Indus Pakistan
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I will explain why I called this article "rubbish". The use of "whipping boy" conveys victimhood. That is to say USA is whipping Pakistan. Such language carries the message that America is the thug and Pakistan is the innocent victim.finds rubbish in the article.
Such ridiculous language might carry traction with ignorants but does not sit easy with a senior diplomat like Mr Akram. Pakistan is not a victim. If Pakistan was indeed a victim than we need to "whip" those in charge of our diplomacy. After all they are paid to do a job - make sure Pakistan get's the best deal. If the deal is so bad that Pakistan is getting "whipped" then we need to hold people like Mr Akram to account and ask if they are doing their job. If Pakistan came out the loser those in charge (including Mr Akram) deserve public thrashing.
It is like sending out a cricket team. If they lose badly to the opposing team and get "whipped" then whose fault is it? The opposing team who "whipped" you or your team for failing? How would you feel if one of the senior players then wrote articles about being "whipped" by the opposing team and crying on about it. Would you not ask that player instead of crying why they failed on the field?
In international relations it's very simple. It's like playing Chess game. If you lose terribly that means you chewed something too big. That points to poor decision making. You should not enter into something that entails you losing badly. If Pakistan indeed got "whipped" it points to flawed policy decisions on part of our governments.
The appropriate response for that is too look where mistakes were made and than respond by adapting to your strengths and covering any weakness you might have. That is learn and move on. Not as Mr Akram does. Write articles that use cheap emotive language and play victim (when it was policy failure by people in government like himself) by using words like "whipping boy" to feed on the ignorance of the average Pakistani. The language used conveniently shifts the blame from those who failed (like this diplomat) to the bogeyman that is America and the victim that is Pakistan.
It turns a complex failure of foreign policy to simple narrative of "bad guy, good guy" and exorcises any failure on part of governments in Pakistan. Instead the focus is "bad guy" America. This suits the simple Pakistani mindset where everything is black and white. The sad part is the failure of diplomacy is never looked at thus ensuring more mistakes will be made in the future. Mr Akram should have used that piece as place for some introspection. Not a way to evade blame.
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