问答题Passage 6  The story of Pakistan is one of remorseless tug and pull between the civilian and military rulers on the one hand, and-the liberal and religious forces on the other.  In the process, the country has failed to become either a democracy, a the

题目
问答题
Passage 6  The story of Pakistan is one of remorseless tug and pull between the civilian and military rulers on the one hand, and-the liberal and religious forces on the other.  In the process, the country has failed to become either a democracy, a theocracy or a permanent military dictatorship.  The chief casualties have been the rule of law, the state institutions and the process of national integration, with grave consequences for the civil society.  How and why did all this come about?  The country was born in 1947 with a clean slate and a potential to follow in one of two directions.  It could opt for democracy. It had inherited democratic institutions and experience from the colonial rule, and was itself the creation of a democratic process involving national elections, parliamentary resolutions and a referendum.  Or it could become an Islamic emirate. The Pakistan movement was based on the theory that the Muslims of India were a nation and had a right to separate statehood.  They were granted separate electorate by the British rulers, and used Islamic identity as their main election slogan in 1937 and 1946.  But instead of making a clear choice, the early leaders tried to mix the two, and inadvertently sparked a series of political, legal and religious debacles that define today’s Pakistan. In political terms, democracy has been the first casualty of this hybrid system.  Its foundations were shaken by two controversial decisions made by the country’s founder and first Governor-General, Mohammad Ali Jinnah.  He dismissed the Congress-led government of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) by decree, and instead of ordering fresh elections, appointed a Muslim League leader as the chief minister with the mandate to whip up parliamentary support for himself.  Secondly, he declared to a large Bengali speaking audience in Dhaka, the capital of East Pakistan, that Urdu would be the only state language.  The first action created a precedent for Governor-General Ghulam Mohammad, a former bureaucrat, to dismiss the country’s first civilian government in 1953.  Since then, the governor-generals, presidents and army chiefs have dismissed as many as ten civilian governments that together ruled the country for 27 years. The remaining 33 years have seen direct military rule.  Mr. Jinnah’s second action alienated the Bengali population of the eastern wing, and set a precedent for the West Pakistani rulers to neutralise the numerical superiority of East Pakistan through legal entrapments and outright disenfranchisement.  After the secession of East Pakistan in 1971, the military rulers have repeatedly vitiated the federal and parliamentary character of the 1973 Constitution, thereby alienating the three smaller provinces of the remaining country.  Legal safeguards against tyranny fell by the wayside in 1954 when the Supreme Court justified the governor-generaP s dismissal of the government and the parliament by invoking the controversial “theory of necessity”.  The theory has endured, and nearly every dismissal of a civilian government and every military takeover have been upheld by the higher judiciary, undermining democratic traditions.  On their part, the military rulers have co-opted both surrogate politicians and religious extremists as instruments of political strategy and national security policy.  The political recruits have provided a civilian facade to military governments, while religious— and sometimes ethnic-extremists have tended to distract and destabilise governments run by secular political forces.  Last, but not least, the Americans have tended to use their crucial financial and military support selectively against democratic governments.  The pattern is unmistakably clear.  The first large-scale American food and military aid started to pour into Pakistan in late 1953, months after the dismissal of its first civilian government.  It continued for a decade as Pakistan under a military regime joined various US-sponsored defence pacts against the Soviet Union.  The US started having problems with Pakistan when an elected government came to power in1972, but poured billions of dollars into the country when another military regime took over in 1977 and agreed to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan.  Similarly, while the elected governments that followed during 1988-1999 had to live with a decade of US sanctions, the military regime of Gen Musharraf, that ousted the last civilian government in 1999, remains a “well supplied” ally in the US, “war on terror”.  There is also a gathering political storm on the horizon, in keeping with the cyclical pattern of the country’s political weather.  As elections approach, exiled leaders Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, both former prime ministers, threaten to return to the country with the express aim of effecting a regime change.  But Gen Musharraf, like his predecessors, is fighting to keep his military office and his special powers under the constitution to dismiss governments and parliaments.  Thus, the story of Pakistan continues to be one of despotic regimes using religious extremists and external support to keep the secular democratic forces at bay; and when these forces do assert themselves, to tie them down in legal constraints that are designed to ensure their failure.  It is the story of a society that has been going round in circles for the last 60 years.  1. State in one sentence the root cause that has brought Pakistan the unstable and disordered situation since its foundation?  2. What led to the secession of East Pakistan in 1971?  3. Describe the big blow to legal safeguards against tyranny and its outcome.  4. Draw a conclusion of the cyclical pattern of Pakistan’s political weather.

