Military Inc.
Author | Ayesha Siddiqa |
---|---|
Genre | Military Industrial Complex |
Publisher | Pluto Press |
Publication date | May 2007 |
Publication place | Pakistan |
Pages | 292 |
ISBN | 978-0-19-547495-4 |
Military Inc.: Inside Pakistan's Military Economy (Template:Lang-ur) is a book about the Pakistan military's economic activities and its consequences, written by Ayesha Siddiqa.[1]
Content
The book, divided into ten chapters, discusses the Pakistan military's economic empire and its political, economic, and social effect on the country. The author uses the term “Milbus” to refer to “military capital that is used for the personal benefit of the military fraternity, especially the officer cadre, but is neither recorded nor part of the defense budget.” She puts the cost of this Milbus to at least $20 billion.[2] Following is a brief description of the content chapter wise:[3]
- Chapter 1: Defines six distinct categories of Military-Civilian relationship in the world and explaining each with a brief case study of different countries.
- Chapter 2: Explains Political growth of Pakistan's Army. its mandate, organizational structure and ethnic composition.
- Chapter 3: Highlights the growth of financial interests of the officer cadre of the army.
- Chapter 4: Outlines the command and control structure of the economic empire, and various methods used to exploit economic resources.
- Chapter 5: Discusses the growth of military business activities during the period 1954-1977. Where it expanded its stake in Agriculture, Manufacturing and Service Industry.
- Chapter 6: Expansion of Military Business during the period 1977-2005, setting up of institutions like Bahria Foundation and Shaheen foundation, entry in finance and banking sector.
- Chapter 7: Discusses urban and rural land acquisition of armed forces.
- Chapter 8: Discusses Welfare program for serving and retired Military personnel, inequitable distribution of resources that shows bias towards smaller provinces and ethnic minorities.
- Chapter 9: Analyzes the financial cost of the Military Economy.
- Chapter 10: Looks at the effects of Military's Economy on its professionalism, and the politics of the state and the conclusion.
Reception
The book caused a stir as it discussed a subject considered taboo in a country ruled for half of its time since independence, by the military. The author on the launch of the book said, "Over the past three years a lot of my friends have advised me not to publish this book. They think I have suicidal tendencies."[4] Talat Hussain, a political analyst, said "Ms Siddiqa is a courageous researcher. This area has always been considered a sacred cow in our society."[5] Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) released a booklet titled ‘Information Brief’, countering the figures and facts presented by the author in her book.[6]
See also
- The Establishment (Pakistan), the Pakistan military and ISI controlled deep state
- Books Husain Haqqani, similar books
- The Idea of Pakistan
- Army Welfare Trust, also known as Askari Group of Companies, a diversified conglomerate company run by Pakistan Army
- Fauji Foundation, similar business run by the Pakistan Army
- Bahria Foundation, similar business run by the Pakistan Navy
- Shaheen Foundation, similar business run by the Pakistan Air Force
- Defence Housing Authority, similar real estate business run by the Pakistani military
- Evacuee Trust Property Board, DHA controls large tracts of their land
- Military–industrial complex, an informal alliance between a nation's military and the defense industry
References
- ^ "Book on military's business empire launched". Dawn. Jan 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
- ^ "Milbus cost". The New York Times. 4 November 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
- ^ Ayesha Siddiqa (2007). Military Inc: Inside Pakistan's Military Economy. Pakistan: Pluto Press. p. 292. ISBN 978-0-19-547495-4.
- ^ "Book reception". BBC. 31 May 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
- ^ "book reception". The Guardian. 2007-05-31. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
- ^ "ISPR response". Dawn. 14 Sep 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2014.