All 28 Uses of
Pakistan
in
I Am a Seal Team Six Warrior
- A Pakistani force, part of the UN humanitarian team, went to investigate an arms depot at a radio station.†
p. 85..8
- When the Pakistanis came out of the building, the protesters attacked, killing twenty-four Pakistani soldiers.†
p. 85..9
- When the Pakistanis came out of the building, the protesters attacked, killing twenty-four Pakistani soldiers.†
p. 86..0
- Aidid's people, including women and children, celebrated by dismembering, disemboweling, and skinning the Pakistanis.†
p. 86..1
- Because it housed the Pakistani UN troops' compound, we called it the Pakistani Stadium.†
p. 91..1
- Because it housed the Pakistani UN troops' compound, we called it the Pakistani Stadium.†
p. 91..1
- On the same day, near the pasta factory, two kilometers away from the Pakistani Stadium, the Army's 362nd Engineers worked to clear a Mogadishu roadway.†
p. 107..8
- A Pakistani armored platoon protected them while the Quick Reaction Force (QRF) stood by in case they needed emergency reinforcements.†
p. 107..9
- Engineers and Pakistanis returned fire.†
p. 108..2
- More QRF helos were called in for help while the engineers tried to escape, heading for the Pakistani Stadium.†
p. 108..5
- Aidid's militia fired a 106 mm recoilless rifle, blasting the lead Pakistani tank into flames.†
p. 108..6
- The engineers, two wounded, and the Pakistanis, three wounded, fought on until they reached the stadium.†
p. 108..7
- One Pakistani died.†
p. 108..8 *
- At 1500, leaving nonessential equipment such as MREs, everyone in Pasha packed up, and we drove to the Pakistani Stadium.†
p. 110..7
- A Pakistani convoy came in to resupply.†
p. 112..4
- Under General Garrison's orders, Casanova and I rode with Steve (a Delta sniper working a lot with military intelligence), Commander Assad, and Assad's Pakistani troops.†
p. 112..5
- We drove across town to the northwest, near Pakistani Stadium, where the Pakistanis ran a tight compound.†
p. 112..5
- We drove across town to the northwest, near Pakistani Stadium, where the Pakistanis ran a tight compound.†
p. 112..5
- At night, the Pakistani compound received fire from the area of nearby trees and buildings.†
p. 113..6
- That evening, Casanova stayed in the tower while I snuck over to the edge of the Pakistani compound and looked over the wall at the adjacent Save the Children house.†
p. 115..1
- Casanova and I began surveillance on Atto's garage from the Pakistani tower at 0600.†
p. 115..5
- We decided our sniper hide in the Pakistani tower had been compromised and received permission to close it for a few days.†
p. 118..7
- We left the Pakistani compound at 1700 and arrived in the hangar at around 1730.†
p. 118..7
- The Pakistanis and United Arab Emirates (UAE) forces secured the area within minutes, protecting the surviving pilot and copilot as well.†
p. 124..4
- Not only did the QRF leave their pilot and copilot vulnerable, they also endangered the Pakistanis and UAE forces protecting them on the ground.†
p. 124..7
- We rode Huey helicopters out to the Pakistani Stadium, then rode local vehicles to two houses.†
p. 127..7
- While there was confusion on the radio about whether we were heading to the first crash site or the second, I heard that a crowd was closing in on Mike Durant with no ground forces in the area to help, and I remembered what happened to the Pakistanis when a crowd descended on them—they were hacked to pieces.†
p. 141..9
- Two Pakistanis and one Spaniard were wounded.†
p. 146..9
Definition:
-
(Pakistan) a south Asian Muslim republic that is the fifth most populous countryeditor's notes: Pakistan borders India, Afghanistan, Iran, & China.
When Great Britain granted independence to British India, two countries were created based on religious identity. India was primarily Hindu and Pakistan was predominantly Muslim.
Millions of people moved in the months after the partitioning in order to live with their religious majority. Hundreds of thousands were killed.
Pakistan was divided by India with those living to the west separated by 1,000 miles of India from those living in the east. The two Pakistani areas were called West Pakistan and East Bengal which was later called East Pakistan. In 1971 East Pakistan won its independence from West Pakistan and changed its name to Bangladesh.