Pakistan on the brink : the future of America, Pakistan, and Afghanistan / Ahmed Rashid.
Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Viking, 2012.Description: xxi, 234 p. : maps ; 22 cmISBN:- 9780670023462
- DS383.5. A2.
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | DS383.5.A2.R37 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 3ACKU000350669, 0003 |
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DS380.P8ک 28 1390 پښتون، افغان، افغانستان / | DS380.P8و 49 1392 قبایل مرز شرقی و سرنوشت افغانستان ( 1980 – 1880 ) / | DS382.A44 1985 Paksitan year book : | DS383.5.A2.R37 2012 Pakistan on the brink : | DS383.5.A2م 57 1368 سیاست خارجی پاکستان / | DS383.5.A3.K53 2011 Afghanistan and Pakistan : | DS383.5.A3و 75 1382 د پاکستان حکومت د افغانانو دوست نه بلکه دښمن دی (د افغانستان له سیاسي، اجتماعي او ملی شخصیت جناب عزیز الله واصفي سره د مجاهد ولس مرکه) / |
“Author of decent in to chaos and Taliban”—cover page.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: 1. Osama and Obama, legacy and inheritance—2. Pakistan in crisis—3. Pakistan : who betrayed whom?—4. Afghanistan : the first surge and the failure of elections—5. Afghanistan : political and military fault lines—6. Afghanistan : talking to the Taliban—7. A sliver of hope : counterinsurgency in Swat—8. Broken relations, crimes and misdemeanours—9. Changing the narrative, or preparing for the worst.
Abstract: What are the possibilities--and hazards--facing America as it withdraws from Afghanistan and as it reviews its long engagement in Pakistan? Where is the Taliban now? What does the immediate future hold and what are America's choices? These are some of the crucial questions that Ahmed Rashid--Pakistan's preeminent journalist--takes on here. Rashid correctly predicted that the Iraq war would have to be refocused into Afghanistan and that Pakistan would emerge as the leading player through which American interests and actions would have to be directed. He focuses on the long-term problems--the changing casts of characters, the future of international terrorism, and the actual policies and strategies both within Pakistan and Afghanistan and among the Western allies--as the world tries to bring some stability to a fractured region saddled with a legacy of violence and corruption. The decisions made by America and the West will affect the security and safety of the world.