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Book review: The art of war —by Afrah Jamal

Three Battles: Critical Clashes Between Asia and Europe

By M Abul Fazl Dost Publication; Pp 87

“War is an extension of politics” — Karl von Clausewitz, 19th century military theorist.



The battles of Jhelum, Plassey and Dien Bien Phu are said to be key turning points in history. Of the three, two had already been lost on a political level long before they were ‘engaged’; all of them have been subjected to intense scrutiny over the years. In one, a battle-hardened general and famous military strategist won a technical victory over a warrior king. In another, a trading company challenged and defeated a major Asian powerhouse. And, finally, a guerrilla style movement led by local nationalists brought down an occupying force of superior strength.

If Plassey was decisive for the company where the British gained a convincing military victory over young Sirajuddaula, the standoff between Porus and Alexander at Jhelum exposed the fatal flaws in a famed Greek strategy and the fall of Dien Bien Phu dealt a crippling blow to the French colonial ambitions.

Strength in numbers is not a decisive factor in either of these examples. M Abul Fazl’s book focuses on social and political dynamics at play that helped shape the course of these wars and analyses the implications of such forces on both the conquered and conquering forces.

It begins in the fourth century BC with Alexander who hailed from a land credited with early laws of war and a formal military organisation. The writer attributes this to unending intense fighting on the peninsula and examines the Greek juggernaut in the lead up towards the conquest of Asia where South Asian states and statelets were up in arms on the flimsiest of pretexts. Alexander’s South Asian adventure was marked by the peculiar nature of the environment where “the outsider was not viewed as a threat but a new entrant in an ongoing game of warfare”. In drawing contrasts between the two armies, he shows South Asians and Persians to be set in the ways of the battle, “as if they were divinely ordained”. The Greeks, on the other hand, relied on “training, discipline and solidarity of the infantry” (page 12). That and the tried and tested Arbela technique failed here. He challenges those historians who credit Alexander with influencing the Indian civilisation and deems trade, not Greek invasion, to be the extent of any cultural exchange.

In the Battle of Plassey, a trading company took on Bengal — a major Asian powerhouse — and its meagre forces defeated an army of 50,000. The writer does not subscribe to the theory that discipline alone gave the British an advantage on the battlefield. He concedes that superior organisation and financial resources served them in good stead when confronting the mighty states and possession of a navy gave them a tactical advantage. “The main weakness of the Indian states was in social and political sphere” and even the acquisition of French drill masters did not help as their politics were driven by “policy, power and personal ambition”. Odds were heavily stacked against Sirajuddaula, an empire was already on precarious footing and a few judicious thrusts managed to bring down the house of cards. Combined with the fact that alliances between Indian princes and Europeans were routine, it is hardly surprising that with such combustible elements present, the slender thread holding the empire together frayed completely. He rules that in the Battle of Plassey “the fighting showed the bankruptcy of South Asian society — a ruling class held masses in contempt and the masses owed no allegiance to it.”

Finally, the narrative enters the 20th century where the “curtain fell on the Asian colonial drama” and the French forces capitulated to Viet Minh — the Vietnamese revolutionary organisation waging a guerrilla war for independence. He states that “a small country, a poor country, an overpopulated country had chosen to write the most glorious chapter in the history of 20th century de-colonisation.”

Through these essays, the writer seeks to clarify Alexander’s conquering record in the light of his Asian exploits. He explores the brittle framework supporting the Indian Empire laying emphasis on its contribution to a rising Europe and closes with a look at the gathering storm that heralded the age of neo-colonialism. He admits the historians’ version into his narrative, and expands upon their ideas to rationalise his interpretation of warfare. The military side is not the sole focus of this discussion, which struggles to define these battles by their impact on the correlation of forces. It uses the failure of Arbela as an example to bolster the view that famed Greek tactic would have been rendered useless long before the Jhelum standoff had Alexander’s opponent (Darius II) been a worthy warrior and not, as was the case, a “pathological coward”. He argues that Clive won the battle before it was engaged through bribery and not in the Napoleonic fashion (page 36). And, finally, he shows how a classic set piece battle, where the destructive power of modern warfare could have been used to successfully crush opposition, crumbled instead when faced with a new age phenomenon of nationalism (page 74). Using insight gained from other books, historians and military-men enables the writer to broaden the debate. His scholarly efforts might spark interest in academic circles.

