On Thursday 11 Dec 2008 11:13:59 pm Alok G. Singh wrote:
>  I was just
> trying to understand your original point about its effect on Pakistan.

India granted Pakistan "MFN" status, Pakistan has not granted that to India

Despite that there is a huge balance of trade difference in favor of India. If 
India resorted to protectionism vis a vis imports from Pakistan - there would 
be virtually no trade - but only smuggling. Smuggling between Pakistan and 
India is risky business. Getting shot is a likely outcome if one does not 
have political patronage or use third party routes. Both of these exist and 
are likely to come under pressure after an event such as the Mumbai attacks.

But I digress..

The commonly expressed fear by Pakistan regarding free trade is that it will 
be flooded with Indian goods and Indian cultural influences that put the core 
idea of Pakistan (as different from India) at risk. Integral to the idea of 
Pakistan is the concept of "homeland for Muslims" of which Kashmir is 
symbolic, but from the Indian viewpoint Kashmir is the thin end of the wedge.

But I digress again...

Pakistan does not want free trade with India despite all the obvious 
advantages that free trade will purportedly bring. Free trade with India is a 
threat to  Pakistan. One needs to look at who is stopping free trade and why 
they are doing that in order to understand where the Pakistani viewpoint 
comes from.

Liberal secular Indians are too smug in their views of Pakistan to even start 
thinking about how Pakistan feels threatened by the very "We are equal. We 
are same-same only" lovey-dovey rhetoric of liberal secular Indians. In the 
flush of this love (after all who can oppose such noble sentiments about 
Pakistan?), no thought is given to how this attitude is actually threatening 
to a Pakistan that is getting increasingly intimidated and dysfunctional.

Indians like to say "Oh we are all similar". Few Indians who say that 
understand that in order to have a separate and distinct "Pakistani" identity 
one must not be Indian. The Indian identity is so secure that an Indian can 
reject his own background and yet get back that identity whenever he wants. 
Pakistanis are seen as Indians even when they insist they are not. Worse - 
many who want to be recognised as Pakistani are forced to hide behind an 
Indian identity in this day and age - such is the reputation Pakistan has 
built up. "We are all the same" is not as pleasant an idea for the patriotic 
Pakistani as liberal secular Indians imagine.

"We are equal" (Equal in our corruption. Equal in our love for each other. 
Equal in the way we are misled by our governments.Equal in all ways) is 
another statement that hits at the heart of Pakistani identity even as 
Indians cheerfully push this smugly satisfying story of equalitis

India is too big and too threatening to Pakistan in a way that Indians do not 
seem to understand even as Pakistan squeals in agony and turns dysfunctional 
trying to change that. The original Pakistan never wanted to be "equal" to 
India. Pakistan was meant to be superior to India in every way. Being Indian 
was an insult. A disgrace. A nation of caste ridden bigots and poverty was 
not what Pakistan was meant to be. 

But a rudderless Pakistan frittered away its independence in fighting to get 
Kashmir in 1947 and again in 1965. But even then Pakistan was an "Asian 
Tiger" of sorts - Pakistanis prided themselves on their superiority over 
India. 1971 was the big blow. Pakistani notions of "superiority over India" 
were replaced by the chilling reality of not being able to control or subvert 
a huge India. Indian progress in recent years has made the idea of 
saying  "We are equal" a sarcastic jibe in which Pakistanis feel hurt and 
angry at reality. If being "equal" to India is an insult, being seen 
as "inferior" to India in any way is intolerable.

Most Indians are too happy with their own lovey dovey perceptions of Pakistan 
imagining that they are the "Friendly Indians who relate to our Pakistani 
brothers and sisters, holding the fort against Indian fundamentalists" 
Unfortunately that is a completely ignorant and delusional view. Indians are 
a threat. Period. Indian who say "We are same. We are equal" are insincere 
sarcastic threats to Pakistan. Indians who openly oppose Pakistan are obvious 
threats.

shiv


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