Friday, May 31, 2019

Pakistan and Afghanistan Essay -- Politics, War, Turmoil

From the 1980s onwards, Pakistan and Afghanistan have been at the forefront of numerous socio-political events germane to the rise of Islamic fundamentalism. The multifarious factors involved form a perplexing web of competing narratives that resist straightforward explanation. This essay will delve into the milieu, seeking alternative theories to construct a cogent thesis for the growth of fundamentalism. In doing so, it will examine the Islamisation policies of Pakistans Zia-ul-Haq administration and its congruence with United States interests at the time. Particular focus will be given to the Afghanistan Pakistan dyad and how the recent engender of world(prenominal) forces perpetuates the conditions that allow Islamic fundamentalism to prosper.As a state whose principal raison dtre is for the protection of Muslims, Pakistan had historically struggled with defining what its Islamic mandate entailed. Arriving in power via a coup dtat, Zia-ul-Haq employed religion to attain popula r legitimacy, orchestrating Islamic reform as a deceitful pretence for securing power (Kennedy 1990 73). Correspondingly, the Soviet attack of Afghanistan solidified the role of Islamic politics, with Zia-ul-Haq exhibiting a distinct preference for radical groups as a counterweight to communist ideology (Fuller 1991 11). The most visible characteristic of creeping religiosity appeared in 1982 with the declaration that national dress and Islamic studies were mandatory for government employees (Cohen 1988 314). Underlying this conversion, the government funded the expansion of an increasingly radical madrasah based education system - with the intention to transform the electoral landscape and boost support for Islamic parties (Nasr 2000 147). Through th... ...ndamentalists who demur at the states very existence, we can opine that Pakistan may already have crossed the Rubicon. This essay has elucidated that Pakistan and Afghanistan are a point of convergence for a litany of failed, arguably forgetful policies by both the chief protagonists and outside interests. As such, the rise of Islamic fundamentalism represents the logical endpoint for an array of policies that mobilised extremist religious dogma to achieve geostrategic objectives. Crucially, the abject failure of all involved to disband and reintegrate those forces into a legitimate Afghan state has proved calamitous in its consequences. With recent international intervention bolstering the ideological sources of fundamentalism and with the nexus of instability spreading deep into Pakistan, the continued prominence of Islamic fundamentalism appears inevitable.

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