What's new

Narendra Modi only has one migraine — Pakistan

Vapnope

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Nov 11, 2015
Messages
6,646
Reaction score
15
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
The playing fields
F.S. Aijazuddin
Updated December 14, 2017
The writer is an author.

THE electoral battles of India are fought on the playing fields of Pakistan. Once again, this time in the Gujarat state elections, the dog-eared Pakistani card is being played to reincarnate Indian nationalism. It was not so long ago, during the Assam state elections, that Assamese were warned of a threat from Pakistan, a distant enemy located over 2,000 kilometres away. Now it’s western Gujarat’s turn to be similarly intimidated.

Read: India should stop dragging Pakistan into its electoral debate, FO responds to Modi's allegations

To Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Pakistan is the equivalent of President Donald Trump’s numerous demons — North Korea, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, Cuba, Mexico, and the Democrat party — all rolled into one. Trump may be afflicted by many headaches; Modi has only one migraine called Pakistan. He has tried numerous remedies, from bombastic rhetoric to boastful retaliation. He’s now veering towards a more potent prescription.

To sane Pakistanis and Indians, the recent deterioration in Indo-Pakistan relations is a cause for genuine concern. It is sliding from the inconceivable towards the inevitable. Indian Muslims — whether Bollywood superstars like Shahrukh Khan or poets like Javed Akhtar — have become inured to the all-too-frequent tests of their patriotism. Indian Sikhs have buried their dreams of Khalistan so deep that the murmur of its slogans will never again be heard. It’s now the turn of Indian Hindus. They are being called upon to abjure any contact with Pakistan to prove their Indian-ness.

To Modi, Pakistan is the equivalent of Trump’s numerous demons.

Since August 1947, three prominent Indians have worn the hair-shirt of Indo-Pakistan amity. Khushwant Singh believed in it to his dying day; he is dead. Kuldip Nayyar arched himself into a bridge to span the chasm; he is wise but wizened. Mani Shankar Aiyar has repeatedly risked his reputation to assert that the Indo-Pakistan bottle is half full, not half empty; the other day, unfortunately, he slipped on his own tongue.

Until a week ago, the BJP regarded Mani Aiyar with fear streaked with disdain. He uttered criticisms about its leadership that the Congress high command preferred to hear but not mouth. His friendship with the late Rajiv Gandhi and then Sonia Gandhi’s reliance on his judgement and experience were his armour. He knew Pakistan better than almost any other Indian (outside RAW). He wrote perceptive books and informative articles on Pakistan. He expressed himself lucidly and persuasively at think tanks whenever he detected the need to agitate the swill of stale verbiage. When in Pakistan, he spoke as a loyal Indian; in India, he spoke as any intelligent outspoken Pakistani would do — given a visa.

On Dec 6, Mr Aiyar hosted a dinner in his New Delhi home for the visiting ex-foreign minister of Pakistan Khurshid Kasuri, a fellow Oxonian. It was the sort of high-brow gathering where everyone speaks and no one listens. The next morning, Aiyar and Kasuri shared a common platform to discuss Indo-Pakistan relations. Carelessly, Mr Aiyar referred to Mr Modi as a ‘neech aadmi’. That did it. The BJP emptied its barrels at Mr Aiyar. He stayed on his feet, but was felled when his own protégé Rahul Gandhi (now Congress chief) ordered him to apologise to Prime Minister Modi. A second arrow shot into Aiyar’s other heel: he was suspended from his party’s membership.

For Mr Modi, an apology by Mr Aiyar was not enough. He has gone further and has given credence to a tweet (withdrawn immediately after being posted) reportedly by a retired senior Pakistani ex-serviceman suggesting that Mr Ahmed Patel should be Gujarat’s next chief minister. Modi called it “a matter of concern”, even though he knew that an obviously underemployed ex-serviceman could hardly ensure Mr Patel’s selection, no more than Trump could induce the British government to appoint his controversial friend Nigel Farage as UK’s ambassador to Washington.

Then, Mr Modi threw in a scorpion of suspicion. He claimed the dinner given by Mr Aiyar for Mr Kasuri was a conspiracy to subvert the elections in Gujarat, even when those present were prominent Indians: “former army chief Deepak Kapoor, former foreign minister K Natwar Singh, former diplomats Salman Haidar, TCA Raghavan, Sharat Sabharwal, K Shankar Bajpai and Chinmaya Gharekhan, former PM Manmohan Singh and former vice-president Hamid Ansari”. Do Guy Fawkes conspirators really meet with such a laughable lack of caution? Mr Aiyar should take comfort from Lord Halifax’s observation (in a slightly different context) that “the best party is but a conspiracy against the rest of the nation”.

For Pakistan, Mr Modi’s more sinister accusation is that his predecessor Manmohan Singh had wantonly ignored the advice of his specialists to order a surgical strike after the 26/11 Mumbai attack. Manmohan Singh’s caution had deep roots, for didn’t the ancient Roman poet Horace warn us that “force without wisdom falls of its own weight”?

