WikiLeaks: What Surprised You The Most?

Posted on December 9, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Foreign Relations, Media Matters, Politics
39 Comments
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Adil Najam

Let me start with my own ‘WikiLeak moment.’ I have been wanting to write about the whole WikiLeak saga and how we Pakistanis have been reacting to it. However, I have still not figured out what there is to say about it. I am clearly in a minority (maybe even a minority of one) on this one since everyone seems to have nothing else to talk about except WikiLeaks: All WikiLeaks all the time seems to be the roller coaster that Pakistan is on right now.

Hence this post. To ask our readers what in the WikiLeaks, or about the WikiLeaks, has surprised them the most. As for me, maybe I have become too cynical myself, but there is nothing in or about WikiLeaks that has really surprised or stunned me. At least , not yet.

Of course, there is much to chatter about for the chattering classes in the WikiLeaks. For a nation that seems to run on talking points, there is talking points a plenty. But to what avail and for what point. That I do not know. And that is what I seek to learn from you, dear readers.

Maybe the surprise is that there still are many who seem (or feign) surprise at finding that Americans wish to influence other countries in pursuit of their own national interests, or that our own leaders seem interested only in their own personal interests. That our leaders are bent on bad-mouthing each other with gusto and seek favors of Americans who they seem to think are the arbiters of their own political fate should also not be a surprise to anyone who has ever seen a Pakistani talk show, least of all to the anchors of those shows. Yet, our perennially incensed anchors seem to be particularly incensed about this very non-surprise.

Maybe one surprise is that we have, as yet, not heard anything about what these memos say about what our media stars have been saying to the Americans. I suspect, that too shall come. Of course, reading about what other countries think of Pakistan and of our leaders is embarrassing, but I cannot imagine that it is truly surprising either. That too many will spin, twist and even lie about what is or is not in WikiLeaks is sometimes irksome, but frankly we have seen lies so much more blatant that these little skirmishes with the truth seem rather trivial. Sure enough, WikiLeaks can confirm that which we had already suspected. But in this case they seem to circumstantially confirm all, and sometimes smack opposite, conspiracy theories. No matter what you believe, you can – and will – claim that WikiLeaks has confirmed that exact view.

So, here I am wondering what I should write about. What is there in these WikiLeaks that is truly news, surprising, or even just insightful? What have we learnt that we really did not know before? And what might we learn from this little tsunami in a tea-cup, if indeed we were ever in a mood to learn anything? Do help me, dear readers, to help figure this one out.

39 responses to “WikiLeaks: What Surprised You The Most?”

  1. Hermoon Gill says:

    @Kasim Mahmood
    Just to clarify: ZAB had a Sunni burial.

  2. Sameer Mehta says:

    Hermoon Gill and Rehan, If and when anything worthwhile or interesting from cables originating from India comes out it will surprise you more than anything else. Pakistani public has been fed up so much negative information (real or imagined i don’t want to discuss) regarding India that when truth will come out it will be written in bold letters “Welcome to real the world”

  3. Ali Dada says:

    I am suprised that people think these things are real. Kinda seems a 3rd class movie script.

  4. Hermoon Gill says:

    @Kasim Mahmood
    Back in the 70s things were different.The age old Shia-Sunni divide in the Middle East wasn’t as highlighted as it was after the revolution in Iran in 1979.Saudis began to look at it not as a threat to their Wahabiism but more so as a threat to the House of Saud and they thought the Saudi family might lose their grip on the power.Hence they all supported Saddam Hussain with all the money they had against the useless and insane war against Iran.
    US and Europe sold arms worth billions of dollars to Iraq all paid for by Saudi and Kuwaiti petrodollars.
    Now thats called ‘wise thinking’.

  5. Kasim Mahmood says:

    If Saudis had anything against Shia leaders from Pakistan, ZAB would not have been Shah Faisal’s favorite “son”. Also, I am not sure if Zardari is really a Shia, though it doesn’t matter.

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