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Western media’s war on Pakistan

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Western media’s war on Pakistan
Dr Moeed Pirzada

While most Pakistanis complain of a media blitz against their country and society, few have given serious thought to what this means in the longer term. It may be time to realize that in the evolving information and disinformation driven global order, many small and developing states can virtually disappear if they fail to understand and control the way in which they are projected. Political science is not an exact science; experts can always disagree and outcomes may vary. But it is important to develop an overall paradigm to understand what is happening. Theoretically speaking, even if media-targeted states manage to preserve their geographical forms they might still have to put up with so much external and internal pressure that their sovereignty is effectively eroded.

Iraq may not be a good example as it was physically attacked, but at the same time, it is important to remember that it was stripped of its legitimacy to “self rule” through a sustained media-led disinformation campaign. Ironically, the way in which events are unfolding, Iraq might not be able to survive as one national unit for very long. Similarly, the dehumanization of the Taliban had been going on for quite some time before the tragic events of 9/11. The terrorist attacks acted as an immediate catalyst but the Taliban, who were out of sync with reality, had forfeited their right to survival a long time ago. It may be relevant to raise the question: If Pakistan is a “media-targeted” state then what are the implications?

It should not be very difficult to appreciate why “media-targeted states” might collapse or lose control of their destinies. Two things are important: One, in an increasingly integrated global village the concept of “national sovereignty” dating back to the Treaty of Westphalia has lost much of its relevance. What happens inside the jurisdiction of a so-called sovereign state is of equal concern to many others outside its borders - especially those with global interests. Second, owing to the increasingly integrated and unipolar nature of the world, the US-led cross-Atlantic states and their domestic institutions have assumed the role of “international regulators”.

This piece is not a debate on the morality of whether such “regulators” should exist. It is about the implications of this development. The power exercised by the media inside these societies, is a direct outcome of this perceived need for “global regulation”.By providing platforms for various dominant stakeholders, the media has assumed the role of custodian of collective interest. The destiny of small or developing states has thus become a question of how legitimate or useful they are in furthering or safeguarding the interests of key players inside these cross-Atlantic societies. Small or weak states that fail to earn legitimacy within this functional model are up for “restructuring” which may take many forms. Creative destruction by war is only one of the options and is not applicable in Pakistan’s case.

In this “information disinformation” driven global order, the strategic threat to small and developing states like Pakistan now lies in the build-up of perceptions; what reality may underlie the perceptions is of little consequence. Guns, bombs, bigger bombs and missiles can, at best, play a limited role in countering this strategic threat. Why? Because these tools provide a semblance of balance in regional situations, and will be of little use when the legitimacy of a state, its governing elite or key institutions is lost. If blue planet is an integral whole then “miscreants” with “genetic defects” need to be sorted out by the regulators of the planet.

The “miscreants” will not be identified and paraded by governments, experts, scholars and the academia but by the financial and managerial interests that control and influence major print and electronic media outlets. Individual writers, columnists and correspondents, however important they may appear on the face of it, are of little consequence. Take a careful look at the stories related to Pakistan that appear on the pages and screens of major US publications and networks, and you will be stunned by the level of contextual uniformity that characterize them. Individuality is either dead or has learnt to survive by making adjustments to the managerial vision that issues pay cheques, flight and hotel bills and guarantees access, influence and empowerment in the “marketplace” of ideas.

This pressure to maintain “contextual uniformity” vis-a-vis Pakistan also affects those academics, and policy wonks in the West who may understand and see things differently but are unable to give expression to their understanding in a marketplace where all ideas have to fit in a skeletal arrangement. Most interesting, however, is the case of a few columnists, politicos in exile, and other public figures of Pakistani origin whose voices, in print and the electronic media, have increasingly become indistinguishable from those of Western media managers and political interests.I leave this question to the readers. It is the power of this “contextual stranglehold” that to literate and aware persons living anywhere in the western hemisphere and reading their morning paper and watching television, has made Pakistan appear today as the epitome of global evil and chaos.

It is a place like Afghanistan, Iraq or Haiti; a country and society that threatens not only regional peace by causing waves of instability to reach India and Central Asia, but the entire international order by brandishing nuclear weapons in the midst of a confused polity controlled by anti-Western zealots. The government’s own admission in the recent nuclear proliferation controversy, however wise under the circumstances, has ironically confirmed those allegations that “rogue” elements may run amok in the system. Recently, Pakistan’s former minister for information Mr Javed Jabbar contributed a piece to this newspaper titled “Facing a media world war”. That analytical piece was, within the limitations of a newspaper article, a “tour de force”, on the subject and is a must read for all those who profess a serious interest in media challenges faced by Pakistan. Mr Jabbar provides a brilliant and comprehensive summation of the causes, origins and the strategic vulnerabilities and dilemmas the country now faces in this area. However, owing to space limitations, he has not been able to deal with the strategic responses the Pakistani state can offer. This is not going to be an easy task either. No one person, or institution, however much of a visionary, can come up with a comprehensive response. This will need the meeting of select minds from various disciplines and fields that are able to understand this challenge from different perspectives. But the first and foremost thing will be to recognize the existence and nature of the threat. The strategic vulnerability Pakistan now faces in this media war is so serious that it should be, without exaggeration, compared to the threat to its survival that the country faced on the eve of India’s first nuclear test in 1974.

