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Normalisation of ties with India necessary for Pakistan: Expert

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PAKISTAN must ensure few things, including normalisation of ties with India, rebalancing civil- military relationship and reviving the economy, before it can be safely put in the category of a "normal" state, an eminent American scholar has said.

"Five or six things must happen before Pakistan can be safely put in the normal state category," eminent American scholar Stephen P Cohen said amidst increasing perception in the western world, the United States in particular that Pakistan is either on the verge or headed towards being a failed state.

"They include developing nearly-normal relations with India, reviving the economy, repairing the state, rebalancing the civil-military relationship, redefining the role of the military in the state, taxing the rich, fighting domestic insurgencies more effectively and allowing a reshaped police force to emerge," Cohen said.

"The politicians would have to moderate their disputes, concentrating on issues and reform, not on patronage and corruption.

"However, none of these steps seems to be a sufficient factor that trumps all others. In the end, muddling through will have at least four or five variations," Cohen, from the Brookings Institute – a Washington-based think tank, writes in the just released book `The Future of Pakistan`.

Brought out by Brookings Institute, `The Future of Pakistan` is a compilation of a series of articles by eminent scholars from the US, India and Pakistan, including Stephen P Cohen, C Christina Fair, Shuja Nawaj and Kanti Bajpai.

Noting that Pakistan`s future is not immutable, he said Pakistan has lasted sixty years, but in the process it has lost more than half of its population in a breakaway movement and barely resembles the tolerant state envisioned by Jinnah.

"The territory and the people of what is now Pakistan will remain, even if they are altered beyond recognition by population movement, environmental change, redrawn boundaries or war.

Pakistan`s nuclear weapons will also remain, even if they are not controlled by a central government," he said.

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