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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 29, 2012 17:04 UTC (55 seconds ago)

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Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa Agha (Urdu: عائشہ صدیقہ آغا) (b. April 7, 1966) is journalist from Pakistan. She is also a regular op-ed contributor to Dawn, and before that to Daily Times. Her articles appear every Friday.

Contents

Education

She received her doctorate from King's College London in 1996 and has worked on issues varying from military technology, defense decision-making, nuclear deterrence, arms procurement, arms production to civil-military relations in South Asia.

Career

Dr Siddiqa has been a civil servant for 11 years during which she was asked to work as the Director of Naval Research with Pakistan Navy making her the first civilian and a woman to work at that position in Pakistan's defense establishment.She also worked as a Deputy Director in Audit Defence Services Lahore Cantt

She is also a Ford Fellow and was the 'Pakistan Scholar' at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars at Washington, DC for 2004-05.

Dr. Siddiqa is also an author, and her books include, Pakistan's Arms Procurement and Military Buildup, 1979-99: In Search of a Policy (Palgrave Press, 2001). Her recent book, Military Inc.: Inside Pakistan's Military Economy [1], was released in April 2007. She has also written commissioned papers on small arms and light weapons proliferation, problems of governance and India-Pakistan relations.

Moreover, she has contributed to various international journals like the Journal for Defence and Peace Economics, Jane's Defence Weekly and the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists.

On June 13, 2007, during her latest book launch at International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, Siddiqa said that she is not a politician and hers is an academic piece of work. She went on to add that she used Pakistan as a case study. She believes that this book is not a political thriller, rather it carries a broader issue of civil-military relationship in Pakistan. She is a visiting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, teaching political economy and history of Pakistan.

Quotes

1.Response to the announcement by Pakistan's army high command that it is to cut 50,000 troops:

"It will only reduce the personal staff of army officers and the money saved from these cuts will probably be spent on more weapons. So in effect I do not consider these changes as major strategic move"[2]

2.Response when asked about Pakistans commitment to stop helping Kashmiri militants:

"I question whether there is an intent to completely disband them, because how else do you talk to India?"[3]

References

  1. ^ Book publisher Pluto Press
  2. ^ BBC Analysis: Downsizing Pakistan's army, By Mazhar Zaidi
  3. ^ Kashmir militants feel the squeeze, By Barbara Plett [1]

External links








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