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No answer to American queries - thenews.com.pk
Mian Saifur Rehman
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
From Print Edition
Pakistan is a modern country where fashions galore. In this huge gallery of fashions, one popular fashion is US-bashing for the sake of it. Name any problem, any trouble and any disease of your life, United States of America is responsible for it.
Even the bold, audacious lot that is famous - or infamous - for its outspokenness and for saying nothing other than the truth, appears to be carried away by this fashion. This was unearthed during a series of policy dialogue sessions and interactive discussions on local bodies, women development and health following the promulgation of 18th constitutional amendment. Many parliamentarians from different parties, lawyers, columnists, TV analysts, human and civil rights activists and women rights’ organisations participated in these conferences that were organised by a commission that is known for its human development debates. There have been more than seven to eight such discussions under the aegis of USAID and on every occasion the conference room was decorated with banners highlighting cooperation between the people of Pakistan and United States.
But, strangely enough not a single participant in these largely attended Citizen Commission’s sessions ever uttered the name, even of US people, what to talk of mentioning or thanking the USAID that threw all these luncheon receptions and arranged the gatherings. Such is the state of America-phobia in our socio-political circles and literati.
Well, every nation and every society has its priorities, likes and dislikes. There is no harm in maintaining a specific posture towards outer communities and peoples but hypocrisy is not understandable. While a large number of our people aspire to visit the United States for tourism, more so for acquiring greater skills, higher education and for business gains and connectivity, almost the same number of these ‘beneficiaries’ of American society’s ‘beneficence’ are found hurling expletives and what not on anything American.
There was a time when almost all the stalwarts of a rightist political party of countrywide fame with pronounced religious leanings, would frequent the United States for ‘higher aims’. Now, however, these people seem to have changed ‘for the better’ after getting ‘better (off)’.
This hypocrisy factor is not at all accepted as a diplomatic finesse anywhere in the world capitals. It is rather taken for an uncouth way of dealing with a country on whose technology, education and diplomacy, we have been depending a lot as an active constituent of an inter-dependent world.
The American officials visiting Pakistan and meeting people from different walks over here have been expressly voicing their astonishment (some even expressed concern) over these double standards. The other day, Peter Lavoy, one of the prominent figures of American National Security system was on a visit to Pakistan. Once I had the opportunity to interact for quite some time with Lavoy when he was heading the US Naval Postgraduate School (US NPS). The occasion was Strategic Dialogue between the US NPS and National Defence University (NDU) of Pakistan. I too was invited to participate. Lot of informal and formal, on the record and off the record discussions took place. The crux of all these discussions throughout, was US-bashing by Pakistanis including those Pakistanis who had been benefitting directly from travel to US or by way of interaction with American institutions, businesses and people.
Even earlier, when an American philanthropist, Terry Wald, visited one of the renowned hospitals of Pakistan to take along with him to the US, children afflicted with serious burns, he asked me the same question: “Why the people of Pakistan hate the people of America who want to help Pakistanis out of their different crises including the one for which I’m here in Pakistan along with globally famous American doctor, Dr. Geoff Williams”.
I wish I were an uncivilized person. Had it been so, I could have concocted a number of sour replies and hurled on the tender-hearted philanthropist and free-treatment-rendering American doctor. But I was left speechless on these double standards of ours which are painting a wrong image of our society in this world of peaceful co-existence even worse than the image of being a terrorism-infested country.
Of course, there is no reason to create bad blood and rifts between the people of any two countries in general and between the people of the US and Pakistan in particular. People are usually at variance from the governments including the highly democratic governments. If the establishment or government of any country has jingoistic designs against any state including Pakistan, there are different mechanisms available to deal with such situations through our Foreign Office, emissaries, global forums and international media. But there is no sense in maintaining a hypocritical posture that is doing no harm to anyone other than to ourselves.
=====================================
As the last line indicates, this hypocritical stance described by the author only harms Pakistan, not anybody else. And yet we persist in doing so, constantly. Why?
