History has taught us repeatedly that tyrants may attempt to bend the will of nations, conspirators may cloak themselves in masks of virtue, and foreign masters may manipulate the destinies of smaller states, but truth—unyielding and invincible—always rises to the surface.
Today, Bangladesh stands at such a crossroads, where the truth of our Liberation ideals collides with the grim reality of a puppet regime imposed through deceit, coercion, and collaboration. At the epicenter of this calamity is Dr. Muhammad Yunus, an opportunistic figurehead manipulated by the American deep state, the CIA, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and their rogue domestic allies—an entrenched camarilla working to rewrite the destiny of our hard-earned nation.
The people of Bangladesh are crying out: “Shun Yunus everywhere—cast him out of Bangladesh!” This is not merely a slogan. It is a moral injunction. It is a patriotic call to reclaim our glorified Bangladesh—a Bangladesh born at the bay of blood in 1971, where Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, and Christians together envisioned a secular, democratic homeland, free from tyranny, treachery, and foreign manipulation.
The Camarilla Behind the Curtain
Dr. Yunus is no solitary actor. He is but the frontman of a sinister orchestra. His rise to power was not the organic voice of the people but the manufactured design of foreign conspirators. The CIA, notorious for orchestrating regime changes across the Global South—from Iran in 1953 to Chile in 1973—has long meddled in the politics of Bangladesh. As historian Stephen Kinzer documented in Overthrow: America’s Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq (2006), the United States has a consistent pattern of destabilizing sovereign nations whenever democratic or nationalist leaders refuse to bow to their dictates. Bangladesh, tragically, has become their latest laboratory.
Alongside the CIA lurks the ISI, Pakistan’s perpetual shadow player. Since the 1971 defeat, Pakistan’s military-intelligence complex has never abandoned its dream of undoing Bangladesh’s sovereignty. Jamaat-e-Islami—the treacherous collaborators of 1971—are their domestic foot soldiers, now emboldened under Yunus’s illegitimate protection. The camarilla thus thrives: an unholy nexus of foreign agencies and local traitors, united by their hatred of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s secular and independent vision.
The Attempt to Bury the Truth
The tactics are familiar: suppress the press, jail the dissidents, rewrite history, and sow communal discord. Under the cloak of “interim governance,” Yunus’s handlers seek to impose silence on the truth of their conspiracy. But can truth be buried? As Mahatma Gandhi once reminded us, “An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.”
Yunus and his masters may attempt to present themselves as reformers or saviors, but their deeds betray them. They have unleashed mob violence, imprisoned freedom fighters, and fostered a climate where the killers of 1971 are normalized once again. They have tried to erase the legacy of Sheikh Hasina’s transformative leadership, which lifted Bangladesh into a new era of epic development, women’s empowerment, and global recognition. They seek to push us back into the abyss of the 1970s, when American and Pakistani machinations conspired to snuff out our newborn state.
The truth they fear is simple: Yunus is not a national leader but a foreign-manufactured pawn. His so-called “clean image” is a façade erected to disguise his complicity in undermining our sovereignty.
The 1971 Spirit Cannot Be Destroyed
In 1971, Pakistan’s military junta and their Jamaati collaborators also sought to bury the truth—by silencing intellectuals, murdering Hindus, raping women, and burning villages. They believed their brutality could erase the dream of an independent Bangladesh. Yet from that blood-soaked soil arose a nation, indomitable and united.
The present conspiracy is but a continuation of that struggle. Then it was Yahya Khan and Tikka Khan; today it is Yunus and his camarilla. The tools differ, but the goal remains the same: to subjugate the spirit of Bangladesh. Yet, as Rabindranath Tagore wrote, “The night is black, but the stars are bright.” The flame of 1971 still burns in the hearts of our people.
We must remind ourselves that our struggle was not for bread alone, nor for development statistics, but for a Bangladesh where all religions and communities could live together in peace and harmony. It was a vision larger than life, larger than death. Yunus and his handlers, in their cynicism, underestimate this enduring spirit.
