residences, and shared with me their knowledge of politics, history and culture. Najam and Jugnu Sethi have been good friends and kind hosts for an equal time.

Naeem Pasha and Kathy Gannon have entertained me more often than I can remember, and Kathy has shared her incomparable knowledge of matters Afghan. Naveed and Saeed Elahi have both given most generously of their time and helped me enormously with advice, information and contacts.

Whether in official service or the media, Maleeha Lodhi has been unfailingly kind, helpful and insightful. Her comments on parts of the manuscript were extremely valuable. I must also thank Shuja Nawaz, Asad Hashim and Hasan-Askari Rizvi for their comments. Of course, responsibility for the contents of this book, and the opinions expressed in it, is entirely my own. Among legions of Pakistani journalists and analysts who have helped me over the years, I must especial y mention my old col eague Zahid Hussain, together with Zafar Abbas, Ejaz Haider, Imran Aslam, Behrouz Khan and Mosharraf Zaidi.

In Peshawar, I am most grateful to Rahimul ah Yusufzai for al his help, and to Amina Khan and her family, to Brigadier Saad, Brigadier Javed Iqbal, Khalid Aziz, and Fakhruddin Khan. It was also most kind of General Zafrul ah Khan and the Frontier Constabulary to invite me to stay in their mess in Peshawar in the summer of 2009. Similarly, I must thank the Vice-Chancel or of Faislabad Agricultural University, Professor Iqraar, for inviting me to speak there and putting me up at the university guest house, Dr Faisal Zaidi and the staff of Broomfield Hal in Multan for inviting me to speak there, Dr Mohammed Amir Rana and the staff of the Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies and Ambassador Tanvir Khan and the Institute of Strategic Studies in Islamabad. I am also most grateful to Professor Ali Khan Shehriyar, Dr Lukas Werth, Dr Shandana Mohmand and their col eagues at the Lahore University of Management Sciences for inviting me to speak, offering very helpful comments on my work and sharing their knowledge of Pakistani society.

General Athar Abbas, Colonel Haidar Malik, Captain Nasireh and other officers of Inter-Services Public Relations helped me greatly by arranging a whole series of meetings with senior military figures.

Colonel Ali Awan and Mrs Saira Ahmed of the Pakistani High Commission in London helped not only with meetings but with extremely valuable advice. I am grateful to them and al the officers and men of the Pakistani armed forces who have helped me over the years.

In Sindh, I am deeply grateful to Sardar Mumtaz Ali Bhutto and his family for two very pleasant and interesting stays separated by twenty years, and in particular for inviting me to the boar hunt described in this book; and also to El ahi Baksh Soomro and other members of the Soomro family for a fascinating stay with them in 1990. The Mayor of Karachi, Mustafa Kemal, gave generously of his valuable time. In Quetta, Nawabzada Aurangzeb Jogezai and Ashfaq Durrani very kindly entertained me in their homes.

I could also not have written this book without the help of assistants and translators in different parts of Pakistan. I am grateful to Zuhra Bahman not only for her help, but also for her family’s hospitality.

Watching Russian television in Peshawar during the Georgian – Russian war of 2008 was a somewhat surreal experience, but one worth remembering. I am also deeply grateful to Tauseef-ur-Rehman of The News, whose insights and contacts in Peshawar helped me enormously. Similarly, to Hasan Kazmi in Karachi, Naeem Daniel of Reuters in Quetta, Ali Gardezi in Multan, and Furrukh Khan and Hirra Waqas in Lahore, who also translated pieces from the Urdu media for me, and to Liz Harris in London.

In Britain, Sir Hilary Synnott, Colonel Christopher Langton, Dr Marie Lal and Dr Stephen Lyon provided me with help and advice. In the US, Joshua White helped me with his unparal eled insights into Islamist politics in the North West Frontier Province, as did Stephen Tankel with regard to Lashkar-e-Taiba. Lynne Tracey of the US Consulate in Peshawar kindly invited me on a number of occasions. Khatib Alam and Gul Hafeez Khokar of GHK Consulting helped me with advice, introduced me to Faisalabad and impressed me with their achievements in helping to improve administration in that city. This was also true of Riaz Kamlani, Colonel Anwar Awan and the staff of the Citizens’ Foundation in the area of education; while the devoted humanitarian service of the staff of the Edhi Foundation has been an inspiration since I first met them more than twenty years ago.

I remain grateful to The Times for sending me to Pakistan and Afghanistan in 1988 and al owing me to lay the foundation for this book, and to the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the New America Foundation, Bil Benter, the Nuffield Foundation, the Leverhulme Trust and the British Academy for financing different parts of my research in Pakistan from 2001 to 2009.

My thanks are due to my col eagues in the War Studies Department of King’s Col ege London for their support, in particular to Professor Mervyn Frost for his kindness in sparing me some administrative duties during the period of researching and writing this book, and to Dr Rudra Chaudhuri, whose insights into Indian policy and generosity in taking over lectures and seminars were a great help in a very busy time.

I am most grateful to Simon Winder, Caroline El iker and the staff at Penguin for their great helpfulness and patience in what at times (through no fault of theirs) was a difficult editorial process, to Janet Tyrrel for spotting and correcting mistakes and infelicities, and to Clive Priddle and his col eagues at Public Affairs in the US. Natasha Fairweather, Emily Kitchin and Donald Winchester at AP Watt have as always been an indispensable help.

My wife Sasha bore the whole burden of the family during my long absences in Pakistan, and my son Misha absorbed a large amount of (antique) Pakistani weaponry without turning any of it on his father. I hope that before too long they wil be able to visit Pakistan with me in more peaceful times.

Acronyms

Awami National Party, the Pathan nationalist party led ANP

the Wali Khan dynasty.

ASI

Assistant Sub-Inspector; a junior police officer.

BJP

Bharatiya Janata Party (India).

COAS

Chief of Army Staff.

District Coordinating Officer (formerly District Commis DCO

sioner), the official in charge of the administration of a district.

Deputy Inspector-General (of police), usual y the rank of DIG

the officer commanding the police of a district.

Federal y Administered Tribal Areas, the indirectly FATA

admin istered Tribal Agencies along the border with Afghanistan.

FCR

Frontier Crimes Regulations.

FIR

First Information Report.

FSF

Federal Security Force.

Intel igence Bureau, the intel igence wing of the Federal IB

Interior Ministry.

IDP

Internal y Displaced Person.

Inspector-General (of police), usual y commanding the IG

police of a province.

Islami Jamhoori Ittehad, an al iance of conservative IJI

parties put together in September 1988 to oppose the Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto.

Inter-Services Intel igence, the intel igence wing of the ISI

armed forces.

JeM

Jaish-e-Mohammed.

JI

Jamaat Islami, Islamist movement founded by Maududi.

Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the social, educational and charitable JuD

wing of Lashkar-e-Taiba (see below) JUH

Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind.

Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam, mainstream Islamist movement JUI

based in the Pathan areas.

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, anti-Shia Sunni militant group, an LeJ

offshoot of Sipah-e-Sahaba.

Lashkar-e-Taiba, militant group focused on jihad against LeT

India.

Military Intel igence, the service responsible for counter MI

BOOK: Pakistan: A Hard Country
12.54Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Cotton Grass Lodge by Woodbury, DeNise
Witch's Business by Diana Wynne Jones
Thirteen Guests by J Jefferson Farjeon
The Caryatids by Bruce Sterling
The Silver Sun by Nancy Springer
The Scarlet Pepper by Dorothy St. James
Wild legacy by Conn, Phoebe, Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress) DLC
Obumbrate by Anders, Alivia