Mian Saifur Rehman
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
From Print Edition
Pakistan is a modern country where fashions galore. In this huge gallery of fashions, one popular fashion is US-bashing for the sake of it. Name any problem, any trouble and any disease of your life, United States of America is responsible for it.
Even the bold, audacious lot that is famous - or infamous - for its outspokenness and for saying nothing other than the truth, appears to be carried away by this fashion. This was unearthed during a series of policy dialogue sessions and interactive discussions on local bodies, women development and health following the promulgation of 18th constitutional amendment. Many parliamentarians from different parties, lawyers, columnists, TV analysts, human and civil rights activists and women rights’ organisations participated in these conferences that were organised by a commission that is known for its human development debates. There have been more than seven to eight such discussions under the aegis of USAID and on every occasion the conference room was decorated with banners highlighting cooperation between the people of Pakistan and United States.
But, strangely enough not a single participant in these largely attended Citizen Commission’s sessions ever uttered the name, even of US people, what to talk of mentioning or thanking the USAID that threw all these luncheon receptions and arranged the gatherings. Such is the state of America-phobia in our socio-political circles and literati.
Well, every nation and every society has its priorities, likes and dislikes. There is no harm in maintaining a specific posture towards outer communities and peoples but hypocrisy is not understandable. While a large number of our people aspire to visit the United States for tourism, more so for acquiring greater skills, higher education and for business gains and connectivity, almost the same number of these ‘beneficiaries’ of American society’s ‘beneficence’ are found hurling expletives and what not on anything American.
There was a time when almost all the stalwarts of a rightist political party of countrywide fame with pronounced religious leanings, would frequent the United States for ‘higher aims’. Now, however, these people seem to have changed ‘for the better’ after getting ‘better (off)’.
This hypocrisy factor is not at all accepted as a diplomatic finesse anywhere in the world capitals. It is rather taken for an uncouth way of dealing with a country on whose technology, education and diplomacy, we have been depending a lot as an active constituent of an inter-dependent world.
The American officials visiting Pakistan and meeting people from different walks over here have been expressly voicing their astonishment (some even expressed concern) over these double standards. The other day, Peter Lavoy, one of the prominent figures of American National Security system was on a visit to Pakistan. Once I had the opportunity to interact for quite some time with Lavoy when he was heading the US Naval Postgraduate School (US NPS). The occasion was Strategic Dialogue between the US NPS and National Defence University (NDU) of Pakistan. I too was invited to participate. Lot of informal and formal, on the record and off the record discussions took place. The crux of all these discussions throughout, was US-bashing by Pakistanis including those Pakistanis who had been benefitting directly from travel to US or by way of interaction with American institutions, businesses and people.
Even earlier, when an American philanthropist, Terry Wald, visited one of the renowned hospitals of Pakistan to take along with him to the US, children afflicted with serious burns, he asked me the same question: “Why the people of Pakistan hate the people of America who want to help Pakistanis out of their different crises including the one for which I’m here in Pakistan along with globally famous American doctor, Dr. Geoff Williams”.
I wish I were an uncivilized person. Had it been so, I could have concocted a number of sour replies and hurled on the tender-hearted philanthropist and free-treatment-rendering American doctor. But I was left speechless on these double standards of ours which are painting a wrong image of our society in this world of peaceful co-existence even worse than the image of being a terrorism-infested country.
Of course, there is no reason to create bad blood and rifts between the people of any two countries in general and between the people of the US and Pakistan in particular. People are usually at variance from the governments including the highly democratic governments. If the establishment or government of any country has jingoistic designs against any state including Pakistan, there are different mechanisms available to deal with such situations through our Foreign Office, emissaries, global forums and international media. But there is no sense in maintaining a hypocritical posture that is doing no harm to anyone other than to ourselves.
=====================================
As the last line indicates, this hypocritical stance described by the author only harms Pakistan, not anybody else. And yet we persist in doing so, constantly. Why?
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