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Fighting to the End - The Pakistan Army's Way of War (Paperback)
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Fighting to the End - The Pakistan Army's Way of War (Paperback)
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Since Pakistan was founded in 1947, its army has dominated the
state. The military establishment has locked the country in an
enduring rivalry with India, with the primary aim of wresting
Kashmir from it. To that end, Pakistan initiated three wars over
Kashmir-in 1947, 1965, and 1999-and failed to win any of them.
Today, the army continues to prosecute this dangerous policy by
employing non-state actors under the security of its ever-expanding
nuclear umbrella. It has sustained a proxy war in Kashmir since
1989 using Islamist militants, as well as supporting non-Islamist
insurgencies throughout India and a country-wide Islamist terror
campaign that have brought the two countries to the brink of war on
several occasions. In addition to these territorial revisionist
goals, the Pakistani army has committed itself to resisting India's
slow but inevitable rise on the global stage. Despite Pakistan's
efforts to coerce India, it has achieved only modest successes at
best. Even though India vivisected Pakistan in 1971, Pakistan
continues to see itself as India's equal and demands the world do
the same. The dangerous methods that the army uses to enforce this
self-perception have brought international opprobrium upon Pakistan
and its army. And in recent years, their erstwhile proxies have
turned their guns on the Pakistani state itself. Why does the army
persist in pursuing these revisionist policies that have come to
imperil the very viability of the state itself, from which the army
feeds? In Fighting to the End, C. Christine Fair argues that the
answer lies, at least partially, in the strategic culture of the
army. Through an unprecedented analysis of decades' worth of the
army's own defense publications, she concludes that from the army's
distorted view of history, it is victorious as long as it can
resist India's purported drive for regional hegemony as well as the
territorial status quo. Simply put, acquiescence means defeat.
Fighting to the End convincingly shows that because the army is
unlikely to abandon these preferences, Pakistan will remain a
destabilizing force in world politics for the foreseeable future.
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