Joe Shearer
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No worries at all Sir
Take your time, i am excited to explore more about this topic.
Apart from the gradual degradation of technology that is inevitable unless there is an immediate and well-planned initiative to turn around the economy, there is also the impact on the operating expenses side of military operations. As was listed for India, so, too, for Pakistan, there will be the same expenses. They will be incurred on a smaller base, with a greater multiplier effect on the economy. Just to remind ourselves,
- military casualties,
- civilian casualties,
- loss of trained manpower,
- expenditure of ammunition and
- destruction of military resources,
- consumption of fuel and related consumables at an operational rate rather than a peacetime rate,
- dislocation of civilian activities,
- loss of production,
- loss of export earnings due to transport dislocation,
- financial outlay.
If I ask right out, if Pakistan is ready to pay this butcher's bill, it is certain that the happy brigade that fights wars on Playstations will reply with a resounding chorus of "yes". But is that really so? Can Pakistan afford these costs? Even granting that patriotism demands that my question may be answered only one way, surely it is something that occurs internally, and causes concern?
The most important factor, one that was inadvertently omitted in my first submission of this note due to my very preoccupation with the subject, is that these costs are payable even in peacetime. How long can you put a defence against a mythical attack, or offence against an enemy intent on minding his own business, ahead of the survival of your other citizens??
But the gloomy reality is that this is not all the cost; there is also a social cost.
TO BE CONTINUED: THE SOCIAL COSTS OF NOT CONDUCTING WAR