يحاول ذهب - حر
Pakistan's deep state
June 08, 2025
|THE WEEK India
There is an invisible clique that ensures that certain ideas and issues are never compromised. Ayesha Siddiqa, senior fellow at the Department of War Studies at King’s College in London, and author of the acclaimed Military Inc.: Inside Pakistan’s Military Economy, gives her views on this invisible entity
OVER THE YEARS, and especially after the post-Pahalgam conflict with India, elements in the Inter-Services Intelligence have grown bigger and more powerful. And so, my argument is that any Pakistan general who ever tries to cross the red lines will get knocked down. And those red lines are not political or domestic. They are more geopolitical.
There is a deep state sitting within the military, which doesn’t allow the top leadership to cross a certain line. And for me as a Pakistani, that is a matter of concern. You will not get the same answer from somebody else who, like me, also has expertise on the military. We don’t know how this deep state network works. This is a group that comes together to get rid of a leader.
For example, in their mind, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto crossed the line. In one of the last interviews before she left for exile to Dubai, she was asked if she would hand over A.Q. Khan (father of Pakistan's atomic weapons programme) to the US if they asked for him. She said, "Yes." She crossed the line. I think getting rid of Benazir was an institutional decision. (Benazir was assassinated in a bomb explosion in Rawalpindi on December 27, 2007).
It needs a careful study at your (India’s) end and our end as well. How does that deep state within the military operate? That mechanism needs to be understood.
هذه القصة من طبعة June 08, 2025 من THE WEEK India.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من THE WEEK India
THE WEEK India
WEIGHT AND WATCH
India stands at the epicentre of parallel epidemics: obesity, diabetes and heart disease, each fuelling the other and blurring the line between lifestyle and disease. But there is hope-GLP-1 therapies are transforming the treatment landscape
17 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
Bliss and the body
Humans have been using cannabinoids—the active compounds found in the cannabis plant—for medicinal and ritual purposes for at least 5,000 years, with some archaeological evidence suggesting an even longer relationship with the plant.
1 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
THE SILENT CRISIS CANCER IN THE ELDERLY DEMANDS OUR ATTENTION
The greying of India is accelerating, expected so with regards to longevity. Current estimates suggest nearly 140 million Indians are aged above 60, a figure set to double within three decades. With advancing age comes increased cancer risk, yet specialised geriatric oncology [Specialty care for elderly cancer patients] services remain conspicuously absent across most Indian healthcare settings.
1 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
Writing our own destiny
As the field of epigenetics advances, we are stepping into a new era of medicine, where health and even destiny become choices we can shape
3 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
Just Pakistan, everywhere
Gadar, Veer-Zaara, Bajrangi Bhaijaan, Raazi, Uri, Gadar 2, Dhurandhar—the list of successful Hindi films featuring Pakistan is long and varied. Romance, comedy, drama and war: stories from almost every genre, unfolding in cinematic stand-ins for 'Karachis,' NWFPs' and ‘Lahores’ routinely play out on Indian screens to packed houses.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
New Year, new resolve, new you
A New Year always brings me back to the same realisation. Good health does not flourish through one dramatic commitment. It grows through the quiet courage to care for oneself, every single day.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
Ms. Multani notes that India's growth increasingly depends on robust healthcare, with hospitals emerging as key drivers of productivity and future competitiveness
Why Health Infrastructure Matters More Than EverA 2024 meta-review found that improvements in public health consistently contribute to higher GDP per capita growth, especially in developing countries undergoing demographic transition. Good health enables a workforce that is more productive, less prone to absenteeism, and capable of longer, healthier working lives. For India, with a median age under 30 and a workforce numbering over 500 million, the stakes are enormous. A healthy working-age population today is the real capital for the India of 2030-2040.
1 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
HELP...
India's mental health crisis must not be hijacked by those with dubious methods
4 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
BOLLYWOOD BLUES
The Hindi film industry needs an urgent revamp. Here's what needs to be done
4 mins
January 11, 2026
THE WEEK India
For folk's sake
In Rajasthan's musical communities, forming a band is unconventional. The three-member SAZ is breaking convention in more ways than one, preserving and reimagining folk music along the way
4 mins
January 11, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
