Daneshmand
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I appreciate your post however you have gone into another sphere from what I was asking. Your talking about what it means to be Iranian. Trust me all nations indulge themselves in mixture of history and fact. All nations talk of their greatness. All nations talk of having history going back thousand of years. We all should have pride.
There is nothing wrong with this. From where I come in Pakistan just 20 miles away is site that had great civilization 2,000 years ago. Just 200 miles away in Harappa we have a site with civilization 5,000 years old. About 400 miles south west of me is Mehr Garh which goes back 7,000 years ago and just 30 miles away is site that boasts human culture from 500,000 yes half a million years ago. I would not be lying if I said Pakistan is land which was cradle of civilization. Along with Mesoptamia, China, Indus Valley ( yes that is in Pakistan ) are the birthplace of "civilization" itself.
As I say to many European's when you guy's were trying to figure out how to cover your posterior we were laying the foundation of civilization itself. So, yes we can all spin fabric to wrap ourselves in to feel the glow of greatness.
Mehrgarh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harappa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sirkap - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Soanian - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I also want to clarify this myth peddled by our huge neighbour on the east, India. A country that has more starving people than any othe place on earth, a country with the largest filthiest shanty towns in the world, a country that until recently was known as the land where more people slept like dogs on the streets then in houses. In fact it is more starving than even Africa. In fact Hollywood even makes a movies on this subject.
City of Joy (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Slumdog Millionaire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian poverty levels higher than Pakistan's, says UN report - Telegraph
More of world's poor live in India than in all sub-Saharan Africa, says study | World news | The Guardian
* This is riposte to those Indian's who have been posting cheap comments.
The myth is Pakistan sells itself out. Never. Pakistan has never sold itself out. Pakistan like any other country ( @The Last of us repeats this all the time ) actively pursues it's self interest. Every country is prisoner of it's own unique circumstances. It is like a ledger account. You have your pros and cons.
We don't have oil like Iran or Saudia has. How potent is oil. Well those camel drivers across the PersianGulf have most of the world dancing at their finger tips. You saw the long ques of Western leaders tripping over each other to pay condolances after the death of the Saudi royal. That shows what oil can do. Iran has plenty of oil and gas that you can float on.
India has so many people that if all Indian's pissed into the ocean at the same time the level of the worlds oceans would rise. That body count on that mass scale gives certain gravitas. Huge numbers can have aggregate punch.
Pakistan has neither India's huge numbers nor oil or for that matter any naturel resource. I was looking at Pak electricty production. Beside hydropower we have to rely on imported gas or oil to power the generators. You know how expensive that is? India has plenty of coal to power it's generators. We don't. That is why we are desperate for the gas pipeline.
Anyway Pakistan has charted a very difficult journey in balancing itself in a world dominated by USA. Although nature did not bestow us any favours but we played our hand and managed to get aid from USA and at the same time built nuclear weapons. That was not easy. Go ask Saddam. Go ask yourself. We pulled it off though. Now American's can go to hell.
Think about this. We are a a country with no resources but right under the noses of the American's milked the bastards and at the same time made the bomb. Not a easy task. Of course did we have to compromise? Yes, we did but all the while we secretly kept working on our goal. So please nobody tell us what self interest is or that we sell ourselves. We do what we have to do with the cards that were dealt to us.
Now we are focussing on China because we know our days of milching America are over. Even now though while we tilt over to China we are squeezing them for everything. You already know they complain about us. NATO was in Afghanistan. We supported Taliban for our own reasons whilst milching Americans at the same time. In my eyes even Machavelli would have had a smile on his face.
As regards China/India after my last post I did some reading on the subject. I am actually shocked at what I read in particular the facts. These Indian's have habit have bragging from the rooftops. I have been reading so much bragging about Iran/India by the Indians I actually thought it was a phenomnen. After I looked at thew facts I was bent over laughing. The sober truth is Iran/India relationship is the steam of the piss on cold day.
Here are the facts. Iran imported 5% from India, from China 21%, Turkey 21%. India at 5% is not even worth squat. As regards exports China was 35% and India 19% and even this is oil. So guy's notwithstanding the Ganga dwellers jumping up and down China is by far the largest trading partner already. So what was all this drama the Indian's make? Nothing. China is already ahead big talk asides.
