List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Acronyms
Acknowledgements
Preface to the Second Edition
Introduction
1. Milbus: A Theoretical Concept
2. The Pakistan Military: The Development of Praetorianism,
1947-77
3. Evolution of the Military Class, 1977-2005
4. The Structure of Milbus
5. Milbus: The Formative Years, 1954-77
6. Expansion of Milbus, 1977-2005
7. The New Land Barons
8. Providing for the Men: Military Welfare
9. The Cost of Milbus
10. Milbus and the Future of Pakistan
Postscript to the Second Edition
11. From Military Government to Military Governance, 2007–16
12. From Military Inc. to Media Inc.
Notes
References
Index
Ayesha Siddiqa is a research associate at the SOAS South Asia Institute. She is the author of Military Inc. (Pluto, 2016).
'Names names and pours cold water on boastful claims, may step on
some powerful toes'
*Guardian*
'A detailed and powerful case study'
*The New York Times*
'This bold book explains why it will be so difficult to persuade
the Pakistani military to renounce political power and return to
the barracks. It is a must read for anyone who cares about Pakistan
or its future'
*Lee H. Hamilton, President and Director, Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars*
'Siddiqa demonstrates [how] economic impunity and political
impunity are closely related'
*Nicole Ball, Senior Fellow, Center for International Policy,
Washington DC*
'No one else has so comprehensively [explained] the army's
involvement in Pakistan's economy, nor linked it so clearly with
the army's growing and seemingly permanent role in Pakistan's
politics'
*Stephen P. Cohen, Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies,
Brookings*
'Complex, riveting, absorbing, Siddiqa has written a vitally
important book which enhances our understanding of the army on the
front line in the war on terror'
*Ahmed Rashid, Far Eastern Economic Review*
'An incisive look at the largely hidden economic empire run by and
for the benefit of Pakistan's military. This courageous book will
not please Pakistan's generals. But no Pakistani, civilian or
military, can afford to ignore its sobering analysis'
*Robert M. Hathaway, Director, Asia Program, Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars*
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