The single most important contribution at this stage would be to develop a blueprint for a “School of Modern Media Sciences”, in other words an independent media university located preferably in Karachi. This entity, of international standards, should be planned in such a way that it can nurture a multidisciplinary, multi-lingual, talent pool needed for Pakistan’s growing print and electronic media. This project may also help in establishing standards of education and training for the rest of the country.

It is obvious that much thinking is needed in this direction and not necessarily in the form of newspaper articles. However, it is high time that Pakistanis realized that they need to find ways and means to break the “contextual stranglehold” of “information disinformation” around Pakistan before it is too late.
 
Agree ONE THOUSAND PERCENT with this author.

It is encouraging to see that influential people in Pakistan are recognizing this very potent threat to Pakistan's very survival and offering solutions.

No amount of nuclear weapons and cruise missiles are going to be useful against this threat. We have to counter this threat in the media itself.

On a very basic level, the chain of control goes
media => public opinion => elections => politicians

from there,
politicians => military commanders => invasion

and/or
politicians => economic and cultural isolation
 
i too agree with this piece cent percent.

some elements who represent themselves as pakistanis and while living abroad are playing in the hands of the west for their aims are threatening the foundations of pakistan with their poison. they are exploiting every events in pakistan to produce its gloomy image. they are a serious threat to the natural foundations of pakistan and using their force of pen to inject poison of western disease in a pakistani society.

nobody cares about threat to the national integrity of pakistan, bo body cares about the terrorism in balochistan and nobody cares about poverty, unemployment and inflasion in pakistan and improving the education standards in pakistan but only thing these western minded ****** scums care is pakistan is under invasion from the devil like aliens talibans, and pakistan is becoming an extreme religious intolerant society , and we need to get rid of maderassas and like that.

we need to control and regulate electronic and print media, and to ban those who bring there western propaganda with them. this is infecting the minds of pakistanis.this is gradually beoming insane
 
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We need to strengthen the idealogy of Pakistan through media but first we need to eliminate secular laws through legislation to modify our justice and governance as per shariah. .

First step will be to promot islamic idealogy at grass level,which can only elimate the corruption and injustice which is root cause of terrorism and extremisim and sectrianism .

Western media had already declared our country most dangrous, only solution is to defend our soil from western cyber war is to develop a broad based education system which could produce well educated generation having both religious and modren education.


Presently we are wasting our 50% of talent in madrasas (only focusing on islamic studies) remaining 50% is following the education system which outdated and substandard.

How can we defend and develop our country and protect its idealogy if we are not providing proper education to our childrens.
 
The main challenge is to counter anti-Pakistan propaganda in Western media itself.

Since we don't own or staff Western media outlets, how do we promote our side of the story?
 
We need to strengthen the idealogy of Pakistan through media but first we need to eliminate secular laws through legislation to modify our justice and governance as per shariah. .

First step will be to promot islamic idealogy at grass level,which can only elimate the corruption and injustice which is root cause of terrorism and extremisim and sectrianism .

Western media had already declared our country most dangrous, only solution is to defend our soil from western cyber war is to develop a broad based education system which could produce well educated generation having both religious and modren education.

Presently we are wasting our 50% of talent in madrasas (only focusing on islamic studies) remaining 50% is following the education system which outdated and substandard.

How can we defend and develop our country and protect its idealogy if we are not providing proper education to our childrens.
That make no sense...How can a madrasas be a waste if the goal is to promote Islam at the grass root level? A madrasas cannot grow any lower.
The main challenge is to counter anti-Pakistan propaganda in Western media itself.

Since we don't own or staff Western media outlets, how do we promote our side of the story?
Well...You take graduates from a madrasas and brainwash them to become 'martyrs' against those news organizations, which if result into a dead new anchor, which would intimidate other news organization to air favorable news about Pakistan.
 
Well...You take graduates from a madrasas and brainwash them to become 'martyrs' against those news organizations, which if result into a dead new anchor, which would intimidate other news organization to air favorable news about Pakistan.

Sadly, some clown may end up doing just that.

But, on a serious note, I like the article's author's suggestion:

The single most important contribution at this stage would be to develop a blueprint for a “School of Modern Media Sciences”, in other words an independent media university located preferably in Karachi. This entity, of international standards, should be planned in such a way that it can nurture a multidisciplinary, multi-lingual, talent pool needed for Pakistan’s growing print and electronic media. This project may also help in establishing standards of education and training for the rest of the country.

God knows we Pakistanis are novices at this media game...
 
If you realize and even admit that, then how can you object to the way the Western media report on Pakistan?