Of course trade is not the only aspect. Sometimes strategic relations can be more important. However I am 100% sure Iran would never allow the use of its land by India against Pakistan. So no worries there. I am seriously, surprised about the minor Indian profile on the Iranian trading flows. Here is the diagrams. I strongly suggest the Pakistani members to look at the much vaunted Indian hand in Iran. Even Turkey is far ahead of India and you know how Turks/Iranian get on.
OEC: Iran (IRN) Profile of Exports, Imports and Trade Partners
Have a look at the bar graph for imports. China, Turkey, South Korea and Germany have it carved. End of sanctions is bad, bad, bad news for India, If under sanction regime this is how the bar looks after the sanctions end those countries like Germany, France, Japan, South Koree are going to be winners because US restraint has held them back.
I fully understand what you want to say. And sure, every nation has the right to claim greatness and history. That was not the point I was hoping to make.
The point I was hoping to make was that for Iranians these issues are very much part of the present psyche. You can go to the most backward village in Iran, and talk to a completely illiterate old man and he will start reciting the epics of Kaveh and Arash as if these two were his village fellows. This then influences the way any Iranian sees the world around himself. And this is separate from religion and cuts through the different linguistic groups living in Iran. I do not know for example how much an illiterate Pakistani villager relates to Taxilla civilization or to Harappa and how much mythology plays into the way an average Pakistani sees the world and finds his identity in.
I know from my interaction from different people, that people from China or Japan or Italy are more amenable to the way Iranians interpret themselves and the world around them. Through a series of national mythologies which are not taught in schools or read in books but learned from grandmothers and grandfathers in an oral tradition as bed time stories. For these kind of nations, such epics and their real and mythical histories are very much alive and are not seen as archaeological finds or museum treasures. It is part of who they are. And it is how they think.
This then causes them to see the kind of question of you raised to be misinterpreted and misunderstood. My intention was to remove this misunderstanding. I know that your intention in raising the question was genuine, but when posed at Iranian public, the question raises misunderstanding since it goes against the fundamentals on which Iranian identity rests.
As for why Pakistan "selling itself" (in your words, not mine), the reason has much less to do with oil or numbers and percentages. It has more to do, with how a nation perceives itself and its potentials. I can assure you that Iranians were thinking pretty much the same in 19th century before the oil was discovered or when an Iranian by the name of Rais Ali Dilvari was fighting the British when the British empire was at its peak while Iran itself was pisss poor. The resistance Iranians put whether when they had to face Russians, British, Portuguese, Ottomans and nowadays Americans against all odds and most of the time lacking any geopolitical or economic sense, is actually centuries old and at its core is because of the Iranian perceptions I explained above. Whether on this forum during discussions, or at national level the geopolitical policies of Iran are all influenced by this particular Iranian identity and perception. Can you say the same perceptual identity exists in the minds of Pakistanis and Pakistani state when dealing with the world? The perceptual identity that Pakistanis learned from their grandmothers?
This is the reason you see the action of Pakistani state as "selling out" because its policies are pragmatic for the moment and make economic and geopolitical sense for the moment but lack the longer historical objectives and therefore later on are termed as "selling out".
This sense of identity has helped Iranians to bide their time and outlast many empires and countries surviving them all. So when this identity comes under any form of attack or doubt whether direct or indirect, Iranians get angry since, they perceive such a doubt or attack as an attack on their current existence (as opposed merely on their "historical glory").
Pakistan too has great potentials and resources. I do not know every thing about Pakistan but for instance I know, one of the world's largest deposits of copper is in Pakistan. Price of copper in the past decade has hovered between 5 thousand to 10 thousand dollars per tonne and if this copper is used in value adding industry for example by producing wires or industrial products, the same copper is going to cost tens of thousands of dollars per tonne. Has Pakistan developed a copper industry? Is it the fault of Iran or India or United States or China or Afghanistan that Pakistan despite having a large population providing for a large labor force and having huge copper deposits, has done nothing to make of it? Should Pakistan continue to "choose" between United States, China, India and Saudi Arabia instead of developing its own identity and working up its own resources?
I think you should be honest with yourself. That is the first step.