The writer is an author.
www.fsaijazuddin.pk

Published in Dawn, December 14th, 2017

https://www.dawn.com/news/1376418/the-playing-fields
 
The playing fields
F.S. Aijazuddin
Updated December 14, 2017
The writer is an author.

THE electoral battles of India are fought on the playing fields of Pakistan. Once again, this time in the Gujarat state elections, the dog-eared Pakistani card is being played to reincarnate Indian nationalism. It was not so long ago, during the Assam state elections, that Assamese were warned of a threat from Pakistan, a distant enemy located over 2,000 kilometres away. Now it’s western Gujarat’s turn to be similarly intimidated.

Read: India should stop dragging Pakistan into its electoral debate, FO responds to Modi's allegations

To Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Pakistan is the equivalent of President Donald Trump’s numerous demons — North Korea, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, Cuba, Mexico, and the Democrat party — all rolled into one. Trump may be afflicted by many headaches; Modi has only one migraine called Pakistan. He has tried numerous remedies, from bombastic rhetoric to boastful retaliation. He’s now veering towards a more potent prescription.

To sane Pakistanis and Indians, the recent deterioration in Indo-Pakistan relations is a cause for genuine concern. It is sliding from the inconceivable towards the inevitable. Indian Muslims — whether Bollywood superstars like Shahrukh Khan or poets like Javed Akhtar — have become inured to the all-too-frequent tests of their patriotism. Indian Sikhs have buried their dreams of Khalistan so deep that the murmur of its slogans will never again be heard. It’s now the turn of Indian Hindus. They are being called upon to abjure any contact with Pakistan to prove their Indian-ness.

To Modi, Pakistan is the equivalent of Trump’s numerous demons.

Since August 1947, three prominent Indians have worn the hair-shirt of Indo-Pakistan amity. Khushwant Singh believed in it to his dying day; he is dead. Kuldip Nayyar arched himself into a bridge to span the chasm; he is wise but wizened. Mani Shankar Aiyar has repeatedly risked his reputation to assert that the Indo-Pakistan bottle is half full, not half empty; the other day, unfortunately, he slipped on his own tongue.

Until a week ago, the BJP regarded Mani Aiyar with fear streaked with disdain. He uttered criticisms about its leadership that the Congress high command preferred to hear but not mouth. His friendship with the late Rajiv Gandhi and then Sonia Gandhi’s reliance on his judgement and experience were his armour. He knew Pakistan better than almost any other Indian (outside RAW). He wrote perceptive books and informative articles on Pakistan. He expressed himself lucidly and persuasively at think tanks whenever he detected the need to agitate the swill of stale verbiage. When in Pakistan, he spoke as a loyal Indian; in India, he spoke as any intelligent outspoken Pakistani would do — given a visa.

On Dec 6, Mr Aiyar hosted a dinner in his New Delhi home for the visiting ex-foreign minister of Pakistan Khurshid Kasuri, a fellow Oxonian. It was the sort of high-brow gathering where everyone speaks and no one listens. The next morning, Aiyar and Kasuri shared a common platform to discuss Indo-Pakistan relations. Carelessly, Mr Aiyar referred to Mr Modi as a ‘neech aadmi’. That did it. The BJP emptied its barrels at Mr Aiyar. He stayed on his feet, but was felled when his own protégé Rahul Gandhi (now Congress chief) ordered him to apologise to Prime Minister Modi. A second arrow shot into Aiyar’s other heel: he was suspended from his party’s membership.

For Mr Modi, an apology by Mr Aiyar was not enough. He has gone further and has given credence to a tweet (withdrawn immediately after being posted) reportedly by a retired senior Pakistani ex-serviceman suggesting that Mr Ahmed Patel should be Gujarat’s next chief minister. Modi called it “a matter of concern”, even though he knew that an obviously underemployed ex-serviceman could hardly ensure Mr Patel’s selection, no more than Trump could induce the British government to appoint his controversial friend Nigel Farage as UK’s ambassador to Washington.

Then, Mr Modi threw in a scorpion of suspicion. He claimed the dinner given by Mr Aiyar for Mr Kasuri was a conspiracy to subvert the elections in Gujarat, even when those present were prominent Indians: “former army chief Deepak Kapoor, former foreign minister K Natwar Singh, former diplomats Salman Haidar, TCA Raghavan, Sharat Sabharwal, K Shankar Bajpai and Chinmaya Gharekhan, former PM Manmohan Singh and former vice-president Hamid Ansari”. Do Guy Fawkes conspirators really meet with such a laughable lack of caution? Mr Aiyar should take comfort from Lord Halifax’s observation (in a slightly different context) that “the best party is but a conspiracy against the rest of the nation”.

For Pakistan, Mr Modi’s more sinister accusation is that his predecessor Manmohan Singh had wantonly ignored the advice of his specialists to order a surgical strike after the 26/11 Mumbai attack. Manmohan Singh’s caution had deep roots, for didn’t the ancient Roman poet Horace warn us that “force without wisdom falls of its own weight”?

