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Mehran Man: The hard choice in Pakistan

Nahraf

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David Frum is a Zionist neo-con from Canada and former Bush speech writer.

David Frum: The hard choice in Pakistan - Full Comment

David Frum: The hard choice in Pakistan
Posted: April 12, 2010, 2:00 PM by NP Editor
David Frum, U.S. Politics

The New York Times leads today’s story on the nuclear summit with some hard words about the Bush administration’s nuclear deal with India.

Three months ago, American intelligence officials examining satellite photographs of Pakistani nuclear facilities saw the first wisps of steam from the cooling towers of a new nuclear reactor. It was one of three plants being constructed to make fuel for a second generation of nuclear arms.

The message of those photos was clear: While Pakistan struggles to make sure its weapons and nuclear labs are not vulnerable to attack by Al Qaeda, the country is getting ready to greatly expand its production of weapons-grade fuel.

The Pakistanis insist that they have no choice. A nuclear deal that India signed with the United States during the Bush administration ended a long moratorium on providing India with the fuel and technology for desperately needed nuclear power plants.

Now, as critics of the arrangement point out, the agreement frees up older facilities that India can devote to making its own new generation of weapons, escalating one arms race even as President Obama and President Dmitri A. Medvedev of Russia sign accords to shrink arsenals built during the cold war.

The authors of the piece have been listening to self-serving Pakistani sources.

Note 2 things please:

First, there is as yet no evidence that India has in fact ramped up its weapons productions.

Second, Pakistan’s assessment of Indian intentions has always been paranoid, never clear-eyed, and if we’re to “go slow” in South Asia until Pakistan calms down, we will never build the relationship with India that we need.

Worth reading in this regard is a fascinating report from Karachi by Jason Burke, in the current issue of Britain’s Prospect magazine.

A decade ago, [Pakistan] felt like the western extension of south Asia. Now it feels increasingly like the eastern fringe of the middle east.

Key to this shift is a transformation of attitude among urbanized Pakistanis – whose modernization has taken them in distinctly anti-Western directions. Burke calls such people “Mehran man” after an inexpensive car popular with the country’s middle class:

Mehran man has a satellite television (there are now 43m viewers in Pakistan), likes the occasional Bollywood movie and is not averse to a bottle of cheap whisky, though not at home. This does not stop him being socially conservative and pious. His wife will wear a headscarf or veil, as will his daughters from puberty.

Much of his worldview is close to the “single narrative”—that the Muslim world is under attack from western interests controlled by neo-Crusaders and malevolent Zionist-Jewish lobbies. Like many Pakistanis, he believes that 9/11 was probably the work of the CIA and/or Mossad. …

Mehran man’s sentiments towards India are divided. There is the attraction of the glitzy country seen in films and then there is the India as historic enemy and oppressor. Similarly, there are the freedom fighters of Kashmir or Afghanistan and there are the terrorists: the distinction is based on the identity of their victims. Kill Americans in Afghanistan or get killed by them anywhere and you are a freedom fighter, kill Pakistanis and you are a terrorist. Mehran man is incensed by the drone attacks in the northwest frontier, as much for their infringement of national sovereignty as out of solidarity with poor villagers killed by them.

Mehran man is deeply proud of his country. A new identification with the ummah, or global community of Muslims, paradoxically reinforces rather than degrades his nationalism. For him, Pakistan was founded as an Islamic state, not a state for south Asian Muslims. Mehran man is an “Islamo-nationalist.” His country possesses a nuclear bomb that, as one Lahore shopkeeper told me, even the rich Arabs haven’t built. The sentiment of self-sufficiency and nascent confidence, hardly justified given Pakistan’s dependence on external aid and internal weaknesses, is boosted by the size of the country: in a decade the population will near 200m.

Would it really make sense to sacrifice the emerging strategic partnership with India to chase such sentiments? And even if it did – is there any realistic hope that we could ever satisfy them?

National Post
 
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Very insightful article, keeping in view of it being written by a western journalist. Re-inforces the view held by many Indians including me.

Would it really make sense to sacrifice the emerging strategic partnership with India to chase such sentiments?

