Eurabia- the just plain wrong genre that refuses to die

Eurabian Follies The shoddy and just plain wrong genre that refuses to die. BY JUSTIN VAÏSSE  By 2050, Europe will be unrecognizable. Instead of romantic cafes, Paris’s Boulevard Saint-Germain will be lined with halal butcheries and hookah bars; the street signs in Berlin will be written in Turkish. School-children from Oslo to Naples will read Quranic verses in class, and women will be veiled.  At least, that’s what the authors of the strange new genre of “Eurabia” literature want you to believe. Not all books of this alarmist Europe-is-dying category, which received its most intellectually hefty treatment yet with the … Continue reading Eurabia- the just plain wrong genre that refuses to die

Qaedastan – will make today’s problems seem tame

Welcome to Qaedastan Yemen’s coming explosion will make today’s problems seem tame. BY GREGORY D. JOHNSEN  In 2010, Yemen will celebrate the 20th anniversary of national unification. But it won’t be much of a party: This could well be the year Yemen comes apart. Even the brutal 1994 civil war failed to threaten the structural integrity of this country chronically teetering on the verge of disintegration as much as the current crises, all of which may be coming to a head in 2010. Yemen has so many dire problems that it’s easy to be overwhelmed. Al Qaeda is growing in … Continue reading Qaedastan – will make today’s problems seem tame

After Pharaoh Hosni Mubarak’s death?

After Pharaoh Hosni Mubarak’s death — or worse, his failure to give up power — could throw the largest country in the Arab world into chaos. BY ISSANDR AMRANI  Of all the crises that threaten to shake Barack Obama’s presidency, few are more volatile than the ticking time bomb in Egypt, especially terrifying for the very reason that no one knows when it might explode. Hosni Mubarak, the 81-year-old former Air Force marshal who has ruled Egypt as a police state since 1981, might leave office sooner than anyone is expecting, opening a power vacuum that could send this U.S. … Continue reading After Pharaoh Hosni Mubarak’s death?

Treating terrorists like warriors is exactly what they want.

KSM Doesn’t Deserve to Be a War Criminal BY TOM MALINOWSKI As the U.S. Congress threatens to block funds for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s (KSM’s) civilian trial, critics of President Barack Obama’s approach to prosecuting terrorism have a common refrain: KSM is a combatant, not a criminal. As Sen. John Barrasso recently put it, “These people are at war against the United States and our values. They deserve a military judge and jury.” But does KSM really “deserve” the honor of a military trial? That is a privilege normally reserved for defendants entitled to call themselves warriors. It’s no surprise that … Continue reading Treating terrorists like warriors is exactly what they want.

If coffins were carried in Wootton Bassett

Charles Ferndale Some time in October last year a thoroughly unpleasant group of extremists proposed that they be allowed to march through the small Wiltshire village of Wootton Bassett, carrying a coffin for every Muslim killed during the war in Afghanistan and along Pakistan’s north-western border. Wootton Basset is near the Royal Air Force base at Lyneham, and all British personnel who die in the Af-Pak conflict are carried through the main street of the village, so mourners can pay the nation’s respects to their fallen soldiers. Clearly, the group which proposed carrying coffins through the streets of Wootton Bassett … Continue reading If coffins were carried in Wootton Bassett

Defeating militancy

Talat Masood Gen Musharraf spoke ad nauseam on fighting extremism and terrorism. And the West and many of our fellow citizens, especially amongst the elite, mistakenly believed that he was the leader who could really steer the country from this menace and stabilise Pakistan. In reality the reverse was true. The Taliban and militant forces kept expanding their frontiers and the Talibanisation mindset was creeping in while he played politics and pursued his expedient agenda of self-preservation. In the last two years with the coming in of the democratic government and the change in military leadership, the country’s policy of … Continue reading Defeating militancy

Ajmal Khattak: the revolutionary dervish?

Dr Mohammad Taqi Ajmal Khattak provided the modern theoretical basis for the idea of Greater Pashtunistan. Well-versed in the Marxist-Leninist theory — prevalent and ascendant at the time — Ajmal Khattak deployed it to strengthen the case for the right of self-determination for the Pashtuns “To become truly great, one has to stand with people, not above them” — Charles de Montesquieu. Ajmal Khattak was a true polymath — a poet, journalist, broadcaster, linguist, scholar and a politician However, despite all his patrician qualities this Renaissance man was a plebeian at heart. Despite his capability to — and opportunities available … Continue reading Ajmal Khattak: the revolutionary dervish?

People and superstition

Voltaire Such is the feebleness of humanity, such is its perversity, that doubtless it is better for it to be subject to all possible superstitions, as long as they are not murderous, than to live without religion. Man always needs a rein, and even if it might be ridiculous to sacrifice to fauns, or sylvans or naiads, it is much more reasonable and more useful to venerate these fantastic images of the Divine than to sink into atheism. An atheist who is rational, violent, and powerful, would be as great a pestilence as a blood-mad, superstitious man. When men do … Continue reading People and superstition

Reassessing Liaquat Ali Khan’s role — did he give the Mullah power?

Riaz Shahid Liaquat Ali Khan was the one to bring for the first time religion into politics. His alliance with the mullahs produced the ‘Objectives Resolution’, which declared Pakistan to be an ‘Islamic state’. Common perception holds Zia or Bhutto responsible for mixing religion and politics, but it was Liaquat Ali Khan under whose leadership mullahs were given entry into politics and the right to decide the fate of the nation Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan was the first prime minister and a founding father of Pakistan. Being the closest lieutenant of Quaid-e-Azam has given him a semi-divine status in Pakistani … Continue reading Reassessing Liaquat Ali Khan’s role — did he give the Mullah power?

India opens its doors to pimps and prostitutes

NEW DELHI: Global armament giants are heading to an annual defence fair in India, which plans to spend tens of billions of dollars to equip its million-plus military with new hardware. Some 650 defence companies from 35 countries will take part in the sixth edition of DefExpo-India, which kicks off Monday, India’s Defence Production Secretary R. K. Singh told reporters. The United States and Israel topped the list of participants in the four-day event in New Delhi while 41 other countries were sending delegations to hold discussions with Indian defence officials, Singh said. “We look forward to facilitating these discussions,” … Continue reading India opens its doors to pimps and prostitutes