Afrah Jamal is a freelance journalist who blogs at Afrah Jamal. She can be reached at afrahjh@hotmail.com
 
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I'm almost finished reading 'Pakistan: From Mosque to Military.'

Good stuff.
 
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I'm almost finished reading 'Pakistan: From Mosque to Military.'

Good stuff.

Reading it now? ;)

I'm finishing "The Making of Pakistan: A Study in Nationalism" by the great K K Aziz: and "The Military in Pakistan : Image and Reality" by A R Siddiqui
 
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Shopping for Bombs
Nuclear Proliferation, Global Insecurity, and the Rise and Fall of the A.Q. Khan Network


Extreme lies about nuclear proliferation activity of our hero AQ KHAN.


http://dc161.*******.com/img/319912167/cdc03179/Shopping_For_Bombs_with_AQ_Kha.pdf


I am sharing this because I feel that one must be keen about the international falsehoods duly constructed by US UK Intelligence agencies to hurdle any Islamic regime becoming a regional power.
Some historical facts regarding NKorea & China are right but those dealing with Egypt & in particular Germany are somewhat absurd. Though in the following book that I have read
http://dc124.*******.com/img/106579452/abdbbef5/The_Bomb_in_My_Garden_The_Secr.pdf

I do remember Iraqi scientist saying a great deal about centrifuge technology import from German black-markets with ample proof to be believed!!
 
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click me>> A Case of Exploding Mangoes - Mohammed Hanif - Fullscreen

Teasing, provocative, and very funny, Mohammed Hanif’s debut novel takes one of the subcontinent’s enduring mysteries and out if it spins a tale as rich and colourful as a beggar’s dream.

Why did a Hercules C130, the world’s sturdiest plane, carrying Pakistan’s military dictator General Zia ul Haq, go down on 17 August, 1988?
Was it because of:

1. Mechanical failure
2. Human error
3. The CIA’s impatience
4. A blind woman’s curse
5. Generals not happy with their pension plans
6. The mango season

Or could it be your narrator, Ali Shigri?

Here are the facts:

• A military dictator reads the Quran every morning as if it was his daily horoscope.
• Under Officer Ali Shigri carries a deadly message on the tip of his sword.
• His friend Obaid answers all life’s questions with a splash of eau de cologne and a quote from Rilke.
• A crow has crossed the Pakistani border illegally.

As young Shigri moves from a mosque hall to his military barracks before ending up in a Mughal dungeon, there are questions that haunt him: What does it mean to betray someone and still love them? How many names does Allah really have? Who killed his father, Colonel Shigri? Who will kill his killers? And where the hell has Obaid disappeared to?

Amazon.com: A Case of Exploding Mangoes (9780307268075): Mohammed Hanif: Books: Reviews, Prices & more
 
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Finished reading "the weekenders '.A group of foriegn authors have penned down their experiences of the city of joy,kolkata.Here u will find the good and the bad but most importantly realize how the city has changed,even though the book was published in 2002.
 
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The Sixth Crisis: Iran, Israel, America and the Rumours of War


Dr Dana Allin, Editor, Survival and Senior Fellow for US Foreign Policy and Transatlantic Affairs, IISS; Adjunct professor of European Studies, SAIS Bologna Center of the Johns Hopkins University will launch his new book: ‘The Sixth Crisis: Iran, Israel, America and the Rumours of War’ from 7-8:15pm on Wednesday, 10 November 2010.

There have been five central crises in America’s post-World War II encounter with the Middle East, and the Obama administration now faces a sixth. Iran’s progress toward a nuclear weapons capability, and the prospect of Israel launching air strikes to stop it, are ingredients for a conflict that could ruin any hopes for fostering peace in the region. The Sixth Crisis (Oxford University Press) explores the fraught linkages between the Iranian nuclear challenge, the increasing likelihood of an Israeli preventive strike, the continuing Israel–Palestine tragedy, and President Barack Obama’s efforts to recast America’s relations with the world’s Muslims.

The authors, Steven Simon, a former senior official on President Clinton’s National Security Council Staff and Dana Allin, a
leading authority on international politics, lay out in clear and accessible detail the technical and political dimensions of Iran’s nuclear program, and the ongoing diplomacy to stop it. They show how Israel’s panic about Iran’s nuclear threat, combined with Israeli policy toward the Palestinians, is undermining Jerusalem’s alliance with America. Tehran, meanwhile, is exploiting tensions between Arab regimes fearful of a nuclear Iran and an Arab public that is both angry about the plight of the Palestinians and resentful of Israel’s nuclear monopoly in the region. The status quo is a path to disaster, and the hopes that President Obama has inspired are threatened by the toxic mixture of Israeli–Palestinian stalemate and Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
 
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Zahid Hussain’s Scorpion’s Tail to be launched today

Staff Report

ISLAMABAD: The launching ceremony of the book titled The Scorpion’s Tail, authored by Zahid Hussain, will be held today (Saturday) at Kuch Khaas.

