War and Secession: Pakistan, India, and the Creation of BangladeshVistaar, 1990 - 338 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 266
... participants started without the expectation that it would end violently . All the participants , both within the region and outside it , pursued solu- tions they felt would accommodate the interests of others . Al- though at the outset ...
... participants started without the expectation that it would end violently . All the participants , both within the region and outside it , pursued solu- tions they felt would accommodate the interests of others . Al- though at the outset ...
Page 268
... participant commenced the prologue to negotiation with positive expectations , perceiving in the statements and com- mitments of other participants intentions and particular applica- tions of them most amenable to its own interests ...
... participant commenced the prologue to negotiation with positive expectations , perceiving in the statements and com- mitments of other participants intentions and particular applica- tions of them most amenable to its own interests ...
Page 319
... in the 1971 South Asian crisis . Unless otherwise indicated , the positions and offices given are those held by the interviewees in 1971 . PAKISTAN Office of the President and Chief Martial Law Administrator 319 Participants Interviewed.
... in the 1971 South Asian crisis . Unless otherwise indicated , the positions and offices given are those held by the interviewees in 1971 . PAKISTAN Office of the President and Chief Martial Law Administrator 319 Participants Interviewed.
Contents
Prologue and Overview | 1 |
Image and Legacy | 8 |
Image and Legacy | 35 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
War and Secession: Pakistan, India, and the Creation of Bangladesh Richard Sisson,Leo E. Rose Limited preview - 2023 |
War and Secession: Pakistan, India, and the Creation of Bangladesh Richard Sisson,Leo E. Rose Limited preview - 1990 |
War and Secession: Pakistan, India, and the Creation of Bangladesh Richard Sisson,Leo E. Rose Limited preview - 1990 |
Common terms and phrases
accepted According action administrator affairs agreed agreement American areas arms army assistance authority Awami League Bangladesh became Bengali Bhutto border called central chief China civil command commitment concern considered constitutional continued crisis critical December decision Delhi demand developments Dhaka direct discussions draft early East Pakistan economic effective effort elections February force foreign Gandhi given groups held immediate important India indicated interests Interviews involved issues Khan late later leaders limited major March martial law meeting ment military minister Moscow Mujib Mukti Bahini Muslim National Assembly negotiations November objectives October officers Paki participants party People's points political position possible prepared president Press proposed province refugees regime regional relations reported representatives response result settlement situation sources South Asia Soviet statement tion transfer of power United University views West Yahya