Muneeb Yousuf

Publication

The Military Is Still Pulling the Strings in Pakistan’s Elections

February 05, 2024

Research Assistants, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Mr Muneeb Yousuf and Mohammad Usman Bhatti’s article ‘The Military Is Still Pulling the Strings in Pakistan’s Elections’ has been published in the Foreign Policy Magazine on 05 February 2024.

With opposition leader Imran Khan behind bars, the February 8 vote offers little hope for near-term stability, say the authors.

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  • Published: 5 February, 2024

Chill in the warmth

January 03, 2024

Research Assistant–PoK Project, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Mr Muneeb Yousuf and Research Assistant–PoK Digest Project (Urdu Media), MP-IDSA, Mr Mohammad Usman Bhatti’s article ‘Chill in the warmth’ has been published in The Telegraph Online on 3 January 2024. Taliban and Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan are ideologically aligned and the latter helped Taliban during its fight against American forces, say Mr Yousuf and Mr Bhatti.

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  • Published: 3 January, 2024

India-Afghanistan Relations in Changing Regional Geopolitics

Research Assistant, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Mr Muneeb Yousuf’s research article ‘India-Afghanistan Relations in Changing Regional Geopolitics’ has been published in South Asia Research Journal (SAGE) on 23 September 2023.

Despite much distrust and many misgivings, India’s Afghanistan policies have to be robust, focused on defending its geopolitical interests and concerns against China’s expansionist clout, while seeking to promote a multipolar world order, a strategy that appears like a reincarnation of India’s earlier path of non-alignment, says Mr Yousuf.

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  • Published: 23 September, 2023

A Problem in the Making: Deepening wheat crisis in Gilgit-Baltistan and federal government’s cold response

Research Assistants, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Dr Mohd Usman Bhatti and Mr Muneeb Yousuf’s article ‘A Problem in the Making: Deepening Wheat Crisis in Gilgit-Baltistan and federal government's cold response’ has been published in Greater Kashmir, on 18 July 2023.

From the beginning of year of 2023, Pakistan in general and GB in particular is grappling with wheat crisis. Remarkably, while the current Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) government has taken some steps towards this direction in the country, however, grievances of the people of GB with respect to shortage and soaring prices of wheat has been deliberately put on a back-burner, thus adding to miseries of common people, say Dr Bhatti and Mr Yousuf.

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  • Published: 18 July, 2023

Sovereign Attachments: Masculinity, Muslimness, and Affective Politics in Pakistan, Shenila Khoja-Moolji, Oakland, CA, University of California Press

Asserting sovereignty across its territories remains the primary purpose of the modern State. There exist two kinds of sovereignties: legal sovereignty and de facto sovereignty. While legal sovereignty encompasses the formal ideologies of rule and legality, de facto sovereignty includes the actual ability to kill, punish, and discipline a specific fragment of society or a section of it. Non-State actors can also perform the latter deeds.

The Comrades and the Mullahs: China, Afghanistan and the New Asian Geopolitics: Ananth Krishnan and Stanly Johny, HarperCollins, Gurugram

The conspicuous US withdrawal from Afghanistan has resulted in a political vacuum, garnering immediate attention of regional and great powers alike. In The Comrades and the Mullahs, presenting Afghanistan’s long history of foreign invasions and resistance, journalists Ananth Krishnan and Stanly Johny show how the country was a theatre for the Great Game between the British and Russian Empires, and later got caught in Cold War rivalry between the US and the Soviet Union. The return of the Taliban in Afghanistan has certainly become a diplomatic predicament for India.

Forgotten Kashmir: The Other Side of the Line of Control

The political dispute over the territory of Kashmir is an intricate problem confronting the modern South Asian leadership. The intricacies of the conflict have led to voluminous writings on the region and evident from them is a greater focus on Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) as compared to the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). The ‘escape’ of Pakistan–occupied Kashmir from the scholarly radar has begun to change only recently.