Transforming Pakistan

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A01=Hilary Synnott
afghan
Author_Hilary Synnott
authorities
Baluchi Tribes
benazir
bhutto
bombings
campaign
Category=NHW
counterterrorism policy
Desert Province
Durand Line
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Federally Administered Northern Areas
Frontier Crimes Regulation
Gdp Growth
Houbara Bustard
IMF Conditionality
institutional reform strategies
Kerry Lugar Bill
Lahore Declaration
military intelligence Pakistan
Mumbai Attacks
Musharraf's Tenure
NATO Force
NATO Front Line
NATO Military Commander
NATO Operation
Pakistan's Arch Rival
Pakistan's National Interest
pakistani
Pashtun Tribal Code
political Islam analysis
regions
security studies
South Asian geopolitics
South Waziristan
suicide
tribal
Tribal Regions
UK's Withdrawal
US Pakistan diplomatic relations
Young Men
Zia's Death
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138405813
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book argues that any strategy for dealing with Pakistan requires an understanding of the country‘s complex and turbulent history and of the weaknesses of its political and other institutions. It describes how, in the absence of an inherent national identity, successive military and civilian governments have made use of Islam and Kashmir,the unfinished business of Partition for political purposes. It also examines the role of the army and of its intelligence service, the ISI, in relation to India, Afghanistan and internal political manipulation.
The nature and history of the tribal regions in Pakistan and Afghanistan, which are little understood in the West and which explain much of the animosity towards the US, are also described in detail.
After 9/11, Pakistan's support for counter-terrorism and military operations in Afghanistan increased the population‘s animosity towards the West and hence the government‘s difficulties in delivering. Meanwhile, the military leadership hedged its bets by maintaining links with militant organisations and with a re-emerged Taliban. With the arrival of an elected leadership, the emergence of simultaneous political, economic and security crises, tactical errors by the West, and the Mumbai terrorist attacks in late 2008, the situation was complicated further.
The book concludes with recommendations, aimed particularly at the new US administration, for a durable long-term relationship with Pakistan, entailing increased attention and resources devoted to institution-building and, over time, the reduction of the role and influence of the army.

After a first career in Royal Navy submarines, Hilary Synnott was a British diplomat for 30 years, serving in France, Germany, Jordan, India (as Deputy High Commissioner), Pakistan (as High Commissioner) and, finally, Iraq, where he was the Coalition Provisional Authority Regional Coordinator for Southern Iraq, from 2003–04. He is currently a Senior Consulting Fellow at the IISS. His other books are The Causes and Consequences of the South Asian Nuclear Tests (Adelphi Paper, 1999) and Bad Days in Basra (2008). He has written numerous articles on state-building and on South Asia for the press and for the IISS.

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