Iraqis resisting Tamerlane's invasion were killed and their bodies piled up in pyramid formations. Six hundred years later, another occupier has displayed a penchant for a different kind of pyramid.
Abul Mansur Taimur or Taimur-Lang (langra) and hence Tamerlane, consciously used shock and awe tactics to conquer. Afterwards, he endeavoured to deal justly with those he had conquered.
The Americans in charge of Abu Ghraib prison made their pyramids for no apparent reason; simply to humiliate and denigrate. However, the sadistic techniques used by jailers are not a fleeting fancy applied impromptu, but demonstrates a lesson taught and well learnt.
The torturers knew the Arab mindset well: abhorrence of nudity, particularly before women, homosexuality and sexual mockery by women; elements which were pointedly focused upon and depicted in the infamous photographs.
And who best knows the Arab mind than those living in their midst. Israeli officers, such as those of their internal security service, Shin Bet, have acknowledged such knowledge.
Israel was the first to launch a pre-emptive strike on Iraq to cripple its nascent nuclear programme. But Saddam did not learn, he made the mistake of sending a few Scud missiles over Tel Aviv during the Gulf War.
America had no apparent self-interest in invading Iraq. Given Israel's stranglehold on American politics is it farfetched to presume that America came to Iraq to complete Israel's unfinished agenda: American might deployed to fulfil Israeli yearning for a final solution, complete subjugation and total Arab humiliation.
For the last 50 years, the world has witnessed the odious treatment of Palestinian Arabs at the hands of Israelis, although propaganda channels have justified Israel's right to co-exist. The right of a fanged wolf in a chicken coop.
Yet lies too have a maximum shelf-life. The excuses put forward for justifying the keeping of stolen land and continually depriving people of their rights are starting to peel away and the truth beginning to emerge. Public opinion has started to shift. A recent survey in European Union countries cited Israel as the greatest danger to world peace.
The numbing persecution one sees as Israeli helicopter gunships kill and tanks bludgeon homes and lives, and America lifts not a niggardly finger in protest but targets its ire against the suicide bomber, who already stands punished by his or her own act, is a mockery of justice approved by the most powerful nation.
When American contractors were being butchered and torn limb from limb in Fallujah, one's heart went out to the victims; nothing justified such inhuman treatment. But let us reflect on whether the treatment of the jailed inmates freed the beast that lurks within from its moral moorings.
America cherishes freedom and democracy at home but eschews it when considering the Arab Palestinian. The greatest friend of Israel has failed in rising to its ideals; instead America has come to share the swamp in which its friend remains mired.
America today is besotted with Israel and appears to be in servile compliance of Israel's agenda. Sanctions are slapped upon Syria because it is supposedly supporting freedom fighters, who only attack Israel.
Little Jordan is kept off-balance by allegations that it is not combating terrorism. And Iran is not permitted to go nuclear because "the Middle East must remain free of nuclear weapons", Israel notwithstanding!
The Israeli interest becomes self-evident in little matters too, which have long-term consequences. If America invaded Iraq to cleanse it of weapons of mass destruction, rid it of Saddam's tyranny and sow the seeds of democracy then what was the need for ordering Iraq to change its flag.
A flag depicting Arab nationalism and demonstrating an affinity with other Arabs; the flags of Syria, Egypt, Palestine, Sudan, Kuwait, Jordan, Oman and Yemen are similar in colour and design. Is the association dented if a new flag is hoisted which resembles the Israeli one?
The command structure within established armies reflects a pyramid shape, with each tier below following what emanates from above. Armies and those it employs must follow orders or else pay dearly.
Even the world's celebrated barbarian Tamerlane understood this. In his own words, "I so firmly established my authority that the amirs, and the vazirs, and the soldiers, and the subjects, could not aspire beyond their respective degrees."
He understood too that without a moral compass all is indeed lost. "Every empire, which is not established in morality and religion, nor strengthened by regulations and laws, from that empire all order, grandeur and power shall pass away. And that empire may be likened unto a naked man, who, when exposed to view, commandeth the eye of modesty to be covered: and it is like unto a house, which hath neither roof, nor gates, nor defences; into which whoever willeth, may enter unmolested."
Tamerlane was not a hypocritical sermonizer. After having vanquished the mighty Othmanli ruler Bayizid, the one-eyed Bayazid was brought before him. Tamerlane laughed out loudly.