There are crazies in every society (Tim McVeigh) but the Western media gives the impression that mainstream Pakistani society is extremist and that Pak nukes are sitting around on a supermarket shelf, ready to be stolen. The fact is that less than 1 percent of Pakistani children attend madrassas. http://ksghome.harvard.edu/~akhwaja/papers/madrassas_beyondcrisis_final.pdf

Granted 1% of 170 million is a lot, but it is hardly representative of the country, and religious parties have been soundly thrashed in all elections.

Pakistan does have a problem with extremist elements, but there is a lot more to the country than madrassas and nuclear weapons. I understand the allure of sensationalism and the Western focus on terrorism post 9/11, but it would be more responsible to show a full picture and show the positive side of Pakistan also, instead of just demonizing us in a monolithic narrative, as the author pointed out.
 
@ gambit, we pakistanis have the negative view of madaressas that, they are not promoting a good standardized education, they should incorporate the healthy standards of education, like teaching the students science, arts geography etc, and also they develop their mental strength to such an extent that, the students form a mature thinking brain. many maderassas are doing this thing, they are emparting both knowledge of science and religion, they understand about their religion not in a misleading way but in a way it is.

on the other hand we support the importance of religious education to the basic/ root level, because it is essential for every muslim to understand its religion and its teachings. what aside maderassas the so called english medium schools and modern schools are doing is, they dont empart the religious education in a good way, like a muslim must know about his religion and the holy book quran which is the soul of islam, but hardly students aside maderassas know about their religion and quran, so they actually dont have understanding of their religion. just like americans declare every muslim a terrorist which is a lack of basic knowledge about islam

the need is not only to improve maderassah standard of education but to improve the standard of education as a whole where both religious and worldly eductions are given in a balanced form.

i support both religious and non religious education go side by side in every institutions following any medium of education. every pakistani should know about his religion.
 
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That make no sense...How can a madrasas be a waste if the goal is to promote Islam at the grass root level? A madrasas cannot grow any lower
.

Presently extremist jehadi mullah's are mis using these madrasa students for their political aims, because after graduating from madrasah they dont get jobs in ministeries,armed forces and science and technology institutes, so there is need to develop these madrasah schools as par with international standard so these students could get admission in any university or college of Pakistan and Western countries.

I want to see madarasah students in Harward and Stanford .If US and allies spend 5% of money they are spending on WOT on development of our Madrasah , we can control terrorism easily
 
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If you realize and even admit that, then how can you object to the way the Western media report on Pakistan?

Western media is not reproting rather it is doing psy-ops. And for that it is using all kinds of tools ranging from promoting an element of fear among their own citizens to all kinds of lies like they did viz viz WMDs in Iraq.
 
If you realize and even admit that, then how can you object to the way the Western media report on Pakistan?

Because 99.9% terrorist operating in Pakistan are not Madrasa graduates.
90% terrorists captured or killed are not even Pakistanis.

One cannot brain wash many thousand for terroism in madrasas and without getting noticed. Definately some advance biotechniques are involved which require billions of dollars and years for research work.

In any case no brainwashed can have any impact until he gets years of education about arms and gorilla warfare and the arms itself.
FYI, all confiscated arms are indian and american origin... these trrorists even have trucks full of RDX...which madrasa of Pakistan have contacts with arms supplier from US and india?

Point is that in this WOT US have much lesser to loose than Pakistan and Pakistan have lost more from the misinformation of media than the losses inflicted by these foreign funded (non Muslim) terrorists.
 
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There are crazies in every society (Tim McVeigh) but the Western media gives the impression that mainstream Pakistani society is extremist and that Pak nukes are sitting around on a supermarket shelf, ready to be stolen. The fact is that less than 1 percent of Pakistani children attend madrassas. http://ksghome.harvard.edu/~akhwaja/papers/madrassas_beyondcrisis_final.pdf

Granted 1% of 170 million is a lot, but it is hardly representative of the country, and religious parties have been soundly thrashed in all elections.

Pakistan does have a problem with extremist elements, but there is a lot more to the country than madrassas and nuclear weapons. I understand the allure of sensationalism and the Western focus on terrorism post 9/11, but it would be more responsible to show a full picture and show the positive side of Pakistan also, instead of just demonizing us in a monolithic narrative, as the author pointed out.
American extremists like McVeigh do not seek to export their violence to other countries, but it is an excellent point nevertheless in that it is easy to imagine the level of violence that people like McVeigh can inflict on other countries even though people like him are the extreme minorities in the US. His companies have more of a grievance against the US government than for other countries. It is the few that does the most damages. Ten percent of 170 million is 17 million. A one-million man shadow army, or latent insurgency, against the ruling government and against the world with a religiously motivated grievance will give other countries good cause to focus on Pakistan with a negative slant.
 
On a very basic level, the chain of control goes
media => public opinion => elections => politicians

from there,
politicians => military commanders => invasion

and/or
politicians => economic and cultural isolation

Though i have to agree the standard of reporting in Pakistan ( and a lot of other countires ) does need improving, it would be nice to see an article in the Daily that doesnt start Its India's fault.....

There really is no world media conspiracy against pakistan, sadly there is hardly any media coverage about Pakistan which considering its importance is why myself and many others search out sites like this to get information.
 

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