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#41 | ||
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Denver on occasion
Posts: 1,823
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Quote:
The paper was interesting. The primary thesis being that after a bad start the Pakistan Army has very quickly learned to be more effective in a small war conducted within its' national borders. It has mostly learned on the fly and is incorporating what is has learned into unit training and various schools. Kind of interesting too when you think of it as indicating the organizations ability to learn like Nagl covered in his book. I got the sense from the paper this concern with small war is especially evident at the lower levels of the army because all the casualties they've suffered in the past few years have been suffered in FATA and Swat. Fear not though, the senior generals are keeping their steely gaze fixed on the Hindu hordes to the east. Since we are on the subject of the Pak Army and in the correct thread, I wish to ask about your following comment. Quote:
As to your second paragraph quoted above, I think I prefer you answer my question as I originally stated it. Your rephrasing changes the sense of my original question. Or you maybe could answer your rephrased question if you swapped the words "India" for "Pakistan" and vice versa. But I would prefer you answer my original question as originally stated-is the Pak Army/ISI's desire to exert control over Afghanistan one we should honor any more than India's desire that they don't? Also you state above you believe the Pak Army/ISIs position is reasonable, yet in the past you stated that you didn't believe they had a right (or something like that, I will get lost if I go retrieve the quote, but I can if you want) to exert control over Afghanistan. Those two statements seem contradictory.
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#42 |
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#43 | |
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Location: UK
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Since a certain event there have been a number of threads and posts that have touched upon the role of the Pakistani Army.
There are now increasing signs that the army is having problems externally with civil society and this WSJ article covers it all:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...orld_LeadStory Opens with: Quote:
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#44 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Concord, MA
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Belfer Center, 27 July 2011: An Introduction to Pakistan's Military
Quote:
Last edited by Jedburgh; 08-07-2011 at 03:59 PM. |
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#45 |
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This report looks rather lame. How does it provide any new insight into the "opaque" side of the army? All it tells you is boilerplate strategic theory and numbers of weapons and so on. Hamid Hussain's occasional articles are far superior if you really want to know something about the Pakistani army.
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#46 | ||
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Location: UK
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Hat tip to FP Blog and an article by Christine Fair, which is sub-titled:
Quote:
Quote:
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davidbfpo |
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#47 | |
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A Pakistani I know, mentioned that Musharraf tried to reverse the Zia effect but as soon as soldiers reached their villages or towns and attended a sermon by the local Mullah they get back to square one. |
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#48 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 578
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The focus on "madressas" and "conservative areas" is useful as an academic exercise but should not "reassure" or "scare" anyone either way. Christine Fair is much more sensible than the previous retarded attempt at connecting lifestyle with political views (he drinks whisky and soda so he must be pro-western), that has a long history in US-Pakistan affairs by now...but this is still misleading.
The problem with GHQ is its tunnel-vision version of "paknationalism"..everything else proceeds from that. Reliance on Islamists is a result of that obsession, not a cause of it. Afghan policy is derived from that obsession, not from Islamic solidarity. And so on... But, at this point, I think the best thing for NATO would be to throw up its hands and give up. They clearly dont understand what is going on and will continue to throw good money after bad. Let the Indians and the Chinese sort it out, or not sort it out. The officer corps has become more formally Islamic with time (as have other sections of the middle class) and this newfound "Islam" is not without its problems, but there is a very long journey from being a more orthodox Muslim to supporting the Haqqani network..and many generals can make that journey without passing through Islam on the way. Last edited by omarali50; 09-27-2011 at 01:45 PM. |
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#49 |
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I was unhappy with the first attempt at a reply this morning and edited it again and am still unhappy. The point may be moot anyway. Events may be moving in a direction where liberal and "conservative" Pakistani officers will all look equally problematic to American analysts because the pendulum is now swinging from "our army in South Asia" to "our enemy in South Asia", with God knows what results to follow.
