The 24 soldiers of the Pakistan Army who died in the Nato strike on November 26 were warriors and martyrs and let no one tell you otherwise. I feel the need to state the painfully obvious because terms like ‘martyr’ have lost ordinary sanctity and anchorage in Pakistan, with the word often being used for religious fanatics. The death of the soldiers was mourned all over the country and Nato, and the US and Pakistan governments were condemned. The media almost spoke in a chorus; the usual pattern was that after a token condolence, the entire focus was on why the elected government had failed to protect our sovereignty and should now be sent home.
Hardly a word was said about the role of the army. The primary reason, I suspect is that it would be hurtful to the memory of those who have recently passed away. This is absurd; the soldiers cannot be adequately remembered or mourned, without the realisation of the core reasons for their death. The moistness and hysteric ululations should not be allowed to result in the abandonment of all critical reasoning faculties. The hollow displays of solidarity seriously got out of hand when organisations like the Jamaatud Dawa (JuD) and the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) decided to take to the streets to express their support for the slain soldiers. It might be useful to jog our memories a little and remember why our soldiers were there in the first place. They were there precisely because theocratic fascists and ideological brothers of the JuD and JI have launched a frontal assault on our country and society.
One might have to reconsider what was once said by Voltaire of Prussia and has innumerable times lazily been repeated for Pakistan, “Prussia is not a country with an army, but an army with a country”. It now seems Pakistan is an army, period. There is no evidence to suggest that we have any meaningful conception of nationalism or patriotism outside of the image of the army. I say this at the risk of sounding cruel but 24 casualties is not an earth-shattering number in Pakistan. The life of a soldier is admittedly of more value than that of a civilian in almost all societies, and rightly so. Yet, let us not lose all sense of proportion and perspective here. The argument is not that we should not express solidarity with those martyred but that we are inclusive enough to extend the same courtesy to the martyred Baloch and Hazara. The infringement of our territorial sovereignty should never be taken lightly and must be protested and resisted with vigour. However, to pretend that we have just woken up to this is disingenuous. We have chosen to define our self only by negation, by whatever we stand against. The armed forces are the instrument symbolising that resistance to the outside world, breeding more and more isolation with each passing day. It leads one to wonder that if, by some miraculous shift in event, we manage to eliminate all major external threats, how will we define or even know ourselves.
In an ordinary functioning country, the criticism would be directed at the army for its failure to protect the soldiers and fight back, and heads would have rolled. Alas, we know, perhaps too well, that ours is no ordinary country. The appropriate forum of protests should have been outside the GHQ. The actions of Nato are indefensible and this matter should not be allowed to slide. All avenues of recourse, including the UN Security Council, should be availed. The appropriate response to Nato, the US and the world is a complex matter and is better left to the experts. I can only think of Shakespeare’s words in Henry V where King Henry says to the French, Montjoy: “We should not seek a battle as we are, yet as we are, we say we will not shun it.” In any event, to absolve the army for incompetence and/or complicity in the fiasco would be insincere. The death of the soldiers does not give the top leadership a free pass to play on the unthinking frenzy of sympathy and get out scot-free as they did after the OBL raid and PNS Mehran incident. The Pakistan armed forces, ably assisted by the mass media, have an uncanny knack for turning examples of horrendous failures into public relations opportunities. This is deplorable not only because it is dishonest but, in this particular case, because it is insulting to the soldiers who were martyred. It is considered unpatriotic to ask intuitive but tough questions from the army in times of crisis. On every occasion of failure by the armed forces we also quickly relearn that it is actually the civilian government which is in charge of foreign policy.
The mindless, hyper-nationalist jingoism and sophomoric solipsism are defining features of our media, but they outdid themselves this time around. Around about the same time, on the first of Muharram, Shias were killed in a terrorist attack in Karachi, but the message of sheer horror did not get the coverage it mandated. However, one anchorperson on Dunya TV chose to talk about it and, probably in some twisted interest of fairness, invited the leader of a banned criminal sectarian organisation (mind you, also a prime suspect of the murders) to voice his hatred against the Shia and why they are labelled ‘kafirs’. Surely, no one can be this stupid so as to not realise the unbelievable insensitivity at play here. It makes one wonder if there is some secret reservoir of the semi-literate, partially educated from which our television channels pluck out some of these gems.
