Sunday, May 09, 2010
Four metaphors
Your major non-NATO ally - breeding ground, nursery, supermarket, Walmart.
1. A breeding ground for Islamism.
Salim Mansur writes in the Toronto Sun:
Since Britain conceded to the demand for Pakistan in the face of religious frenzy pushed by middle- and lower-class Muslim activists, the country’s history has been a series of failures of its own making. These failures have deeply embittered the thinking of that class of Pakistanis from whose rank the ruling elite comes, and whose regular pastime is to parcel blame to others for their part in making Pakistan a terrorist-exporting rogue and failed state.
2. Irresistible lure of Pakistan as nursery of global jihad (URL may be temporary)
Lehaz Ali writes for the AFP:
...radicalised youth have long felt an irresistible pull to Pakistan as a nursery of modern jihad.
3. Terrorism's Supermarket
Fareed Zakaria writes in Newsweek:
For a wannabe terrorist shopping for help, Pakistan is a supermarket......Until the Pakistani military truly takes on a more holistic view of the country's national interests—one that sees economic development, not strategic gamesmanship against Afghanistan and India, as the key to Pakistan's security—terrorists will continue to find Pakistan an ideal place to go shopping.
4. WalMart of private sector proliferation
Director General of the IAEA, Dr. Mohamed El Baradei called Pakistan the "WalMart of private sector proliferation".
==========
Please note that I have been frequently accused of severe anti-Pakistan bias; as though that makes what I'm saying less true somehow. Please note that all four quotes above are from people whose name is Muslim; the first three appeared in the last twenty-four hours. None of them is mine. You want to ignore all this in the name of political correctness or because it makes you feel better about yourself - so unbigoted - the outcome is on your head.
==========
PS: every Indian who has thought about this that I know is convinced that a nuclear explosion enabled by Pakistan in an Indian city is inevitable; therefore it is best to get over with this as early as possible.
1. A breeding ground for Islamism.
Salim Mansur writes in the Toronto Sun:
Since Britain conceded to the demand for Pakistan in the face of religious frenzy pushed by middle- and lower-class Muslim activists, the country’s history has been a series of failures of its own making. These failures have deeply embittered the thinking of that class of Pakistanis from whose rank the ruling elite comes, and whose regular pastime is to parcel blame to others for their part in making Pakistan a terrorist-exporting rogue and failed state.
2. Irresistible lure of Pakistan as nursery of global jihad (URL may be temporary)
Lehaz Ali writes for the AFP:
...radicalised youth have long felt an irresistible pull to Pakistan as a nursery of modern jihad.
3. Terrorism's Supermarket
Fareed Zakaria writes in Newsweek:
For a wannabe terrorist shopping for help, Pakistan is a supermarket......Until the Pakistani military truly takes on a more holistic view of the country's national interests—one that sees economic development, not strategic gamesmanship against Afghanistan and India, as the key to Pakistan's security—terrorists will continue to find Pakistan an ideal place to go shopping.
4. WalMart of private sector proliferation
Director General of the IAEA, Dr. Mohamed El Baradei called Pakistan the "WalMart of private sector proliferation".
==========
Please note that I have been frequently accused of severe anti-Pakistan bias; as though that makes what I'm saying less true somehow. Please note that all four quotes above are from people whose name is Muslim; the first three appeared in the last twenty-four hours. None of them is mine. You want to ignore all this in the name of political correctness or because it makes you feel better about yourself - so unbigoted - the outcome is on your head.
==========
PS: every Indian who has thought about this that I know is convinced that a nuclear explosion enabled by Pakistan in an Indian city is inevitable; therefore it is best to get over with this as early as possible.
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Posting anonymously.
Four metaphors
2010-05-09T06:00:00-04:00
Arun
Pakistan|
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Rajan P. Parrikar · 777 weeks ago
What is Fareed Zakaria smoking? 'Holistic' is the journalistic equivalent of Deepak Chopra's 'quantum.'
Reminds me of the other armchair idiot Amitava Ghosh who, after 11/26 Mumbai, dumped feel-good tripe in the NYT. There is no dearth of Indian cocktail party warriors with PC opinions at the ready. They no doubt want to be seen as 'global citizens', paragons of 'eclecticism', beacons of tolerance.
Rajan P. Parrikar · 777 weeks ago
What is Fareed Zakaria smoking? "Holistic" must be journo-speak for Deepak Chopra's "quantum."
Reminds me of the other armchair idiot Amitava Ghosh who, after 11/26, dumped similar woolly-headed tripe in the NYT. There is no dearth of these cocktail party Indian warriors who crave to be seen as global citizens and beacons of tolerance.
Arun · 777 weeks ago
banerjee · 777 weeks ago
Arun · 777 weeks ago
.....a picture of restraint and nuance when it comes to Islamic jihadists
Generally, a very safe thing to be in the face of jihad, restrained and nuanced :) :)