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更多“问答题Passage 6  The story of Pakistan is one of remorseless tug and pull between the civilian and military rulers on the one hand, and-the liberal and religious forces on the other.  In the process, the country has failed to become either a democracy, a the”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    The McDonald's has become one of the symbols of America's cultural export.()


    正确答案:对

  • 第2题:

    The fact that it has become more onerous or more expensive for one party than he thought ______ sufficient to bring about a frustration.

    A.is not

    B.is

    C.will probably be

    D.is one of the way by which it is


    正确答案:A

  • 第3题:

    A double male coupling is one that ______.

    A.has left hand twist

    B.has inside threads on both ends

    C.has outside threads on both ends

    D.takes two men to operate


    正确答案:C
    一个双凸链接件,两端有外螺旋结构。

  • 第4题:

    A company has a Frame Relay WAN with one central - site router and 100 branch office routers. A partial mesh of PVCs exists: one PVC between the central site and each of the 100 branch routers. Which of the following could be true about the number of EIGRP neighbor ships?()

    • A、A partial mesh totaling 100: one between the central - site router and each of the 100 branches.
    • B、A full mesh  -  (101 * 100) / 2 = 5050 - One neighborship between each pair of routers.
    • C、101 - One between each router (including the central site) a nd its nearby PE router.
    • D、None of the answers is correct.

    正确答案:A

  • 第5题:

    You are designing the physical database layout on your host machine. What is the relationship between tablespaces and datafiles in the Oracle database?()

    • A、One tablespace has only one datafile
    • B、Many tablespaces can share one datafile
    • C、One tablespace can have many datafiles
    • D、One datafile can contain many tablespaces

    正确答案:C

  • 第6题:

    单选题
    The fact that it has become more onerous or more expensive for one party than he thought ()sufficient to bring about a frustration.
    A

    is not

    B

    is

    C

    will probably be

    D

    is one of the way by which it is


    正确答案: A
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第7题:

    单选题
    As indicated in the passage, being free personal preference in that _____.
    A

    means that one can ignore other people’s criticism

    B

    means that one can impose his preferences on others

    C

    doesn’t mean that one has the right to do things at will

    D

    doesn’t mean that one has the right to charge others without evidence


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    细节推论题。文章末段指出,人人有权发表自己的意见,这不仅是允许的,而且是应当的。但这样做时,前提是只要不伤害别人就行。故C符合。

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    It is mentioned in the passage that one has to pay tax according to _____.
    A

    how much education one has received

    B

    whether one is single or married

    C

    how old one’s children are

    D

    where one lives


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    事实细节题。题干意为“文章提到,一个人应该根据什么来纳税?”由文章的第一段第一句可知,一个人缴纳税款是由很多因素决定的。“Whether the man is married”是其中的一项,其余选项在原文中均未提及。所以正确答案为B。

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    Which of the following describes one of the apartments the speaker has seen?
    A

    A railway on one side and a lake on the other.

    B

    A busy road on one side and a lake on the other.

    C

    A busy road on one side and a railway on the other.


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    独白明确提到One apartment I saw had been empty for two years. It has a busy road on one side and a railway on the other!

  • 第10题:

