A Repeat Telecast of Historic Blunder of West: From Afghan Mujahideen to Nazi India

Mumtaz Hussain Soomro
3 min readSep 21, 2023
Thewire.in Report on Canadian Allegations [R]

In the thousands of years of recorded history of mankind, one of the most prominent mistakes that man has made is to repeat their mistakes. A bunch of people makes a family and a collection of families compose a town, and similarly, a large number of towns create cities, counties, and continents. Just like an individual person, countries make mistakes too. History is full of the rise and fall of great powers like the Romans, Greeks, Persians, Byzantines, and Ottomans. On the one hand, it is education, research, innovation, and social justice that uplift a civilization. On the other hand, it’s the repetition of historical blunders that become the origins of fall. Prima fascia these blunders revolve around rivalries, lack of education, fascist mindset, and the God-Complex of controlling everyone and everything. Digging these blunders deep will reveal the root cause, that makes a giant fall like a house of cards, is the repeatation of mistakes. Gorge Santayana a Spanish-American philosopher said and I quote:

“Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it”

In the obsession with global dominance and fear of losing it to the East, raising China obviously, the West, the U.S., is suffering from myopia and short-term memory loss! How? It was the West who once praised progressive Iran under Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and even helped him to strengthen his power to rule [R] and President Ronald Reagan called Afghan Mujahideen freedom fighters [R]. After the Cold War and the fall of the USSR, the U.S. left the mujahideen alone to find their fate on their own. In the words of former United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, “We have helped to create the problem we are now fighting" [R]. Charlie Wilson’s War, a Hollywood movie from 2007, is an excellent infotainment on the Cold War.

As the U.S. was concerned with the growing influence of the USSR in Central Asia back in the time of the Cold War, now the U.S. is having a similar sort of fear but the point of concern is China this time. With the blessings of the West, India is being prepared to rise as a new socio-economic power to counter the red dragon i.e., China. On the road to strengthening the Indian Economy and its significance in Asia, the West is turning a blind to the fascist nazi Indian regime. India has so much potential and energy to play a positive role in the region and raise the whole of Asia but it is dancing to the tunes of the West. The genocide watch reported that the world’s highly populated country is slowly degenerating into a conflict zone of sectarian violence and the burning down of more than 250 churches in Manipur is one of its instances [R].

The more recent incident of the murder of a prominent Sikh-Canadian activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar is merely a manifestation of Nazi India.Nijjar was fatally shot on June 18 outside a Sikh temple near Vancouver [R]. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, on 18-Sep-2023, told his parliament regarding the alleged involvement of India in the killing of a Canadian citizen [R] and he raised the issue with Modi last week at the G20 summit [R]. Some Indian commentators are abusing Khalistani activists, along with the Canadian government [R] while reports claim that UK, US, and Australia are deeply concerned over Canadian allegations [R]. In my humble opinion, it is just the tip of the iceberg and if the West kept a blind eye on the Nazi Indian regime then no good will come out of this China containment strategy. Only time will tell whether the West’s new blue-eyed boy, India, could contain the red dragon or not but one thing is obvious, which is not the good results in future for the Asian region, the world, and the West itself. In the words of Hillary Clinton……

“lets be careful what we sow because we will harvest ”

--

--

Mumtaz Hussain Soomro

A student of Computer Science, currently pursing MS in Data Science from NED UET. Enthusiastic book & tech reader. Academic researcher and computer programmer.