Bayizid took offence. Taimur apologized: "Surely God does not think much of the kingdoms of this world because he gives one to a lame one and another to a half-blind one and lets the lame one take away the one-eyed man's kingdom."
Sermonizing from the pulpit of power on the virtues of democracy, whilst forgetting that it is a means to an end, and not the end in itself, is all that is on offer. Man has lived for centuries without democracy but rarely without justice.
America is kept captivated by the tantalizing web of Israeli democracy; which ensnares an old and settled population. The tangibles of freedom and justice lie crushed under the new dogma. The Israeli mahout leads the pachyderm to do its bidding in Iraq sonorously drubbing democracy's drum under a canopy of blue and white.
Despite investing heavily in its snooping abilities for the last several years, America has once again demonstrated its failure to look under its own rug. It did not know what its troops were up to in Iraq.
Donald Rumsfeld who was in charged of them is quizzing and studying whether arranging nude prisoners in pyramidal fashion constitutes "torture" or is simply an "abuse".
"As often as a study is cultivated by narrow minds, they will draw from it narrow conclusions," said John Stuart Mills. The torture (or "abuse") is compounded by the abject failure of the American presence to be kept informed about its own army.
Tamerlane's book on political and military instructions stresses the necessity, quality and accuracy of information. "I ordained that on every frontier, and in every country, and in every city, and in every camp a writer of intelligence should be established; and that each should write to the imperial presence, with truth and perspicuity, full accounts of the conduct and behaviour of the governors, and of the officers; and of the soldiers.
And I commanded that these accounts should be transmitted unto me day by day, and week by week, and month by month. And I ordained, that a thousand swift camel-men, and a thousand swift horsemen, and a thousand expeditious foot-men should be selected; and that they should return unto the presence, and give me information thereof, that I might provide the remedy before the evil arrived."
Tamerlane's informers no doubt brought to his attention that the Persian poet Hafiz had offered to give away his beloved Samarqand and Bukhara for the mole on the face of a fair maid of Shiraz in return for her love.
"How dare you give away my choicest cities for the mole on the cheek of some girl," thundered the much-feared Taimur, when Hafiz was brought before him. But Hafiz's quick reply pleased Taimur and Hafiz came away with expensive gifts. "Alas, O prince, it is this generosity which is the cause of the poverty in which you see me."
America looks at the world through Israeli eyes and sees only the mole on the Arab face as the entire Arab enterprise. The elephant blunders and tramples in Iraq but remains paralysed in Israel; double-standards wound the Arab and Muslim conscience. The world yearns for America to overcome its fear of Israeli mice, swing its trunk, trumpet a warning and stomp a little justice there.
A fortnight to remember
By Anwer Mooraj
This has been an action-packed fortnight. First there was the Shahbaz Sharif saga which ended in the former chief minister of Punjab taking a ridiculously long aerial detour to get back to Riyadh.
Then there was the display of that dreadful picture of a female American soldier hauling a naked Iraqi prisoner as if he was a dead goat, followed by a gallery of snapshots of sadistic abuse, which nearly cost the American secretary of defence his job. And finally, there was the tale of the signora in the sari declining an offer to take over the stewardship of the world's largest democracy.
The Shahbaz Sharif episode was ridiculous to say the least, and amply demonstrates the truth of the Urdu saying about the buffalo belonging to the man who wields the heavy stick. The facts speak for themselves.
Taking note of the government's failure to produce the alleged agreement under which Nawaz Sharif, his brother and their families had been exiled to Saudi Arabia, the Supreme Court of Pakistan observed that Shahbaz Sharif had a constitutional right to enter and reside in this country, as he was a citizen of Pakistan.
A bit of legal gobbledygook followed. The counsel of the petitioner contended that instructions had been issued at all airports that in the event his client tried to enter his homeland, he would be grabbed and deported to Saudi Arabia.
The judgement ruled that the contention was without any tangible evidence and its legal adjudication was not possible, nor could it be made a basis for invoking the extraordinary jurisdiction of the court.
Shahbaz Sharif's counsel subsequently filed a petition before the Lahore High Court in which protection was sought against possible deportation. But the efforts of the counsel came to naught, and the man whose action apparently turned the vast punitive machinery of the state on its head, landed, and was unceremoniously packed off to the holy land.
