Indus Pakistan
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@ If I have a soft corner for Pakistan then definitely it is for our very existence. We must have always a cordial relation with Pakistan even beyond that for the very existence of our country. If today Pakistan is broken than be sure in the half decade the fate of Bangladesh will be either like Hydrabad or even if we existent it will be like Bhutan.
@ For the last 40 years or so we had been hearing all the one sided propaganda's of Awami Leaque and India.
@ It is true that Pakistan had exploited us in many aspects for the last 24 years but the way India and AL says there is hardly any truth on it.
@ The problem was once in 1947 once Bengal became the part of Pakistan, it was no match with the other parts of Pakistan. All the military installations were located at various parts of Pakistan. These were mainly on the Afghan side of the border like Noshera, Waziristan, Chirat, Abbotabad, Rawalpindi and others. They had good number of military strength. Most of them were in the British Indian Army. Where we had no such installations other than some abandoned airfields scattered through out Bangladesh. For your information in 1947 in East Pakistan we had only one skeleton Divisional HQ located at old High Court building, one Combined Military Hospital (CMH) at Dacca Medical College and one yes only one Punjab Regiment. With this one Punjab Regiment along with the scouts of Fuzlul Kader Chow we marched to Rangamati and brought down the flags of Congress and flags of India and brought it under our dominion. In those days we had not a single Jute Mills. There were no Head maters, no Principals, no Darogas, no DC'c, no EP's, all went to India. Can you think in those days we had not a single CSP officer. So comparing East Bengal with other provinces of Pakistan was useless. By 70's the Bengali CSP officers came up at per West Pakistani CSP officers. Even the standard of Bengali CSP officers were better. Soon they started dominating in the foreign services. Never belief on the statical figures of Awami Intellectuals.
Good points there. Just would like to clarify that Nowshera, Abottabad, Kohat etc are in Pakistan and not on the Afghan side of the border. Lot of these are either in Pashtun dominated Khyber Paktunkhwa province or the Potohar region of Punjab. There are of course historical reasons for this. During the British Raj the tribes on the Afghan border [just like today] were always fighting and this area had some of the largest British Army bases in South Asia.
I would not worry about Pakistan, despite what you hear it is highly improbable that Pakistan will disintegrate. Present Pakistan is a single block contigous state. Punjab is almost 50% of the population. Pashtun and Punjabi are very integrated now. Pashtun form significant portion of the military.Sindh now has too many people from other provinces [ Karachi now has more Pashtun then any other city in the world and even the Afghan's number in millions ] so I can't see any problems there.
Balochistan has problems but that province only has 10 milion people with only 4 million being ethnic Baloch. Millions of Baloch over the centuries settled in adjacent Sindh or Punjab. Even if you assume 50% Baloch are hell bent on trouble that would be 2 million people in a nation of 180 million. That is slightly over 1% of Pak population.
Compare that to Bengal which had 53% of the population and was 1,200 miles away with not so friendly India in between. So I doubt if 1971 is going to ever repeat itself.
Finally just would like to point out that Lt. Gen. A.K Niazi was Pashtun and Yahya Khan was a Kizilbash of Persian background. Zulfikhar Bhutto was Sindhi of course. I believe most of the army units involved in operation Searchlight were Punjabi with some Pashtun [Frontier Force] and Baloch thrown in. I doubt if these same units would have been quite as ferocious if they were asked to do the same thing in the West wing.