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The DAWN gate : Corporate media interests vs national interest.

The corporate media has is and will always be working in their own interest. I doubt there are any institutions except Pak Army who can put National Interest ahead of their own.
 
,,if it was true this guy would have been picked up by your own agencies and he wont be seeing light for a long time. .
Dear Pakistani culture is different from India. Imagine the kind of debate and its intensity but there are no arrests. How come a veteran can be picked up by own agencies!!. veterans are very open in discussions. and their juniors respect them. please see the discussion in that context
 
Dear Pakistani culture is different from India. Imagine the kind of debate and its intensity but there are no arrests. How come a veteran can be picked up by own agencies!!. veterans are very open in discussions. and their juniors respect them. please see the discussion in that context
giving out a mole is equal to treason,it takes a lot of planning and effort to place a mole in the close circle of the head of your enemy,if they had one,i am sure no other than top 2-4 people in Isi would be knowing it,,the value is too high for a veteran to give out the mole with his rants.
 
The DAWN gate : Corporate media interests vs national interest.

By: Atta Rasool Malik
13 October 2016 - Islamabad

“We are living in turbulent times. So much so that it is difficult to predict what would be the security situation in 2025.” said General Raheel Sharif's during his address at International Defence Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS) on 5th Dec, 2014. He further elaborated, “While we need the world’s continuous support to succeed, it is by no means a one-way traffic. Our successes will improve chances and choices for the forces of order.” "A diffusion of power is taking place with non-state actors assuming greater role and clout than the state itself." "These non-state actors, include not just various interest-based groups fighting for power - but multinational companies and non-governmental organisations, that have substantial financial muscle."

“We are living in turbulent times. So much so that it is difficult to predict what would be the security situation in 2025.”

Army chief General Raheel Sharif said at the International Defence Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS) on 5th Dec, 2014, on the changing dynamics of warfare and the way conventional battles of today are fought on political, economic, cultural and religious lines.

“While we need the world’s continuous support to succeed, it is by no means a one-way traffic. Our successes will improve chances and choices for the forces of order.”

"A diffusion of power is taking place with non-state actors assuming greater role and clout than the state itself."

"These non-state actors, include not just various interest-based groups fighting for power - but multinational companies and non-governmental organisations, that have substantial financial muscle."
 
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