The International Dimension of Betrayal
It would be naïve to view Yunus’s regime as a domestic aberration alone. It is part of a larger pattern of neo-imperial manipulation. The American deep state, through the CIA, has always preferred pliant leaders who prioritize Western strategic interests over national sovereignty. Yunus fits their mold perfectly—pliant, dependent, and willing to serve foreign masters under the garb of “global respectability.”
For Pakistan, propping up Yunus offers a double victory: revenge for 1971 and renewed leverage in South Asia. For Jamaat and other local collaborators, it offers a chance to roll back the war crimes trials and rehabilitate their criminal legacy. The triangle is complete: CIA-ISI-Yunus, with domestic traitors as their foot soldiers.
History again offers lessons. When Salvador Allende of Chile sought to chart an independent socialist path, the CIA orchestrated General Pinochet’s coup in 1973. When Mohammad Mossadegh of Iran nationalized oil, he was toppled in 1953. The parallels with Bangladesh in 2024–2025 are unmistakable.
The Call to Action: Boycott and Resist
If truth cannot be buried, then it must be proclaimed with courage. The people of Bangladesh must reject Yunus’s regime in every sphere of life. Political boycott, social boycott, economic boycott— “No place for Yunus, no place for traitors in Bangladesh—drive him out now!”
This is not merely about one man. It is about dismantling the camarilla that sustains him. It is about rejecting the CIA’s meddling, resisting Pakistan’s covert war, and defeating Jamaati-Shibir’s venomous infiltration. To boycott Yunus is to boycott betrayal itself.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” Silence in the face of this conspiracy is complicity. To speak is to resist. To boycott is to reclaim.
Reclaiming Our Glorified Bangladesh
Bangladesh was born not as a vassal state but as a proud nation, drenched in the blood of three million martyrs and sanctified by the tears of ten million refugees. That Bangladesh was envisioned by Bangabandhu as a place where “people of all religions will live together in peace and harmony.” That vision has been betrayed by Yunus’s regime, but it has not been extinguished.
To reclaim our glorified Bangladesh, we must act on three fronts:
Historical Vigilance: Guard the legacy of 1971 against distortion. Teach the new generations that freedom was not gifted by foreign powers but won by blood.
Political Unity: Awaken the democratic forces of the nation to rally behind the rightful leadership of Sheikh Hasina, who remains the legitimate Prime Minister of Bangladesh.
Global Advocacy: Expose the foreign conspiracy before the world. Let the international community know that the Bangladeshi people reject Yunus and denounce foreign interference in our sovereignty.
As Thomas Jefferson wrote, “The price of liberty is eternal vigilance.” Our vigilance must now be sharper than ever, for the conspirators are cunning, and their designs are cloaked in deception.
Termination: The Triumph of Truth
The camarilla of Yunus, the CIA, the ISI, and their rogue associates believes they can bury the truth of Bangladesh’s independence, sovereignty, and secular identity. But they miscalculate the resilience of our people. They underestimate the moral force of our martyrs’ blood. They forget that nations built on sacrifice do not die easily.
The truth cannot be buried. It may be delayed, distorted, or suppressed, but like a river, it finds its way back to the surface. The slogans ringing across the nation—“Yunus must go—let every voice rise, let every hand resist!”—are not the cries of the few but the roar of the many. They echo the eternal truth that Bangladesh belongs not to conspirators and collaborators, but to its people—united, defiant, and determined.
Let us, therefore, reclaim our glorified Bangladesh. Let us honor the promise of 1971. Let us ensure that future generations inherit not a puppet state, but a sovereign nation of peace, harmony, and dignity.
"You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time." — Abraham Lincoln
And the truth defies the grave—none can ever bury it.
Written by: Anwar A. Khan
Author's Bio: The writer was a freedom fighter in 1971 to establish Bangladesh and is an independent political analyst based in Dhaka, who writes on politics, human-centred leadership, and international affairs.
Copyright: Fresh Angle International (www.freshangleng.com)
ISSN 2354 - 4104
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