Sinnerman108
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,994
- Reaction score
- -3
- Country
- Location
Yes, it did then too.
I count at least 3 different themes/issues that you have combined in your post above.
Sir ji, yes sir is a culture inculcated in uniform. It is a universal military ethos to respect the chain of command. Nothing particular in that about our army only. If what you are alluding to is lack of ability to question, then it comes down to personal character. Yes, you do run the risk of being too noisy and get posted out and in some cases put on adverse report. Maybe this is a rot that needs to be fixed among other things. I do know of cases outside of Pakistan where people quit the military because they feel its too suffocating etc.
Senior officer expenses. This has to be cleaned up from within the military. The belt tightening across the country may lead the army to do the same. No disagreement there.
The third point, I do disagree with you which is the need to learn "angraizi". You have to, if you want to run a competent army. It is simply for the reasons that most of your weapon systems are of foreign origin and we do a despicable job of keeping our vernacular updated to be able to accommodate. We don't do the complex work of localizing the information/documentation/training material that comes with the various weapon systems in use. Zia's Urdu medium nonsense set our workforce back. I say this having lived through that. I don't know how old you are and if you did experience that or not, but it set our youth back.
As you must be aware, the vast majority of our ranks is not competent in the English language (most have not even matriculated from Urdu medium schools) so the expectation is that young officers would help bridge this gap. I have commented on this issue many times in the past. It has nothing to do with the legacy of the angraiz and all to do with a practical need.
Someone had argued with me about the same in the past and I had provided an anecdote from one insider who simply mentioned to me, have them translate the many thousands of pages of manuals for the F-16 flight line into Urdu and then we would have no need to teach our airmen angraizi.
So while eating with forks and knives can be relegated to the dustbin of history, for good or bad, angraizi language cannot.
maybe in a few years, you will agree with me.
I don't have a single hair that isn't white.
Save and mark above post, keep thinking about what I said,
you will find answers.