SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: NickSE who wrote (43699)3/6/2003 3:01:24 AM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
<If al-Qaeda or the Taleban are behind the attack, it could spell a change in their tactics.

During their operation in the region, Pakistani forces have failed to make any significant arrests.>

"There is a strange magic about the lands of the North-West Frontier and Afghanistan, a magic which over many centuries has captured the hearts and minds of all who have been there, and the imaginations of many who have not. Visions are conjured up of lean hawk-nosed tribesmen, craggy defiles, struggling British soldiers, near cantonments, bitter battles, memsahibs at tea—and of the most famous mountain gateway in the world, the Khyber pass. It is a region of contrasts: barren hills which rise to snowy peaks; inimical passes which open into fertile plains; dry river-beds which become raging torrents. And these contrasts are reflected in the people—hostile and vengeful they may be, but theirs is a code of honour, and their hospitality is generous beyond measure. These ancient tribal traditions have lived on, as has the land’s long history of fiercely resisted invasion: by Greeks, Mongols, Moguls, Persians, British—and today, the Russians.

"Against a background of the history and geography of the Frontier area, the author paints a vivid picture of this extraordinary and war-loving place, drawing upon written records—soldiers’ letters. Memsahibs’ journals, travellers’ tales—and on first-hand material and interviews with tribesmen and visitors : soldiers, diplomats, missionaries, doctors and nurses, journalists among them.

"Every rock, every hill has its story, ‘Winston Churchill wrote of the North-West Frontier, and here is the full story of these lands, from Alexander the Great of the kidnapping of Molly Ellis; from skirmishes, wars and the present-day guerrilla warfare against the Soviets to the life of the Englishwoman there during and since the British Raj; from the tribes’ attitudes to foreigners to the mark they leave upon the visitor’s heart—every aspect of a fascinating land is here, in a book of endless interest."

North-West Frontier Province
Province of Pakistan capital Peshawar area 74,500 sq km/28,800 sq mi population (1993 est) 20,090,000. It was a province of British India 190147. It includes the strategic Khyber Pass, the site of constant struggle between the British Raj and the Pathan warriors. In the 1980s it had to accommodate a stream of refugees from neighbouring Afghanistan.

The North-West Frontier was one of the great frontiers of the former British Empire, nearly 3,200 km/1,990 mi in length, stretching from the Karakoram Mountains in the north of Kashmir to the Arabian Sea.