No. Better sense would be to try to change Pakistani perception and their worldview which is based upon the propaganda fed by ruling Political-Feudal-Military nexus. The "Mehran-man" is innocent, and he cannot be subjugated for the in-efficiencies of the ruling elite. He will believe what he has been fed, since his birth. The root-cause lies in Pakistan's false sense of fear from India, which drives it's security establishment to take these steps, and the vicious circle continues.

And even if it did – is there any realistic hope that we could ever satisfy them?

How can they even think so? "Mehran-man" hates West and America. What-ever America does, it will be the "evil oppressor of innocent Muslims". The ruling elite will keep milking US for this false hope on which US provides aid to Pakistan.

The best part for me was this
The sentiment of self-sufficiency and nascent confidence, hardly justified given Pakistan’s dependence on external aid and internal weaknesses

How aptly this defines the attitude not only of the Mehran-man, but the Pakistani establishment on a whole.

I can judge that many Pakistanis here will start attacking my post judging me by my Flag, but as an honest human being, if you as a country want to progress, then you have to leave, the false bravado, and inflated sense of macho-ness. It is fed to you guys so that, you may not question the authorities about the condition of your country, and feel happy upon "The sentiment of self-sufficiency and nascent confidence".

Look at your best friends China for example. Those guys, except for few instances, do not indulge in chest beating, even when they qualify most for that in this world today.

Thanks.
 
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Insightful article? Not by yards.

It is merely a regurgitation of various stereotypes and generalizations about Pakistan, not surprising since Frum is after all defending the legacy of the administration he served.

Would post in detail but don't have time right now.
 
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Frums article and the original by the Burke are utter nonsense. The Middle Class is about the least religious of Pakistans various classes and professionals least of all. Its the elite and the working class who are the main subscribers to militant beliefs.
 
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Mehran man has a satellite television (there are now 43m viewers in Pakistan), likes the occasional Bollywood movie and is not averse to a bottle of cheap whisky, though not at home. This does not stop him being socially conservative and pious. His wife will wear a headscarf or veil, as will his daughters from puberty.

Much of his worldview is close to the “single narrative”—that the Muslim world is under attack from western interests controlled by neo-Crusaders and malevolent Zionist-Jewish lobbies. Like many Pakistanis, he believes that 9/11 was probably the work of the CIA and/or Mossad. …

Mehran man’s sentiments towards India are divided. There is the attraction of the glitzy country seen in films and then there is the India as historic enemy and oppressor. Similarly, there are the freedom fighters of Kashmir or Afghanistan and there are the terrorists: the distinction is based on the identity of their victims. Kill Americans in Afghanistan or get killed by them anywhere and you are a freedom fighter, kill Pakistanis and you are a terrorist. Mehran man is incensed by the drone attacks in the northwest frontier, as much for their infringement of national sovereignty as out of solidarity with poor villagers killed by them.

Mehran man is deeply proud of his country. A new identification with the ummah, or global community of Muslims, paradoxically reinforces rather than degrades his nationalism. For him, Pakistan was founded as an Islamic state, not a state for south Asian Muslims. Mehran man is an “Islamo-nationalist.” His country possesses a nuclear bomb that, as one Lahore shopkeeper told me, even the rich Arabs haven’t built. The sentiment of self-sufficiency and nascent confidence, hardly justified given Pakistan’s dependence on external aid and internal weaknesses, is boosted by the size of the country: in a decade the population will near 200m.

Is this a description of the working class/ lower middle class in Pakistan- or is it intended to describe the upper classes?

Because; it would be speaking either about the 'Led' or the 'Leaders', i.e. the Politicians.
 
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Is this a description of the working class/ lower middle class in Pakistan- or is it intended to describe the upper classes?

Because; it would be speaking either about the 'Led' or the 'Leaders', i.e. the Politicians.

Lower middle class is being described in this article. Which accounts for a major chunk of the population.
 
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Can he tell us who the Mehran Man votes for , religious parties get 3% of votes in Pakistan. so who is he talking about.

Pakistan never had nationalist party in power.

Another brain washed western .
 
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