The brutal and unforgivable killing of our soldiers by Nato is imperialism and nothing else. Protests only should not suffice. However, we will do well to remember that our soldiers in the trenches are dying while fighting valiantly and their blood is being traded to keep a few generals from losing their jobs and luxury vehicles. This is a repulsive bargain. Let us learn to honour the memory of all martyrs, armed forces and civilians, by abandoning false dichotomies and start asking those unpleasant questions.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 4th, 2011.
COMMENTS (45)
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Great rhetoric missing out on bigger picture!
Wonderful In July I met Mr Kamran Shafi in Saint Louis USA and spoke with him about your brilliance and he said that he has not read you yet. I hope that he read this. he is also my favorite writer but you are number one. I wish I was in Lahore to hug you and salute you for courage and fine language.
A good article. But who should speak for the soldiers who sacrifice everything for country and then blamed for many ills. A soldier is a person who is never heard and never speaks when someone talk low of him. Its very easy to gossip around in the drawing rooms and applaud somebody's news analysis but its very difficult to die and leave a number of mourners behind for few thousand rupees.
Really want you to give a big HUG... This is totally more than 100% reality. SALUTE sir for putting such daring words...:-D
Left to our brilliant Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, the country and the army both are bound to doom. Produce a government of competent and full-of-character leaders, and you won't have to rely on generals for running the country and its policies.
Exceptional, to say the least. Great job.
Where was the outrage when 3,000 Pakistani soldiers died from attacks by Taliban or AQ?
This is brilliant. But is anyone outside of English speaking civilian minority listening? Your valuable words are utter waste if they are not getting heard by the unholy trio.
Too good Mr. Ijaz. Impressed by every word that you've written. I cannot agree more.
Thanks brother for showing the true perspective in the midst of the Great Engineered Reaction and Protest. The Guardians and other protestors apathy and silence to similar killings of innocent 'bloody civilians' in drone attacks and of the Baluch and Shias expose their Great Hypocrisy.
Our sahib log should read this article.
Excellent and Bold article. Such daring boldness can help our country to prosper and understand our real problems
Sadly Quixotistan is all I can say. Excellent article.
excellent
"Martyrdom is the only way to become famous without any ability"--G.B.Shaw
Ostensibly we are not ready to fight the military might of NATO/USA; we have a pathetic track record in all our excursions against India i am left with only the following two questions:
What is the purpose of Armed Forces than if they are only interested in cherry picking in terms selection of Enemy? (I am not suggesting that we should select one for the heck of it). Since we don't have a weaker enemy in the past to match our strength; are we therefore making a weaker state our enemy, purposely aka Afghanistan?If our real strength is no match with the powers we are confronting with; is it not the time to cogitate what we did wrong and rectify those wrong doings. Why are we pursuing those quixotic goals which are beyond our capacity and why are we depriving the common people from a respectful life?
The Army has never won a battle, but they make the rulers of banana republics look good with their antics. Imagine a rally in support of ISI not too long ago. Even in sub sharan countries it is difficult to match such foolishness.Only Gadafi ,but he died ------so no examples living.
Saroop, you discharged your obligation to your pen and the nation quite gallantly..your honest analysis was a far better homage to the slain soldiers than the empty rhetoric & noisy chest thumping salute stay safe..
Impressive...right on the nail head.Just yesterday indian army court martialed and kicked out a Lt.Gen on charges of financial corruption.Can you imagine that happening in pakistan in the next 100 years? is ghar ko aag lag gai ghar ka chrag say.
Honestly speaking this is written by a 'liberal fanatic' and while he makes good points we also know that so do 'religious fanatics'... The emotional chagrin is cleverly masked by an extensive vocabulary and references to popular undercurrents in 'educated' circles such as "Religious organizations are evil", "US is overstepping boundaries because most people in our country are stupid". "Generals' luxuries vs jawans' lives"....
