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Denial-istan

Huffington Post Contributor   First Posted: 05/31/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:15 PM ET

Pakistan

by Farrukh Rehan

Every morning I roll out of bed and scan the papers on the net. Today, like most days, I find something distressing about Pakistan. As part of my new routine I call my younger brother in Lahore. The exchange is familiar to both of us: No, he wasn't near the suicide bombing/ commando attack/ mammoth demonstration/ drone fired missile. Yes, he will be careful and will not visit fancy restaurants where he may be targeted in an attack against "Western" establishments, and yes, he agreed, he will not go to pray at mosques either, which perplexingly also seem to be a favored target of the radical Islamic extremists who send the suicide bombers.

It is a devastating failure of state for any country when its citizens have to think twice before going to their place of worship. But the biggest failure of all is the utter inability of the leadership of Pakistan, both civilian and military, to unite the Pakistani people against this grave and imminent threat, and to explain to them what is going on, who is attacking the very core of the republic and what needs to be done to defeat this threat.

In the absence of national leadership or even basic coherence at the top, rumors and ideological punditry masquerade as reason. A television anchor insists that all the attacks are the handiwork of Indian intelligence agents. A talking head on another channel claims that the Taliban are misunderstood - all they want to do is to bring swift justice to the country. Another strategic expert assures viewers that everything happening in Pakistan is the U.S.'s fault. Drone attacks are creating anti-Americanism, and its only natural that those attacked will retaliate wherever they can. If the US were to simply stop the drone attacks on Pakistan, everything would be just fine. The fact that Pakistan was spinning out of control well before anyone had heard the term drone hamla, is left out of the conversation.

Some though, have a more sinister explanation for Pakistan's rapid descent into chaos. They whisper that the Pakistani army is orchestrating the bombings and ceding territory in Swat to ensure continued US attention and funding. How else can you explain the total capitulation of the vaunted 500,000 strong Pak army, which can't seem to battle a rag-tag force of a few thousand militants? But a counter theory gaining currency is that it's actually the United States that is simultaneously supporting extremists on the one hand, and launching drone attacks with the other. The purpose of such dastardly duplicity? Well duh, to break up Pakistan into pieces so that the US can take over its precious nuclear weapons.

The net result of this mass confusion is that the people of Pakistan can't seem to diagnose what is apparent to any objective observer:

A) - that the process of acceding to Islamist demands that started in the 70's has reached its logical conclusion, where the Islamists are now simply demanding that the whole country be handed over to them.

And

B) - the cancer of extremism, once foolishly used by the State for its own purposes, has metastasized and is now spreading through the body of the nation.

But admitting this would be tantamount to admitting that we have been on the wrong path for a very long time. It would mean admitting that we have been wrong in our blind pursuit of Kashmir to the detriment of Pakistan; that we have been wrong in our meddling in Afghanistan for the sake of strategic depth; wrong in neglecting our people's education and development in favor of purchasing F-16s. And most of all, it would mean admitting that we have been wrong in changing ourselves from our founder's vision - a progressive, Muslim majority but pluralistic Pakistan - to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

No one has the courage to face these bitter truths. It is far easier to be in denial than to examine the core beliefs that form our national mythology. It is far easier to be indignant about the infringement of our sovereignty by U.S. drones than to wonder how a nation could claim to be sovereign and yet be largely dependent on the generosity of other nations for paying its bills. It is far easier to keep blaming the U.S. for a thirty year old Afghan policy, rather than to ask why we chose to continue that policy once the Soviets had retreated.

And so it continues; every horrific incident, every injustice, every new low is justified and explained away.

Mumbai attacks that trace back to Pakistan? Can't be Pakistanis because the attackers seemed to know their way around Mumbai too well.

What about the daily bombings across Pakistan? Of course it's the work of India, perhaps the U.S., or maybe even Israel.

What about the killings and beheadings in FATA areas? Well, those are unsettled areas, so what happens there doesn't really affect the rest of the country.

And the handing over of Swat valley to the Taliban? It's what the people of Swat wanted - the Taliban will bring peace in exchange for territory.

What about the flogging of a 17 year old girl in Swat captured on video?
The first response; That was shameful, no ifs and / or buts. A few hours later; Maybe the video was a hoax to defame Pakistan? A further few hours later; It's definitely a hoax. How could the girl take 34 lashes and then be able to walk home? A few days later; People have forgotten about it and moved on.

As the body of the patient convulses on the operating table, and the doctors squabble over both the diagnosis and the treatment, the seeds sowed in past decades - seeds of extremism, seeds of disenfranchisement, seeds of misgovernance - have come to bear their deadly fruit. I can only surmise that this fruit is so bitter, the picture in the mirror so ghastly, the fate so
clearly written on walls, that our minds cannot accept it and denial is the only refuge for us. After all, if Amerindia is responsible for all this, we are responsible for nothing. Not for creating it, nor for fixing it.

I place another call, this time to my sister in law. She laughs at my concerns. "My dear brother, the media exaggerates everything," she tells me. "You people living abroad become paranoid. We're used to it. This is Pakistan. This is how it's always been. People are going about their business and life goes on. It will all blow over in time."

"I gotta go now, we're going out to dinner," she tells me, and hangs up.

If our leaders and our people continue to keep their eyes wide shut, I'm afraid no amount of aid or drone strikes can prevent the coming calamity that will likely dwarf Iraq and Afghanistan.


Farrukh Rehan is originally from Pakistan and now lives in Montreal. He writes about issues related to Pakistan, Islam and politics. He can be reached at farrukhrehan@hotmail.com.