    问答题
    Passage 6  The story of Pakistan is one of remorseless tug and pull between the civilian and military rulers on the one hand, and-the liberal and religious forces on the other.  In the process, the country has failed to become either a democracy, a theocracy or a permanent military dictatorship.  The chief casualties have been the rule of law, the state institutions and the process of national integration, with grave consequences for the civil society.  How and why did all this come about?  The country was born in 1947 with a clean slate and a potential to follow in one of two directions.  It could opt for democracy. It had inherited democratic institutions and experience from the colonial rule, and was itself the creation of a democratic process involving national elections, parliamentary resolutions and a referendum.  Or it could become an Islamic emirate. The Pakistan movement was based on the theory that the Muslims of India were a nation and had a right to separate statehood.  They were granted separate electorate by the British rulers, and used Islamic identity as their main election slogan in 1937 and 1946.  But instead of making a clear choice, the early leaders tried to mix the two, and inadvertently sparked a series of political, legal and religious debacles that define today’s Pakistan. In political terms, democracy has been the first casualty of this hybrid system.  Its foundations were shaken by two controversial decisions made by the country’s founder and first Governor-General, Mohammad Ali Jinnah.  He dismissed the Congress-led government of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) by decree, and instead of ordering fresh elections, appointed a Muslim League leader as the chief minister with the mandate to whip up parliamentary support for himself.  Secondly, he declared to a large Bengali speaking audience in Dhaka, the capital of East Pakistan, that Urdu would be the only state language.  The first action created a precedent for Governor-General Ghulam Mohammad, a former bureaucrat, to dismiss the country’s first civilian government in 1953.  Since then, the governor-generals, presidents and army chiefs have dismissed as many as ten civilian governments that together ruled the country for 27 years. The remaining 33 years have seen direct military rule.  Mr. Jinnah’s second action alienated the Bengali population of the eastern wing, and set a precedent for the West Pakistani rulers to neutralise the numerical superiority of East Pakistan through legal entrapments and outright disenfranchisement.  After the secession of East Pakistan in 1971, the military rulers have repeatedly vitiated the federal and parliamentary character of the 1973 Constitution, thereby alienating the three smaller provinces of the remaining country.  Legal safeguards against tyranny fell by the wayside in 1954 when the Supreme Court justified the governor-generaP s dismissal of the government and the parliament by invoking the controversial “theory of necessity”.  The theory has endured, and nearly every dismissal of a civilian government and every military takeover have been upheld by the higher judiciary, undermining democratic traditions.  On their part, the military rulers have co-opted both surrogate politicians and religious extremists as instruments of political strategy and national security policy.  The political recruits have provided a civilian facade to military governments, while religious— and sometimes ethnic-extremists have tended to distract and destabilise governments run by secular political forces.  Last, but not least, the Americans have tended to use their crucial financial and military support selectively against democratic governments.  The pattern is unmistakably clear.  The first large-scale American food and military aid started to pour into Pakistan in late 1953, months after the dismissal of its first civilian government.  It continued for a decade as Pakistan under a military regime joined various US-sponsored defence pacts against the Soviet Union.  The US started having problems with Pakistan when an elected government came to power in1972, but poured billions of dollars into the country when another military regime took over in 1977 and agreed to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan.  Similarly, while the elected governments that followed during 1988-1999 had to live with a decade of US sanctions, the military regime of Gen Musharraf, that ousted the last civilian government in 1999, remains a “well supplied” ally in the US, “war on terror”.  There is also a gathering political storm on the horizon, in keeping with the cyclical pattern of the country’s political weather.  As elections approach, exiled leaders Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, both former prime ministers, threaten to return to the country with the express aim of effecting a regime change.  But Gen Musharraf, like his predecessors, is fighting to keep his military office and his special powers under the constitution to dismiss governments and parliaments.  Thus, the story of Pakistan continues to be one of despotic regimes using religious extremists and external support to keep the secular democratic forces at bay; and when these forces do assert themselves, to tie them down in legal constraints that are designed to ensure their failure.  It is the story of a society that has been going round in circles for the last 60 years.  1. State in one sentence the root cause that has brought Pakistan the unstable and disordered situation since its foundation?  2. What led to the secession of East Pakistan in 1971?  3. Describe the big blow to legal safeguards against tyranny and its outcome.  4. Draw a conclusion of the cyclical pattern of Pakistan’s political weather.

    正确答案: 【参考答案】
    1. The early leaders of Pakistan tried to mix democracy and Islamism, and inadvertently sparked a series of political, legal and religious debacles that define today’s Pakistan.
    2. Mohammad All Jinnah declared that Urdu would be the only state language, which alienated the Bengali population of the eastern wing, and set a precedent for the West Pakistani rulers to neutralist the numerical superiority of East Pakistan through legal entrapments and outright disenfranchisement.
    3. In 1954, the Supreme Court invoked the “theory of necessity” which has endured, and nearly every dismissal of a civilian government and every military takeover have been upheld by the higher judiciary, undermining democratic traditions.
    4. Pakistan continues to be one of despotic regimes using religious extremists and external support to keep the secular democratic forces at bay; and when these forces do assert themselves, to tie them down in legal constraints that are designed to ensure their failure.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    According to the passage, all the following statements are TRUE EXCEPT that_____.
    A

    a completion process will be held to select the four astronauts

    B

    the cost of Mars One could go as much as $6 billion

    C

    if it goes as planned, we could expect to watch Mars One on TV

    D

    the four astronauts could return to Earth after a few years' stay on Mars


    正确答案: C
    解析:

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    The passage is chiefly about ______.
    A

    an effort to protect an endangered marine species

    B

    the civilian use of a military detection system

    C

    the exposure of a U.S. Navy top-secret weapon

    D

    a new way to look into the behavior of blue whales


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    主旨题。本文主要叙述在冷战结束后,民用科学家首次使用在过去几十年建立起来的追踪潜在敌人军舰的水下监听系统网络,进行民用科研。对蓝鲸追踪仅仅是个引导,本文既不是对蓝鲸追踪法的研究也不是对海军秘密的揭露,而主要说明美国海军水下声音监测装置为民用科学家服务的问题,B项与文章内容相同。

  • 第13题:

    According to the passage, it is true that ________.