Published by Simon and Schuester, (NY, USA), The Scorpion’s Tail is based on extensive reporting inside Pakistan’s dangerous lawless regions and exclusive interviews with militant leaders and high-level military and intelligence sources. It reveals how and why the Islamic extremist groups based in Pakistan’s remote tribal territories had greatly increased their power since the start of the war on terror. Hussain has also given a first hand account of how these militants unleashed a reign of terror on US forces in Afghanistan and on both the military and civilian population within Pakistan.

Hussain is the first to reveal how a loose constellation of tribal groups has now come together to form a distinctive Pakistani Taliban, working closely with al Qaeda and the Afghani Taliban to launch increasingly sophisticated and deadly attacks on both sides of the ****** border. He is also the first to chronicle in detail the still unacknowledged US war carried out in Pakistan by remote predator drones. Reporting from the scenes of a number of drone missile strikes and interviewing a number of attempted suicide bombers, he reveals the extent of anti-Americanism the strikes have stoked in Pakistan, driving a new breed of highly educated, professional, and middle-class Pakistanis into the militant groups.

Distributed in Pakistan by Liberty Books, Hussain’s gripping and revelatory account is an urgent wake-up call about the blowback effects of the US war in Afghanistan and the drone campaign in Pakistan, about how volatile the situation in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region has become, and about the deeply troubling limitations of the current military strategy in ever gaining decisive ground against the insurgents.

Zahid Hussain is an award-winning journalist and writer. His book “Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle With Militant Islam” won widespread acclaim. He lives in Pakistan, and The Scorpion’s Tail is his second book.
 
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Boris Evseyevich Chertok (Russian: Борис Евсеевич Черток; born 1 March 1912) is a prominent Soviet and Russian rocket designer, responsible for control systems of a number of ballistic missiles and spacecraft. Author of a three-volume book Rockets and People, the definitive source of information about the history of the Soviet space program.

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Rockets & People Vol 123 - Fullscreen

remember its huge book size
 
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Book launching: Muslim narcissism feeding terrorism

By Mushir Anwar

ISLAMABAD: The narcissism of the Muslim civilization is the central theme of Dr Mubarak Haider’s book Tehzibi Nargisyat which was launched here at the SAFMA Media Centre on Monday evening amidst heated discussion by a very involved audience.

The author said that the Muslim people have generally been hesitant in self criticism and have not subjected the history of their civilization to critical observation and a sickening self love and self aggrandizement have been their driving passion which is behind the tendency to look down upon all cultures and civilizations which
they aim ultimately at destroying in order to establish the supremacy of the Islamic way of life.


He said the desire to achieve dominance for their faith over the world was behind the present extremist movements and terrorism which the general lot of the Muslim people led by religious parties and groups was not ready to reject wholeheartedly.

As a result other civilizations and cultures were feeling threatened by what they call the ‘Muslim menace’. This has isolated the Muslim community in alien societies.

Unless the Muslim people adopted an accommodative attitude towards other cultures and eschewed their dream of imposing their way of life on others from their psyche, it would not be possible for them to make any progress or live in peace in the present day world which was very different from the old world in which they had achieved political and cultural dominance.

His ideas generated a lively debate among the audience.

Dr Aslam Syed who is here on a visit from Germany contested Dr Mubarak’s contention about the Muslim people’s narcissism and said that all civilizations have had this tendency at one time or the other. Moreover the Muslims have been quite objective in the assessment of their civilization and mentioned the work of Muslim scholar Shehrstani and other thinkers like Abu Bakr Razi who had subjected Muslim history to deep analysis and critical review.

Participants who joined the discussion were Kishwar Naheed, Dr Ayesha Siddiqa, Iqbal Jafar, Hameed Alvi, among others in the audience.
 
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Hey actually i a, from abroad and that is why i cant read urdu books but my parents are Pakistani. These days i am trying to learn urdu from on of my old fellow. But when i was in UK, i dont read books so much, just few top 10 most popular comic books.
 
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