History of Pakistan
Pakistan, populous multiethnic country of South
Asia. Having a predominately Indo-Iranian speaking population, Pakistan has
historically and culturally been associated with its neighbours Iran, Afghanistan,
and India. Since Pakistan and India achieved independence in 1947,
Pakistan has been distinguished from its larger southeastern neighbour by its overwhelmingly Muslim population (as
opposed to the predominance of Hindus in India). Pakistan has struggled
throughout its existence to attain political stability and sustained social
development. Its capital is Islamabad, in the foothills of the Himalayas in
the northern part of the country, and its largest city is Karachi, in the
south on the coast of the Arabian Sea.

From independence
until 1971, Pakistan (both de facto and in law) consisted of two regions—West
Pakistan, in the Indus River basin in the northwestern portion of the Indian
subcontinent, and East Pakistan, located more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) to
the east in the vast delta of the Ganges-Brahmaputra river system. In response
to grave internal political problems that erupted in civil war in 1971, East
Pakistan was proclaimed the independent country of Bangladesh.