Sheikh Rashid, spokesman for the government, then held a press conference, aired on television, which was basically a hatchet job. Though he tried his best to assume a lugubrious dignity and an air of candour, he was grilled by the battery of journalists who had assembled and a lot of questions remained unanswered.
One can understand the government's predicament and reluctance to allow the Sharif brothers to return to the country whose passports they carry. Not only do they still have a considerable number of supporters.
Their very presence might induce some of the turncoats to return to the fold, and weaken the establishment parties, where cracks have been discernible in the ruling coalition.
After all, on May 8 Kabir Ali Wasti, vice-president of the PML(Q) predicted that Prime Minister Jamali would resign in 90 days because of his poor performance and inability to run the government in accordance with the president's seven-point agenda.
What has given the whole issue an interesting twist is Shujaat Hussain's contention that Shahbaz Sharif could have been deported under the banishment accord. Now here comes the sting in the tail.
An ATC judge had declared the PML(N) president a proclaimed offender. Under the law a citizen who has allegedly committed an offence is required to appear in court, and failure to do so could result in forfeiture of his property.
Now how can a citizen appear before a magistrate or a judge when the government is preventing him from entering his own country and denying him the right to defend himself?
Where the government is batting on a weak wicket is its inability to come up with any documentary evidence that even vaguely suggests that the brothers willingly accepted exile.
Even if documentary proof were available and was being withheld for reasons of lese-majeste, surely this information could have been submitted to the Supreme Court. Three and a half years have passed since the challenge was posed by the Sharif brothers, and the issue has remained as contentious as before.
The day after the world received the startling news that Sonia Gandhi had turned down the premiership of India, the caricaturist of a Pakistani English daily came up with a delightful cartoon. The picture was presented in two sections.
The first, entitled "Over Here" showed three desperate men rushing towards an empty chair. And the second, entitled "Over There" described a single woman in a sari, her pallu flying in the breeze, running away from an empty chair.
Irrespective of some of the editorial views expressed in this country about the damage done to the Congress by this momentous decision not to sit in parliament, Sonia Maino Gandhi has grown enormously in political and moral stature.
There is considerable sympathy and respect for this lady, not only in India and Pakistan, but also among intelligent people around the world. There is probably no other example in living memory of a politician who has come up with such an extraordinary act of political renunciation, and displayed the courage to stick to her decision in such extremely difficult circumstances.
Nobody will probably ever know the real reason why the lady just walked away from being prime minister of the world's largest democracy. She did speak about listening to her "inner voice" which aides close to her believe might have referred to security considerations.
After all, her mother-in-law and husband, both prime ministers, were assassinated while in office. Could there be a collective proclivity to ensure that the temporal existence of all members belonging to and connected with the dynasty of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, should be terminated?
Some political analysts believe that her decision was purely pragmatic. It has removed the emotive punching bag which the opposition BJP and their allies had been using in the run-up to the 14th national elections, and would have continued to use had she become prime minister. The threat to boycott the swearing in ceremony by the opposition was real and ominous and smacked of pure spite.
However, as events have shown the attack on her foreign birth and antecedents, although in extremely bad taste, apparently had little effect on the outcome of the elections in which the Congress emerged as the largest single party. It only demonstrated the desperation felt by the Hindu fundamentalist parties. After all, as one Congress supporter put it, "Sonia is as Indian as Mother Theresa."
Other critics believe that she, like Mahatma Gandhi, has never really been interested in holding an official position in government. She could have probably taken over as prime minister when she rode the crest of the wave of national sympathy which followed the assassination of her husband.
But she chose instead to retreat into the background and keep her family out of politics. According to her aides, she appears to be more interested in defending and protecting India's secular traditions, by introducing a people-oriented government. She does not want to provide the pretext for further chauvinist attacks by the opposition that is bent on subverting the electoral verdict.
When the euphoria has finally died down, and Manmohan Singh begins to grapple with the onerous task of governing a population of a little over a billion people, historians will see Sonia Gandhi as an exceptional leader who achieved considerably more by giving up an assignment than by taking it, by reconstructing a largely comatose and moribund party and leading her followers to a stunning electoral victory.
Could there be a greater tribute? The Pakistan Foreign Office should take comfort from the fact that the new rulers of India are interested in continuing the peace process and further normalizing relations. This is a hopeful sign and augurs well for the future.