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Sub-continental twins, India and Pakistan, have shared a troubled relationship since their birth in August 1947 amid the tumultuous labour pangs of partition.
The two countries have charted different paths since the beginning – India has taken its place at the high table of the world as the largest democracy and amongst the largest, fastest growing economies, while Pakistan has been struggling with internal contradictions.
With his combat experience in the wars with Pakistan, and subsequently having set up India’s Defence Intelligence Agency as its first Director General, Lt General Davar’s credentials for undertaking such an analysis are impeccable. He defines ‘Deep State’, as “a state within a state”, which determines the policies and operations of the government, akin to the shadowy Military Industrial Complex of the US.
In order to justify its very existence, it has had to strive to establish a persona distinct from its Indian roots. In the process, Islam became the rallying point, and India a convenient enemy to rally against.
The book describes the birth of Pakistan’s infamous Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI), and diligently chronicles its evolution and development as a power unto itself, at times even surpassing the army that otherwise it is an organ of.
It traces Pakistan’s political journey through military rules punctuated by occasional spells of democracy, highlighting the role played by the army and ISI during both the regimes.
Intermittently, the great game in Afghanistan – from the Soviet invasion of 1979 to the US led Global War on Terrorism – bolstered Pakistan’s position, and further strengthened the Deep State that wielded actual power. It shows how the army and ISI have used every opportunity to bolster their own position, and concurrently build a multi-billion dollar industrial empire controlling a major portion of Pakistan’s economy.
The book serves as a comprehensive primer for anyone who wants to understand the regional dynamics, from Independence to the present times. Given the author’s credentials, personal experience and knowledge of the subject, some insight into the possibility of alternative power centres within Pakistan challenging the ‘Deep State’ anytime in the foreseeable future would have been a welcome addition.
Maybe a sequel could be written, to deal with these issues.
(The writer is a retired colonel of the Indian Army and currently a research fellow at the Ministry of Defence, writing the official history of India’s participation in World War I. He can be reached @ragarwal. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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