The writer is an author.
www.fsaijazuddin.pk

Published in Dawn, December 14th, 2017

https://www.dawn.com/news/1376418/the-playing-fields

Pakistan was never a factor to vote in elections in India if that was the case Why UP/himachal/Mahrastra/Karnataka/Goa/Punjab/Kerala elections are not fought on the playing fields of Pakistan ? Pakistan was brought into the Gujarat equation because of the ex-pak army officers comment on a Pakistani channel that he wants Ahmed patel as Gujarat CM . The author should come out of his delusion first
 
Such ---Articles of self flatly can appear in Pak media only!!

A nuclear nation with no coffers.
No Governance.
Islamabad under siege for 2 weeks -- of Civil War

CPEC China is bleeding you.

Chinese were desperate for CPEC
Pakistan could have cut cost to only 10-12 Bn.
The chinese would have built road from KARACHI Xin jian for free as they were desperate -- But your Poor Negotiation skills lost the game.

Antiquated Airforce
No Navy
Armod Corp with Type 59 Tank


Where is the Threat !!
 
Group of Ahmed patel was in favor of IA vacating siachin, the deal was almost sure but IA was against it and BJP raised this issue in parliament.
 
Pakistan was never a factor to vote in elections in India
You did not read the article or missed the elephant in the room.

Such ---Articles of self flatly can appear in Pak media only!!

A nuclear nation with no coffers.
No Governance.
Islamabad under siege for 2 weeks -- of Civil War

CPEC China is bleeding you.

Chinese were desperate for CPEC
Pakistan could have cut cost to only 10-12 Bn.
The chinese would have built road from KARACHI Xin jian for free as they were desperate -- But your Poor Negotiation skills lost the game.

Antiquated Airforce
No Navy
Armod Corp with Type 59 Tank


Where is the Threat !!
What a hyperbole ! But then again what can be expected from you guys
 
Such ---Articles of self flatly can appear in Pak media only!!

A nuclear nation with no coffers.
No Governance.
Islamabad under siege for 2 weeks -- of Civil War

CPEC China is bleeding you.

Chinese were desperate for CPEC
Pakistan could have cut cost to only 10-12 Bn.
The chinese would have built road from KARACHI Xin jian for free as they were desperate -- But your Poor Negotiation skills lost the game.

Antiquated Airforce
No Navy
Armod Corp with Type 59 Tank


Where is the Threat !!
So whats stopping you guys from taking back azad kashmir ?:whistle:
 
You did not read the article or missed the elephant in the room.


What a hyperbole ! But then again what can be expected from you guys

Not 'you guys' please.These are a few surviving Indians on the forum, and two of them look odd on these pulpits. For instance, @Gurjot.S doesn't really belong; he is normally quite balanced. Nor does @Alphacharlie.

My guess is that, like me, they are wandering about these deserted, echoing halls and reacting to every passing breeze with an overdone demonstration of alert attention.

What you read is only partly true; Modi's awful fear is of being found to be incompetent and irrelevant (both true), in spite of his desperate efforts at building events into a model of public service, or of building improvement of the country over several factors into a full-scape revolution. Nobody but he and his crowd of social media and web Hindus can see this revolution; most of them can hardly even see the events that they build around.
 
Not 'you guys' please.These are a few surviving Indians on the forum, and two of them look odd on these pulpits. For instance, @Gurjot.S doesn't really belong; he is normally quite balanced. Nor does @Alphacharlie.

Well the two guys that you mentioned are no better than any other bharati.The posts above are a proof of it.

And neither are you.
 
Well the two guys that you mentioned are no better than any other bharati.The posts above are a proof of it.

And neither are you.

LOL.

Just like old times? But things have moved on, and this forum is not what it used to be.

And neither are you. :D
 
Pakistan was never a factor to vote in elections in India if that was the case Why UP/himachal/Mahrastra/Karnataka/Goa/Punjab/Kerala elections are not fought on the playing fields of Pakistan ? Pakistan was brought into the Gujarat equation because of the ex-pak army officers comment on a Pakistani channel that he wants Ahmed patel as Gujarat CM . The author should come out of his delusion first
You might be out of indian from past 40 years bud.. there isnt one single public meeting where indian parties dont talk about Pakistan.. it seems like india is not india without us :) we keeping you united its a losers thought.
cuz Pakistan dont play this game in election if we do then we not only talk :)
 
Forum has improved actually. And so am I.

But you and your ilk didn't.

You had your chances. There was a strong school of thought cheering you on. Every opportunity was given the management, every chance was given to the more quarrelsome and thuggish members to change.

But you and your ilk didn't.
 
Many people in India and abroad has such misconception but Modi has medicine for everybody. He is a master of diplomatic art of putting his enemy in place very systematically. He even put in place mighty (So called) china. Pakistan is becoming irrelevant slowly in power scenario of the world.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom