Pakistan's security and foreign policy / edited by Hamid H. Kizilbash
Material type: TextPublication details: Progressive Publishers, Lahore : 1988Description: xxiii, 351 pISBN:- 969806401X
- 327.1 S5259
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | UE-Central Library | 327.1 S5259 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | T4637 |
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327.1 K452 Bain-al-aqwami siyasat or is ka mutala | 327.1 K452 Bain-al-aqwami siyasat or is ka mutala | 327.1 K452 Bain-al-aqwami siyasat or is ka mutala | 327.1 S5259 Pakistan's security and foreign policy | 327.11 B6118 World politics : trend and transformation | 327.11 B6118 World politics : trend and transformation | 327.11 K259 World politics : |
I. Afghanistan
1. Call for withdrawal of soviet forces from Afghanistan
2. Afghanistan – not an east west issue
3. Will the soviet union withdraw its forces ?
4. Replacement of the Kabul regime and Afghan self determination
5. Afghanistan crisis and no alignment
6. Implications of soviet intervention and options for Pakistan
7. Peace keeping force to prevent blood bath
8. The soviet union’s mistake
9. Pravada’fall for dialogue
10. Indirect vs. direct talks go
11. Gorbachev’s call for a neutral anon aligned Afghanistan
12. Untying Gordian knot of interim government five party conference
13. The final round? Gorbachev sets withdrawal time frame
14. The Geneva accords
15. Chronology negotiations on Afghanistan
II. Part 2 : Pakistan, the great powers and India
16. Pakistani and U. S. interests convergence and divergence
17. Non alignment as a strategy for peace and security in south Asia
18. Pakistan’s threat perception and diplomatic options
19. No war pact and friendship treaty
20. Indian, Afghanistan and the soviet union policy options for Pakistan
21. Pakistan –U. S. relation from ,military alliances to no alignment
22. Superpower competition arm India
23. Concessional u.s. military scales and quid pro quo
24. Pakistan, united states and India issues in triangular relations
25. Pakistan, india and the soviet union gorvachev’s Asian pacific forum
26. Pakistan’s foreign policy imperative : a new dimension
III. Part 3 : the nuclear issue, saarc, the Muslim ummah and security the internal dimension
Rajiv Gandhi and the spectre of the Islamic bomb
Pakistan, India and the no use of nuclear weapons
Regional disparities and south Asian cooperation
The concept of the ummah and its influence on Pakistan’s foreign policy
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