
The interviews and speeches included in this volume recreate for us, as no other book could, the era during which Pakistan was stable, prosperous, and held up as a model for other states in the continent. They contain candid comments, for instance, on Lal Bahadur Shastri and on the industrialists whom Ayub Khan is supposed to have patronized, whereas in fact he decried the concentration of wealth. He also criticizes the bureaucracy and makes decentralization his prescription for progress. The volume clears away many misconceptions about this little-appreciated ruler.His interviews reflect a man with a vision, free from all religious and ethnic bigotry. He upheld the ideals of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan for modernization of the thought process rather than regression in the face of this fast progressing world. Ayub Khan's interviews transcend the boundaries of timesince nothing has changedespecially in the politics of the country.
This volume investigates the political vision and administrative philosophy of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan during his tenure as the leader of Pakistan. The author, drawing upon a curated selection of his own public addresses, interviews, and speeches, presents a defense of his governance model. He argues for the necessity of modernization, bureaucratic reform, and economic decentralization, while addressing contemporary criticisms regarding wealth concentration and regional stability.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians often utilize this text as a primary source for understanding the internal political rhetoric of the Ayub Khan era. Readers frequently note that the prose provides a direct, albeit subjective, insight into the administrative priorities of a leader who remains a polarizing figure in South Asian history.
Page Count:
315
Publication Date:
2010-05-16
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195476247
ISBN-13:
9780195476248
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