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Showing posts with label Ashok Mehta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashok Mehta. Show all posts

Sunday, June 3, 2012

RISE OF THE MUSLIMS: Writing on the wall, Islamic History, NewAgeIslam.com

Islamic History
RISE OF THE MUSLIMS: Writing on the wall

Ashok V. Desai on a book about how Islam changed the world

That is the sort of world in which Arabs lived. Arabs existed before Islam; they were tribes that inhabited the desert to the east of the fertile crescent that extends along the Mediterranean coast from Egypt through Palestine and Syria to Turkey. Outside Nemara, an ancient fort near Damascus (the capital of today’s Syria), lies the grave of Imrul-Qays, son of Amr, described as king of Arabs, who died in AD 328 — much before Muhammad was born. Two hundred years later, this area was under Ghassanids, who were governors under the Romans. They held a fair every spring at the shrine of St Sergius where Arabs from the mountains and desert further east would come to pray and celebrate; at that time, those Arabs were obviously Christians sometimes. They were nomads; they kept camels, goats and sheep. They lived in tents. They rode horses. They traded wool and hides for grain, wine and olive oil. And they carried arms — swords and bows — to protect their herds from theft. So they were also equipped for robbery — and probably collected a tribute from the Byzantine settlements to their west in lieu of robbing them.




Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Pakistan's proxy war, War on Terror, NewAgeIslam.com

War on Terror
Pakistan's proxy war
Ashok Mehta

After the dismantling of the Taliban regime in Kabul, Pakistan has constantly feared encirclement by India especially after the Indian Air Force's new air base at Farkhor in Tajikistan and through its soft power: Economic and humanitarian aid which has made a profound impression on Afghans. If the theory of strategic encirclement is a viable one, India deserves credit for it given it does not have contiguous borders with Afghanistan. India's strategic objectives in Afghanistan are best met with a pro-India Government in Kabul keeping an eye on Pakistan and access to resource-rich Central Asia.

Islamabad's notion of strategic depth in Afghanistan is a keenly debated subject in Pakistan. Some experts, including former Army Chief Gen Jehangir Karamat, say it is an outdated concept, a relic of the Cold War. Others, including the new Government, disagree. It has, therefore, reinvented a more aggressive version of countering India's growing influence in Afghanistan which it believes has been encouraged by the Karzai Government to balance Pakistan.

http://newageislam.com/pakistan-s-proxy-war--/war-on-terror/d/189