And we have an election year coming up. If I was an academic specializing in research papers about the recruitment patterns of the Pakistani army and the school networks in Chakwal, I would start thinking of grant ideas in a different direction. When the money spigot is finally turned off, it wont be done very rationally. Nobody wants to study a disaster until at least 20 years have passed. |
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#50 | |
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Council Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: UK
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This is a review of Carey Schofield's new book:http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/720...y-within.thtml
Quote:
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davidbfpo |
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#51 |
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Council Member
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I see that the army is still the great white hope in Pakistan. There is an Urdu verse that fits here:
Meer kya saada hain, beemar huey jin key sabab Ussi attar key londey sey dawa letey hain.. How naive is Mir, going to get his medication, from the same physician who made him sick in the first place.. Who knows. Next time around, it may work. |
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#52 |
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Council Member
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Location: USA
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Good review, of all places, in huffpo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/aparna..._b_995933.html
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#53 | |||
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Council Member
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Location: UK
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Omarali50,
We must have read a different review! As you said: Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
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davidbfpo |
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#54 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 578
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If its blunt, it cannot be good?
![]() I will be the first to admit it, I think the Pakistani army high command (for all sorts of reasons) has adopted a strategic worldview that is fundamentally flawed and leads to repeated disasters and missed opportunities. And I also think that a lot of Western commentators take it for granted that all modern looking armies must have the same fashionable modern notions of strategic necessities and problems, so they tend to take the Pak army view as a reasonable starting point and take it from there. I think that is a mistake. I also think the Pakistani army is not impossible to reform. They are pragmatic at heart and if more of their "allies"and advisers had told them so and been a bit more upfront, they might have been induced to rethink...."enabling" their pathologies is not helping them. having said that, I also suspect it may be too late now. Mistrust and accumulated mistakes make it hard to imagine the US or NATO playing too constructive a role any more. Maybe Uncle Chin will have to do what Uncle Sam could not.. |
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#55 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 578
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for a look at how the strategic geniuses are thinking, go to http://rupeenews.com/
Last edited by davidbfpo; 10-06-2011 at 09:31 PM. Reason: URL added |
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#56 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 578
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we have a bit of a discussion going about the 1971 war and I wondered if anyone here (especially Ray) can shed some light on Indian operations in East Pakistan. The discussion is at: http://www.brownpundits.com/2011/12/...west-1971-war/
btw, I have seen that military men can be rather suspicious of people who seem disloyal to their own military...but I hope you dont judge too harshly ![]() we mean well. |
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#57 | ||
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Council Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: UK
Posts: 6,218
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We have had at least two reviews of Carey Schofield's book 'Inside the Pakistan Army: A Woman’s Experience on the Frontline of the War on Terror', pub.London: Biteback Publishing, 2011; 232 pages.
Here is one by a contributor to SWC, Hamid Hussain, who is a USA-based analyst and this is a slightly edited summary Quote:
At length Quote:
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davidbfpo |
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#58 |
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Location: USA
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we, in the chattering classes, have a name for this condition. Its called Lieven Syndrome, in honor of respected author Anatol Lieven. Extreme cases may also be labelled "Cloughley syndrome", for obvious reasons.
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#59 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: UK
Posts: 6,218
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The occasional SWC contributor, Hamid Hussain, a USA-based analyst has written an article for a regional defence journal and provided a copy (slightly edited by me).
This coup brought General Musharraf to power and the paper details what happened. What I found interesting was the inter-action within the army leadership and the future careers of those involved - with several suicides.
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davidbfpo |
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#60 | |
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Council Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Calcutta, India
Posts: 943
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Omar,
I am responding since you asked me to. Quote:
In his piece Defeat in the West, Waseem Altaf appears to indicate that practically all the Pakistani military were staffed by incompetent brass and that is why Pakistan made no headway. If that is true, which I am sure it is not, then there is some real systemic problem in the Pakistani military. I am sure this article denuded the Arabian Sea of sea salt since much of it was consumed while reading this piece. |
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