    [A] in the late 19th century in the United States the dividing line between adolescence and adulthood no longer existed

    [B] no one can marry without the permission of his parents until the age of twenty-one

    [C] one is considered to have reached adulthood when he has a driver’s license

    [D] one is not free from the restrictions of child labor laws until he can join the arm


    正确答案:A
    45. 答案[A]意为:获得驾照的人就可以算是成人了 第一段末句指出,到了 19世纪晚期,美国的青春期和成年期的分界线消失。Frontier 意为dividing line。所以,[A]为正确选项。
    第二段倒数第五句指出,18岁后,可以不经父母的同意结婚。所以[B]错在“21岁”。第二段四、六、七句说明:16岁青少年可以获得驾照,但只有到了 21岁,他们才称为法律意义上的成年人。所以[C]错误。第二段倒数第六、七句说明:16岁就可以不受童工法限制,而 18 岁后他们才可以参军。所以[D]错误。

  • 第14题:

    You are pushing a tow ahead,at high speed,near the right hand bank of a canal.The forces affecting your towboat and tow will tend to ______.

    A.Push both the head of the tow and the stern of the towboat away from the right hand bank

    B.Push the head of the tow away from,and pull the stern of the towboat into,the right hand bank

    C.Pull both the head of the tow and the stern of the towboat into the right hand bank

    D.Pull the head of the tow into,and push the stern of the towboat away from,the right hand bank


    正确答案:B

  • 第15题:

    If one has failed to report his or her income tax for quite a few years, he or she may be put in prison.

    A.Right
    B.Wrong
    C.Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第16题:

    Company.com has non-IBM fibre attached storage. The storage is connected to a node in the  cluster that has multiple adapters and virtual paths. There is a concern about detecting the loss of one of the fibre adapters since there is no indication to the administrator that one has failed.  What feature of HACMP can be sued to assist with this issue?()  

    • A、 Disk heartbeat
    • B、 Error notification
    • C、 Event notification
    • D、 Application monitor

    正确答案:B

  • 第17题:

    单选题
    It seems that the author of this passage ______.
    A

    is one of Freud’s devotees

    B

    believes in both Animism and Zoroastrianism

    C

    thinks that Freudian theory is sound

    D

    thinks that the truth is not in the hand of Freud


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    态度题。从第七段最后一句提到的“But as to Freud’s claims upon truth, the judgment of time seems to be running against him.”,可知对于弗洛伊德自称的真理,时间的证明似乎对其不利。因此选项D描述的“作者认为真理并不非掌握在弗洛伊德手中”为正确答案。

  • 第18题:

    单选题
    It can be inferred from the passage that ______.
    A

    new radio devices should be developed for tracking the endangered blue whales

    B

    blue whales are no longer endangered with the use of the new listening system

    C

    opinions differ as to whether civilian scientists should be allowed to use military technology

    D

    military technology has great potential in civilian use


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    推论题。根据美国水下声音监控系统对深海火山,洋流变化,全球温度等方面的民用科学的研究,说明军事技术转为民用更具有潜力。所以D为答案。

  • 第19题:

    单选题
    As is suggested in the passage, failure to feel happy often results from ______.
    A

    lack of company of friends

    B

    lack of freedom to love and be loved

    C

    taking everything one has for granted

    D

    ignoring the choices one is given in life


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    从文章倒数第二段“The more we can enjoy what we have,the happier we are. ”“It’s easy to overlook the pleasure we get from loving and being loved,the company of friends…”可知,我们并没有去发掘生活中的乐趣,没有把生活中的普通事情当成快乐的源泉。“We’re so self-conscious about our“right”to it that it’s making us extremely unhappy. ”而把一切当作是理所当然的,所以我们不快乐。故选c。

  • 第20题:

    问答题
    Passage 3  Certain barriers to foreign trade make selling in the international market a real challenge. Relatively few Americans are fluent in more than one language. (31)______, not all foreign traders speak English. (32)______, English is the second language in many countries, (33)______ is helping to lessen the language barrier. (34)______, an increasing number of Americans are learning a second language.  Each nation has (35)______ peculiar social customs and business practices, which often serve as a hindrance to international trade. The Latin American Siesta—the long lunch hour (36)______ makes the workday longer—is not common (37)______ other ethnic groups. Many foreigners working in Latin American countries find this custom difficult to observe. For some, driving a car (38)______ the left hand side of the road is confusing. Removing your shoes to enter a residence or religious building is (39)______ unique custom. Strange and exotic foods sometimes create a diet problem for the new comer abroad. On the other hand, the American practice of one-stop shopping in shopping centers is becoming common practice in many foreign countries.  One common foreign custom that has caused trouble is the “entry fee” or bribe that is often expected (40)______ dealing with foreign governments.

    正确答案: 31. and
    逗号之前指出很少有美国人能流利地说一种以上的语言,而空缺后则提到不是所有的外商都说英语。这两部分都是在陈述语言作为国际商务障碍之一的表现,属于并列关系,因此填并列连词and。
    32. However
    前文讲述语言在国际商务交流中带来的不利因素,而紧接着又指出英语是许多国家的第二语言,两部分之间为转折关系,又因该空后又逗号隔开,因此填入转折副词however。
    33. which
    该句主要成分是“英语是许多国家的第二语言”,因此逗号之后是非限定性定语从句修饰前面所指代的内容,因此应用which引导。
    34. Also
    上句指出由于英语是很多国家的第二语言,因此语言障碍的问题得到缓解。该句指出“越来越多的美国人在学习第二门语言”,与前文是递进的关系,因此填Also。
    35. its
    该句主谓宾齐全,需填入一个词来修饰宾语,因此应该填its,指代主语nation,表明“每个国家都有自己独特的社会风俗和商业惯例”。
    36. that
    破折号之间的内容是对主语Latin American Siesta的解释说明,可知the long lunch hour之后的内容为一个定语从句,因此可由that引导。
    37. to
    be common to为惯用搭配,意为“是…所共有/共用”,文中指“Latin American Siesta不是其他民族所共有的”。siesta(气候炎热国家的)午睡,午休。因此应填入to。
    38. on
    该处考查介词和名词搭配。side经常与介词on连用,on the left hand side意为“在左手边”,文中指“沿着左手边开车”,因此要用介词on。
    39. another
    上文提到在拉美国家,许多外国人感到遵守当地习俗很困难,并且给出了沿着左手边开车的例子。该句描述了走进一所住宅或宗教场所时要脱鞋的习俗,可知本句是在列举另一个独特风俗,答案为another。
    40. when
    该处描述又一个习俗,即和政府打交道要被收“entry fee”,因此应用when引导一个条件状语从句。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第21题:

    问答题
    练习17  Five hundred years ago, news of important happenings—battles lost and won, kings or rulers overthrown or killed—took months and even years to travel from one country to another. The news passed by word of mouth and was never accurate. Today we can read in our newspapers of important events that occur in faraway countries on the same day they happen.

    正确答案: 今天,我们可以报纸上读到当天在遥远国家所发生的重要事件。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    He has ______ arms now and is able to pick the table up with one hand.
    A

    weakest

    B

    weaker

    C

    strongest

    D

    stronger


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    句意:他现在更强壮了,能够一只手举起桌子。句子中的now以及句意可知这是在与过去作对比,因此用形容词比较级stronger。

  • 第23题:

