solid snake
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If we think about it, we are so much like Israel.
Pakistan and Israel are the only two countries in the world formed to give people of a certain religion a homeland within a region.
Pakistan and Israel both face bigger enemies.
Pakistan and Israel have both been US allies. (more or less)
Pakistan and Israel both limit minorities participation in the military/politics (Israel doesn't let Muslims enter the Air Force as pilots, PAF doesn't let non-Muslims enter as pilots and many other examples)
Infact, I found an article on this issue:
If we recognize Israel, we can benifit a lot. Hopefully, within the next couple of decades, there will be an Israeli embassy in Islamabad.
Pakistan and Israel are the only two countries in the world formed to give people of a certain religion a homeland within a region.
Pakistan and Israel both face bigger enemies.
Pakistan and Israel have both been US allies. (more or less)
Pakistan and Israel both limit minorities participation in the military/politics (Israel doesn't let Muslims enter the Air Force as pilots, PAF doesn't let non-Muslims enter as pilots and many other examples)
Infact, I found an article on this issue:
Notwithstanding these differences, however, both states share a certain common historical legacy and the contours of state-building. They both suffer from internal strife and divisions. As states created with the explicit purpose of safeguarding the political rights of religious minorities, the Zionist and Pakistani struggles for independence reflect some similar political traits and approaches. Some of the problems they faced in nation-building were also similar.
In both cases, the question of nationhood was strongly influenced by religion; yet those who led the struggle were anything but religious. Neither Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the architect of Pakistan, nor David Ben-Gurion visualized the creation of theocratic entities.
[ ]These are not the only similarities between Israel and Pakistan. Since their establishment, both countries have been haunted by an existential threat and have struggled for acceptance by their regional neighbor/s. It is no coincidence that the security establishment plays a pivotal rule in both countries; in one case as an effective vehicle for national unity and cohesion and in another as the ultimate arbitrator in the national power struggle. While the degree of external threat differs, both countries had genuine fears about their acceptance by the majority from which they broke away.
[ ]Unlike their rivals (India and the Arab countries respectively) they pursued a realistic foreign policy devoid of idealism and rhetoric. At the time of their independence, both tried to pursue a non-aligned foreign policy that sought friendly relations with the rival blocs of the Cold War. A host of regional developments curtailed their options, however. Very soon, both were firmly entrenched in the Western camp and emerged as principal allies, and at times proxies, of Washington in the region
If we recognize Israel, we can benifit a lot. Hopefully, within the next couple of decades, there will be an Israeli embassy in Islamabad.