War Historian
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- Jan 12, 2019
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Before Zulfiqar Ali bhutto
After Bhutto nationalization
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Did far better than Amir ul Mominoon Nawaz Sharif who had run Pakistan's economy to the ground. Between Oct. 1999 and Sept. 2001, before any American 'aid' arrived after 9/11, Musharraf had already started to reverse the decline of Pakistan's economy.
I don't think there is much of a difference in foreign policy between Bajwa and Asim Muneer. The pillars of Pakistan's foreign policy are to never alienate China, keep trade with the West going, and don't displease, in fact, milk the rich Arabs. What am I missing? Imran-Bajwa tussle was about some extension or for power politics.
Drastic situations require equally drastic measures.
Good point. To add to that, from my personal experience, though I was very young then, textile mills of very close relatives shut down due to workers' strikes. Large mills which literally employed hundreds if not thousands, in Karachi experienced breakdowns in the 1970s. They were mothballed!! Sealed. We kids used to go there for fun but couldn't anymore. Some close family members, who built great wealth using the money they brought from India during the Partition, still haven't recovered from those days. My own family's textile mill managed to survive and still bears my dad's writing in a concrete block when the foundation was being laid, saying '1951'.
There has been a wish to move away from America forever but realities dictate otherwise. People don't know what kind of economic damage a flick of American President's pen can cause to Pakistan; just the expulsion from the SWIFT program would be huge. But I don't think Pakistan has burned its bridges with America and will not do so into the foreseeable future. If you watch the whole video I posted above. Mr. Shami is praising Pakistan for keeping its longstanding relationships intact.It is worlds apart. India, KSA, UAE, Israel, the only continuity of policy is with China and USA, but the US policy is being looked at hard from what I hear.
Karachi's neglect and subsequent destruction is simply a matter of the city losing the capital status. By the end of 1970s a new cadre of civil bureaucracy had a stranglehold over affairs in Pakistan. That's one more thing you can attribute to the flawed genius of noble dictators found dime a dozen in that era.
There has been a wish to move away from America forever but realities dictate otherwise. People don't know what kind of economic damage a flick of American President's pen can cause to Pakistan; just the expulsion from the SWIFT program would be huge. But I don't think Pakistan has burned its bridges with America and will not do so into the foreseeable future. If you watch the whole video I posted above. Mr. Shami is praising Pakistan for keeping its longstanding relationships intact.
I attribute Karachi's problems with the huge influx of Afghan refugees, the rise of the terror of MQM, and general population explosion in Karachi. The basic issue of Karachi is that it is city with multiple govts at odd with each other.
Ethnocentricism and xenophobia...Easy to blame Afghan or Bangladeshi immigrants but the city was doomed when her transition from federal to provincial resulted in what can only be described as a turf war.
I don't think there is much of a difference in foreign policy between Bajwa and Asim Muneer.
Hi,But question is did he nationalized because he wanted it or was it the military who wanted to do it?
Tough to know..
Regardless potential doesn't matter
Nigeria has unlimited oil one of the smartest people I know still poor !
Country as a whole is still confused..
still confused on whether to follow a consitution or not ..
still confused what system they want.....
still confused about capitalism vs socialism ...
still confused about corruption and rule of law..
Not only did Bhutto destroy the economy, he also destroyed banking, education and the bureaucracy. He killed merit and set the precedent of stuffing everything with jahil political appointees from the villages.
Ayub Khan set the precedent of military control and Bhutto set the precedent of feudal control.