    问答题
    Passage 2  The admission by the chief of the Pakistani Taleban, Baitullah Mehsud, that his group was behind Monday’s attack on a police academy in Lahore comes as little surprise.  Analysts and officials said in the immediate aftermath of the attack that the most likely connection was with Mr. Mehsud’s Tehrik-e-Taleban (TeT) organisation.  What has caught many off guard is how quickly and openly Mr. Mehsud accepted responsibility. Previously he and his organisation would either refrain from accepting responsibility for major attacks, or wait several months before acknowledging their role.  It is another indication of how much the power of the Taleban has grown and how secure they feel in their safe havens along the border with Afghanistan.  In particular, the Waziristan tribal region—part of which is controlled by Mr. Mehsud—stands out as the place which currently harbours some of the most wanted men in the world.  For Pakistani security forces and the US, it has increasingly become centre stage in what was once called “the war on terror”.  Everybody from Osama bin Laden to the trans-Atlantic bombing suspect, Rashid Rauf, has at one time or another said to have been based in this territory.  If there is a place in the world which can continue to provide shelter for al-Qaeda, this is it. It is a land of steep mountains and narrow valleys populated by tribesmen proud of their long history of “dying gloriously” in battle.  During the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Waziristan remained the vanguard of the struggle. The first of the Afghan cities to be lost by the Soviets was to a commander from this region, when Khost fell to the now legendary Jalaluddin Haqqani.  It is his son Sirajuddin who now heads the Afghan Taleban’s command in this region and the adjoining provinces of Afghanistan.  He was recently declared wanted by the US with a reward of $ 5m for his capture.  But the most famous and notorious of the Taleban warlords remains Baitullah Mehsud.  He and his TeT organisation are responsible for much of the spread of Taleban ideology across Pakistan.  Intelligence officials confirm that it was the help and training of TeT that enabled the Swat Taleban to demand and achieve a separate legal system in that Pakistani district.  They also say that his support was crucial to the Taleban in nearby Bajaur, enabling them to reach a peace deal with the army despite the military having much of the upper hand.  The TeT is also said to maintain networks as far afield as the southern port city of Karachi.  Increasingly, it has grown as a clear and present danger to the state of Pakistan.  But while the country’s security forces have been able to thwart Mr. Mehsud’s plans outside the tribal areas, it has been almost impossible to curtail his activities—and those of other Taleban leaders—in Waziristan.  In a series of tactical campaigns, starting in 2004, the Taleban have all but pushed the security forces out of Waziristan. The few that remain are confined to their forts.  Over the last year, the only thing that has penetrated the Waziristan tribal region are suspected US drones. These have killed hundreds of people, many of them militants, but also many civilians. That has angered ordinary Pakistanis and raised anti-American sentiments to an all-time high. Pakistan’s security forces say the drone strikes also prevent them from acting more strongly against the militants.  In fact, other than killing a lot of junior and mid-level al-Qaeda and Taleban personnel, the attacks have united all Taleban factions in Pakistan.  In a recent declaration, Pakistan’s other two Taleban factions—led by Maulvi Nazir and Hafiz Gul Bahadur-said they had formed an alliance with Mr. Mehsud.  The two belong to the Ahmedzai Wazir tribe, the Mehsud’s traditional enemy.  The Ahmedzai Wazir is the larger tribe and exists on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. They are believed to harbour most of the senior al-Qaeda leadership, including Osama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri.  The harsh realities on the ground have made some analysts adamant that Pakistani and US authorities have little choice except direct military action in Waziristan.  “This would mean bloody and entrenched fighting with serious losses against a battle-hardened enemy” says an ex-army official familiar with the region.  Whether both sides are willing to take this on, in the face of declining public support for the conflict and its casualties, remains one of the great unanswered questions in this increasingly bloody war.  1. What is the main difference in Mehsud accepting responsibilities between previous attacks and this one?  2. What are the unexpected impacts that the US strikes in Waziristan have?  3. Why does the author take the example of the legendary Jalaluddin Haqqani?

    正确答案: 【参考答案】
    1. He accepted responsibility so quickly and openly this time;/ in the past would either refrain from accepting responsibility for major attacks; /or wait several months before acknowledging their role
    2. Raised anti-American sentiments to an all-time high (angered ordinary Pakistanis) ;/ prevent Pakistan’s security forces from acting more strongly against the militants;/united all Taleban factions in Pakistan (Pakistan’s other two Taleban factions have formed an alliance with Mr. Mehsud.)
    3. To demonstrate the bravery of the Waziristan tribesmen (to echo the sentence “tribesmen proud of their long history of “dying gloriously” in battle”); / to explain why Waziristan is so hard to be penetrated (defeated) by the Pakistan and US forces.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第24题:

    单选题
    From the passage, we can draw a conclusion that _____.
    A

    family has deep influence on a person

    B

    compliments are very important to a person

    C

    one should treasure the relationship between others

    D

    when facing tough time, one should never say die


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    推理题。根据全文内容可知,本文主要讲述了作者在孩童时期的经历对他以后生活所造成的影响:他成年后不会称赞别人的性格特点都是由于他童年时期的经历造成的饿,童年时期作者是长子,承担起了协助养家糊口的重任,但同时他也只是个孩子,渴望得到母亲的关爱,但是他表露出对弟妹们的支持和鼓励只能让自己更失去母亲的关爱。由此可以推断出A选项的说法正确,其他三项都不是文章的中心和意图所在。因此,本题的正确答案为A。