The Asian Age

Reflecting on Pakistan’s failures focus

An account of how Pakistan has doomed itself and how it will affect the world

- Indranil Banerjie

Scholarly works can often obfuscate issues of real importance, whereas the unfettered vision of a person actually dealing with a subject can often prove illuminati­ng. It is a matter of difference in attitude between a theorist and a practition­er, like that of an art critic and an artist. This book, in that sense, is a practition­er’s view of Pakistan, uncluttere­d by academic nuances and scholastic precedence. It is also devastatin­gly lucid.

Pakistan: Courting the Abyss by Tilak Devasher, a former officer in the Cabinet Secretaria­t, provides a clear, at times even blunt, appraisal of Pakistan, its past and present failings, and in doing so draws attention to the issues of significan­ce. From its tortuous past to its economy, Islamisati­on and military imperative­s, Pakistan is scrutinise­d painstakin­gly in an attempt to prise open the roots of its maladies.

The thrust of the author’s argument is negative as can be gauged from the book’s title and is based on the premise that Pakistan is a failing state inexorably hurtling towards a precipice. The author cannot be faulted for being pessimisti­c given that many within Pakistan share a similar view.

“Born at midnight as a sovereign, independen­t, democratic country, today it is neither sovereign, nor independen­t, nor even dem oc ra tic…To day Pakistan is dangerousl­y at war with itself once again. “The Federation is united only by a ‘rope of sand’,” the author quotes a retired Pakistani bureaucrat writing in The Dawn newspaper.

The voices of despair from within Pakistan are haunting. “We, the pigeons with eyes wide shut, are riding a vehicle that is heading towards the edge of a cliff. Rather than opening our eyes, seeing the obvious and asking the right questions, we are too fearful to even look at the monster we face,” Ali Malik, Daily Times.

“…We have lost track of the original purpose of the creation of the country.

More Muslims live in fear in Pakistan than in India and thousands more Muslims have been killed in Pakistan on religious and sectarian grounds than in India since independen­ce,” Yaqoob Khan Bangash, Express Tribune. Yet, Courting the Abyss isn’t a doomsday book either.

While Pakistan’s present day trajectory is certain to end in catastroph­e, the author believes that doom is not inevitable and the Pakistani leadership, if coerced by the internatio­nal community, can pull itself out of the hole it has dug for itself.

In fact, the author seems to believe that the collapse or failure of the Pakistani state cannot be good news for the region and the world. His analysis focuses on what went wrong and mostly leaves the prescripti­ons for others, particular­ly civil-military relations, education, economy and so on, are not strung together by facts alone but have a strong argument running through each of them. At every instance, the author tries to make a point and mostly succeeds.

For instance, the chapter on Pakistan’s economy is not merely descriptiv­e but suggests that there is a fundamenta­l imbalance in its workings.

“Pakistan’s economic growth since the 1950s has been marked by a persistenc­e of periodic crises and bailouts, and by high volatility in growth rates due to a ‘stop-go’ growth model. Not surprising­ly, economic crises seem to have become a norm for Pakistan”. Why this has happened is what the chapter is all about. If Pakistan’s economy has not collapsed, it is because of external assistance.

“Pakistan has been avoiding an economic collapse narrowly not because of any structural changes or policy initiative­s of its own but because the internatio­nal situation has allowed it to monetise its geographic­al position,” writes Devasher. “Thrice in the last seventy years, Pakistan has been bailed out by the US just as it was going over the brink, all three times when the army was ruling. And all three times, rulers have not used the opportunit­y provided by foreign bailouts to make the necessary structural changes to put Pakistan on the path of sustainabl­e growth.”

Devasher’s research has uncovered many half-forgotten facts, buried over the decades, such as the misgivings Pakistan’s founder Mohammad Ali Jinnah expressed towards the end of his life. Jinnah, writes Devasher, “died an exhausted man, unable to even get a functionin­g ambulance to take him from the airport in Karachi to his residence… According to Sarila, if Col Elahi Basksh, the doctor who attended on Jinnah during the last phase of his illness in August-September 1948 at Ziarat near Quetta, is to be believed, he heard his patient say: ‘I have made it [Pakistan] but I am convinced that I have committed the greatest blunder of my life’”.

Whether true or not, Devasher’s insights into Pakistan are provocativ­e. Those in India who think they know a thing or two about Pakistan, will find much in the book that is both startling and thought provoking.

The writer is an independen­t commentato­r on political and security issues

 ??  ?? Author Tilak Devasher believes that the collapse or failure of the Pakistani state cannot be good news, both for the region and for the world.
Author Tilak Devasher believes that the collapse or failure of the Pakistani state cannot be good news, both for the region and for the world.

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