Adil Najam
We at ATP like books. Over the last many months we have featured and discussed a number of books that relate to Pakistan in various ways.
I must confess that I had always hoped that we would talk more about books than we have. I hope we will be able to do so in the future. As a step towards that goal, we would like to invite our readers to share with us your suggestions of books on Pakistan that are worth reading.
This is not a popularity contest. We have no awards to give. We merely want to collate a list of books on Pakistan that people consider to be interesting reads. Specially those that you would consider recommending to others for whatever reason.
We have only two criteria:
- First, that the books you suggest must be about Pakistan, and significantly so. We, of course, realize that many Pakistanis read many books that are not about Pakistan, but the focus of this blog is not only on ‘All’ Things Pakistan, but also ‘Only’ things about Pakistan.
- Second, for the purpose of this first exercise please restrict your suggestions to books in the English language. This is a pragmatic, and not an ideological, criteria. The universe of books in Urdu is much larger - especially when one includes works of fiction and poetry - and hopefully we will have a separate exercise on those. For now, we wish to start small by focusing only on English language books.
The plan right now is to make this post and list a standing feature and to keep adding to it as readers share their suggestions and ideas. Hopefully this will be a useful service to those interested in Pakistan and Pakistaniat.























































I am working on Pakistan’s regional role, especially in the context of ‘War against Terrorism’. I found recent books about Pakistan by Ayesha Sadiqua Agha’s Military Incorporated, Hussain Haqqani;s Pakistan between Mosque and Military, Mary Ann Weaver’s Pakistan in the Shadow of Afghanistan and Jihad, and the latest one by the little known Professor from Peshawar Ijaz Khan Pakistan’s Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Making to be excellent studies of their subject that is Pakistan today and a must study for any one trying to understand the phenomenon of Pakistan
BOOK ANNOUNCEMENT
Title: Pakistan’s Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Making: A Study of Pakistan’s Post 9/11 Afghan Policy
Author: Ijaz Khan
Publisher: Nova Science Publishers, New York, USA
The book studies Pakistan’s Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Decision–Making process with the help of Prof. Karl Deutsch’s Streams of Information Model and explains how and so why Pakistan made the decision to support Taliban, then why and how, in the wake of 9/11, it changed that policy, noting the difficulties it is facing as a result of the changed Afghan Policy. It is argued that Pakistan’s support for Taliban was a result of its strategic culture that had developed over years, that saw religious extremist forces as good and reliable tools of policy, more precisely its security policy. Thus all its domestic perceptions were woven around Pakistan’s establishment belief that Taliban serves Pakistan’s regional security interests best. The change resulting in abandoning of Taliban was more a result of external inputs which conflicted with its long held security perceptions which continues to be unchanged for most part. Thus one notes a growing crisis of state and society and more importantly of international credibility about Pakistan’s role in the ‘War against Terrorism’ . The book notes that Pro Taliban Policy continues to be viewed as a better option in a wide range of establishment intelligentsia, not just the religious extremists. The book ends with suggestions how and where to change Pakistan’s decision making process by changing its strategic culture, as required by Pakistan’s announced change in its Foreign/Afghan Policy. The study goes a long way in helping understand the phenomenon of Pakistan’s existance and also helps along the way in understanding Pakistan’s role in the ‘War against Terrorism’ addressing issues of capabilities as well as willingness.
For further information go to Publisher’s Website:
https://www.novapublishers.com/catalog/product_inf o.php?products_id=5861
Hi. Mirror to the blind by tehmina durrani is a wonderfull book about a great man of this century Edhi . People like him are born with a mission in mind and they wont rest till they achieve it and that what this book is all about . A must read.
I will recommend two books:
Pakistan: Eye of storm, by Owen Bennett Jones
Deception: Pakistan, the United States, and the Secret Trade in Nuclear Weapons, by Adrian Levy and Catherine Scott-Clark
Gauhar Ayub’s book was launched today; http://www.jang-group.com/jang/jul2007-daily/31-07 -2007/up65.gif
Anybody knows anything about it? Anything interesting?
Now Gauhar Ayub’s book is coming out; http://www.jang-group.com/jang/jul2007-daily/27-07 -2007/topst/main11.gif
Let’s see what he has to disclose..
There is also “Passage to Peshawar” by Richard Reeves (yes, THE Richard Reeves; not exactly a literary nobody). Now quite dated (published in 1984 but still available on Amazon), it is one of the best accounts of Pakistan under Zia that I’ve ever read. It’s also one of the best dissections of what makes Pakistan what-it-is. Given how little time Reeves spent here, he quite impressed me with his insights into Pakistan.
Indeed a very good collection of books. I had admired Cohen’s book “Idea of Pakistan” since many of his arguments and suggestions were bang on target, some even complimenting what Musharraf is doing.
I have read several books, nice to see “Pakistan’s drift to Extremism” up in the list. I’ll add the following books
1) Kux’s “Pakistan and United States: Disenchanted Allies”
2) “Pakistan, between Military and mosque” by Hussain Haqqani
3) “PPP rise to power” by Philip E. Jones