The thing to understand is these things are nothing new and a gripping title is not really going to add something intuitive or ground breaking to this debate. Evident enough, the writer just rants and offers no concrete solutions leaving it for the "experts". What we need at this time is a solutions based approach for dealing with issues rather than dividing our society based on religion/liberal or civil/army lines...
Thanks for telling the truth once again. You are waging a Jihad against the lies and injustices with the nation by the deep state. I have written a lot in these blogs and half of it does not get published especially in the last several days. It is ironic how the generals use one foreigner against the whole elected govt of Pakistan? Also how they are capitalizing at the death of these innocent soldiers. When would be treated equally under the law in Pakistan? Regards, Mirza
Superb article, but Sir if you continue banging your head against the wall we know who will be hurt. Honest writing is a thankless job that will invite more brickbats and attacks rather than kudos. Country has already forgotten Saleem Shahzad long ago, of no consequence to the selective Ghairat brigade.
Bravo Bravo Yes we should have enough courage to say all this.
Finally one man says the way it is. Kudos to you sir!
Absolutely fantastic article
Very well said indeed! Hats off!
I wanted to comment something funny in the disguise of zaid hamid... but the article is too true to make fun of... u r right on spot with ur views.
You are right - I have wondered what's the difference between this incident (where 24 soldiers died) and other recent ones where hundreds of soldiers died at the hands of the Taliban and other terrorists. These kind of hypocrisy and dichotomy is what that makes the international community brush off Pakistan's oft repeated claim of being the 'greatest sufferers of terrorism'. This 'suffers of terrorism' line rings hollow when people and soldiers killed by terrorists are treated as a minor incident, not worth talking about.
the generals' foremost responsibility is their men. why can't and shouldn't they be asked about lives they were directly responsible for? operational matters are no concern of the civlian govt or the so-called commander in chief. even a kid knows that.
no one wants war. it must be avoided at all costs. that's not what the question is asking for. it is merely asking what was and was not done by the military leadership to try and save the lives of these 24 men who were prepared to lay their lives down for the rest of us? any rational person would ask this question and a society with any sign of life left in it would insist on it till honest and full answers are provided. they were prepared to die so i might live. i owe it them to ask why they were left to die. thanks for clarifying that part, saroop ijaz.
Spot on! It's shame that ruling elite has kept the majority in darkness. Military is the puppet master which is beyond any kind of accountability. The civilian administration fulfill the role of whipping boys when things turn south and only interested in enriching themselves. President Zardari is content playing to his masters tunes in spite of knowing who was behind the murder of his father in law as well as his wife! Shame on this sham country. I pity the ordinary people who have nowhere to turn to, other than shouting "Down with Amreekha".
Take a bow.. Brilliant!
I fear it could become an army without a country
well said. All citizens of Pakistan must be respected at same level. If the common citizens are killed, we all take it easy and show no serious concern, sorry to be straightforward. This is exactly opposite to the recent martyr of 24 army men. Ask the families of those who got martyred, what their loved ones meant to them. MAY ALLAH give us the right sense to revise our national interests, if there are any.
It is hard to deny what you say.
Alas, the Generals of our army - the only politicians who never have to own up to what they did - tarnish the memory of patriots like Minhas or Bhatti by bringing the Armed Forces, as an institution, in disrepute.
Standing ovation for Saroop Ijaz! Bravo! Bold, objective, honest and much needed.
Wonderfully put and I couldn't agree more. It is pathetically sad that the death of twenty-four of our soldiers, it has apparently turned into a grand PR exercise.
Kudus for saying this.
Yes we are sad and condemed the deaths of any body even if one animal die of bruital murder but i think death of soldier is more valueable in any society and i witniced when i came in america where president himself is commander inchief of forces why is that in the democratic libral country?? i think soldiers in pakistan are great asserts of the country we shall respect them and i salute them.