This is part of HuffPost World's Spotlight On Pakistan. We are looking to build our network of people living in Pakistan who can help us understand what is happening there. These people will send us reports -- either snippets of information or full-length stories -- about how the political crisis affects life in Pakistan. If you are interested, this is an opportunity to have a continued conversation with Americans about what's happening in your country. If you would like to participate, please sign up here.


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by Farrukh Rehan Every morning I roll out of bed and scan the papers on the net. Today, like most days, I find something distressing about Pakistan. As part of my new routine I call my younger brothe...
by Farrukh Rehan Every morning I roll out of bed and scan the papers on the net. Today, like most days, I find something distressing about Pakistan. As part of my new routine I call my younger brothe...
 
 
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:39 AM on 05/02/2009
Thank you for your post, Mr. Rehan. I appreciate the insight into the situation in your home country.
12:49 AM on 05/02/2009
Breaking up Pakistan will bring peace and stability to the region in the long run. I can't think of any negatives for breaking up the failed state.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TJCole
01:23 PM on 05/01/2009
When we wake up one morning not to far off to hear that Pakistan has fallen to Taliban rule and is under Sharia Law and that Taliban forces have access or possession of even just some of it's nuclear weapons only then will be fully realize and appreciate how disastrous and what a betrayal the Iraq War diversion really was...

We were betrayed at Tora Bora, and it is in fact when we lost the so called War on Terror...
11:02 AM on 05/01/2009
One sane voice amongst the jingoistic lot. All of us want a prosperous and stable Pakistan. It is high time the Pakistani establishment understood that and took care of the basic facilities for its population. Jinnah was a great and ambitious man whose vision has been so diluted that everyone sees Pakistan as nothing but a collection of mad mullahs.

Unless the majority rise up in a cry and demand for change, the collateral damage will be too much to cope with. It is imperative for the governing elite to step out of their air conditioned cocoon and face the reality.

Good luck.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
07:47 AM on 05/01/2009
Guess who they learned it from? For real:

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2009/04/baghdad-bob.html
05:21 AM on 05/01/2009
I think you are in denial if you think they should or would be supporting unmanned little toy planes rigged with bombs controlled by a foreign nation
I think you are also in denial if you do not believe the United States is directly responsible for moving the Taliban from Afghanistan into Pakistan
I think you are also in denial if you think the people of Pakistan are not smart enough to realize that their leaders are supporting the US bombings secretly so they can continue to get aid while lying to the public about it

If you want to create less confusion why not stop bombing and lying to them all the time?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KataVideo
01:20 AM on 05/01/2009
"Rumors And Ideological Punditry Masquerade As Reason In Pakistan"

they got republicans in pakistan?
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
07:48 AM on 05/01/2009
LOL!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:29 AM on 05/02/2009
I had pretty much the same thought! :)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ssfahrer
12:48 AM on 05/01/2009
"Extremism (in defense of liberty) is NO vice"-- Barry Goldwater, 1964. No more truer words have been spoken in the past 50 years....
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
07:49 AM on 05/01/2009
Extremism, whether in the past 50 years or in the past 5,000, has never been used in defense of liberty. On the contrary:

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2009/04/what-is-americas-greatest-enemy.html
10:47 PM on 04/30/2009
Fascinating post, thank you. I liked it a lot. I'm a generic american age 53.
08:48 PM on 04/30/2009
Does anyone else see the similarity to the current Republican Party?
08:11 PM on 04/30/2009
This has been the pakistani mantra since I can remember. Deny, divert and distract. Until they take some responsibility for their country nothing will get fixed. Personally I think the whole world will be better off with a broken up pakistan.
07:31 PM on 04/30/2009
What about Obama saying that Pakistan doesn't have a functioning Judiciary, when that is the only branch of government in Pakistan that had legitimacy, at least when it was led by Iftikhar. Somehow, I think that Obama has not been told about Iftikhar and the lawyers movement. Even Obama fails to understand that the US government and the US military inappropriately meddle in Pakistan, particularly paying off the Pakistani Army, which clearly supports the Taliban (and maybe, or maybe, not the Pakistani Taliban) as well as al-Qaeda (whatever that is) and the Pak Army clearly seeks continued US financing, which requires an alleged existential threat. The truth is that many nations are using the so-called terra' threat to increase their power and enrich themselves. Even Obama says he has been enchanted by the US military, so much so that he thinks the US should continue 'helping' Pakistan or that there is still 'work' to be done in Iraq.
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AZterritory
AZ: best taxidermatologists ever-ask Jan
07:31 PM on 04/30/2009
"Rumors and ideological punditry" . . . sounds like FOX news to me.
07:22 PM on 04/30/2009
I hope you and your family stay safe ... Best wishes from India
06:04 PM on 04/30/2009
By: Colonel A.M. Khajawall {Ret}, MD. ABFM., ABDA.
“Great grand gestures-Yes. Grand posturing-No!”
And
“For the triumph of evil it is necessary that the concerned people do nothing”

Dear loggers, editors, readers, and prognosticators,


As the spokesman of Kashmir American Mission categorically announce that the announced Kashmir
Elections are being simply orchestrated and conducted to dupe and
deceive the world. Sadly. the elections always meant to deprive the
occupied and oppressed people of Kashmir the freedom.The elections
processes are always meant to deny and delay the occupied,tormented, and oppressed
people of Kashmir to decide their future freely, fairly without any
fear and favour.
02:40 AM on 05/01/2009
60 % of these "Occupied and Oppressed " Kashmiries voted in the latest state elections! So your point is??