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Pakistan army backs democracy after Islamabad clashes

This is a well-written article, the last sentence being painfully the best:

An obituary of change - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

An obituary of change
By Babar Sattar

IF it comes down to individuals here are the choices: revolutionary leaders who incite violence, provoke disciples to attack symbols of the state’s civilian authority, scramble to seek the army chief’s patronage in the thick of night, beaming; a prime minister who seeks his army chief’s protection but lacks the courage to acknowledge it and whose inability to govern and lead stands exposed by protesters holding Islamabad hostage; and the reluctant arbiter, the guardian angel, saviour-in-chief and responsible statesman, our army chief.

Who wins and who loses? Infighting politicos stand discredited and the khakis empowered. Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri joined hands to suck all legitimacy out of vital civilian institutions: the executive, judiciary, parliament and Election Commission. These institutions can proffer no solutions to Pakistan’s problems, we are told. The solution? Throw out the PM, then let these institutions initiate reform and begin to perform under able khaki oversight.

Why is democracy on the ventilator yet again? Because the second choice of every politico eager to grab power is still the army, the first being obvious.

Within PML-N’s question as to why revolutionaries have suddenly shown up in Islamabad and demanded the PM’s head is the insinuation that strings are being pulled from behind. If the khakis orchestrated the marches to teach Nawaz Sharif a lesson for trying Musharraf and relishing disparagement of the ISI’s good name by traitor Geo, they could want one of three things: rendering Sharif impotent, then letting him subsist at their mercy; installing a friendly set-up amenable to khaki control; or bringing things to a boil and intervening directly.

If the khakis were prompting the ‘revolution’, would you seek their chief’s help to dissipate it? You could, only if you believed that the ultimate aim of the prompting is to bleed you to impairment but not death, and had made your peace with remaining PM in a debilitated state under khaki protection. Or because you have learnt nothing from history, your own spat with Musharraf or the exhibition of khaki power these past few months, and still believe that you can rely on the military to subdue political opponents.

During the 1990s, PML-N relied on the khakis to fix everything from reviving Wapda and cleaning up canals to establishing military courts. It seemed at it again when it reached out to the army chief to pull Khan’s and Qadri’s ears. If the khakis were the scriptwriters of the current mayhem, would a sane government seek their help and in the process alienate parliament whose support was keeping the government afloat?

Then there is Khan holding forth on his container narrating how he pleaded with the army chief that Sharif, who accepted money from the ISI to win an election back in the early 1990s, was completely untrustworthy. The irony of an ex-army chief having reportedly put together the IJI and the Supreme Court having indicted him and an ex-ISI chief in the Asghar Khan case for their role in distributing money to get IJI elected seemed completely lost on Khan.

If Khan is the revolutionary who will destroy the status quo and instil change, what in his model of pure democracy is the conceived role of the army chief? Should he have rushed to place his demands before our chief security officer if he believes that khakis have no business intervening in politics? Or has he also made his peace with the fact that khaki patronage is the real game-changer without which his revolution would have remained suspended on a container.

How different will the political culture of a revolutionised Pakistan be? Sharif introduced the 14th Amendment under which a party member who disagreed with the party head would stand disqualified. Khan, proud of PTI’s internal party democracy, has threatened to chuck out parliamentarians who disagree with the mighty Khan and are loath to resign. Nawaz Sharif allegedly buys anyone who stands in his way. Khan paints as black and impugns the integrity and reputation of anyone who disagrees with him.

Khan’s prime contribution so far was that he brought an apolitical middle class out of their smug cocoons into mainstream politics and bred hope for change. Now he’s throwing it all away. Over the last month, he has led the core of his loyalists into a frenzied intolerant zone where all civilian state institutions stand delegitimized, where there is no room for disagreement, no patience for due process, no need to back allegations with proof and no value attached to the dignity and reputation of others.

Khan’s recent politics has polarised this despondent nation along partisan lines to breaking point. So effective is the revolutionary hypnosis that even PTI leaders as gifted as Asad Umar have suggested that with testimonies as weighty as those of Afzal Khan presented during media trial, what is left to prove. While reasons for removing the evil Nawaz are on repeat every evening, not a word is uttered about how Pakistan is to be reconstructed post-revolution.

The revolutionaries did not have the numbers to overwhelm Islamabad. The dharna couldn’t continue forever. Relying on the government to make mistakes under pressure, the breakthrough came when Sharif handed the reins to the army chief. The revolutionaries then created a spectacle, with full knowledge that use of force will deliver what their obdurate demands failed to: public sympathy. Mobs can certainly overthrow governments. But they can’t instal desirable ones. It will be a miracle if Sharif survives. But even bigger miracle will be if the no-holds-barred Imran Khan is allowed to rule by the khakis.

This is what return of praetorianism looks like. Gen Raheel Sharif is in charge now. With the khakis having emerged yet again as arbiters of last resort and the ultimate saviours, the subservience of the de jure system to the de facto system is complete. As Khan and Qadri fell over one another excited at being granted an audience with the chief, someone perceptively quipped on Twitter, “funny, how closely this ‘Naya Pakistan’ resembles purana Pakistan”.

The writer is a lawyer.
 
It's pretty hard to predict because so many factors are currently in play. Most likely outcome is that Nawaz remains in power, since, in my opinion, even the Army now thinks it would be bad for Pakistan's long-term stability if he was overthrown like this.

Some realism. Good.


In 1977 General Zia had to declare Martial Law but even he could not nullify the 1973 Constitution--he had to put the Constitution in 'abeyance'. In 1999 General Musharraf didn't even declare Martial Law--he just took over and called himself 'Chief Executive'.
Why did they both did that? Simply because even they feared the backlash. 1999 was a looooooong time ago. Forget America or KSA or whatever foreign power to influence Pakistani political transitions. It is the Pakistani society itself which is going to react against any Martial Law in the strongest term possible. The Army Chief cannot impose a Martial Law because he knows that, within a day, Pakistani Army will have to face the combined wrath of the media, the judiciary, the civil society, the lawyers community... I say this for a fact in advance.

The thuggish mobocracy of Imran Khan and Tahirul Qadri had no chance. Have no chance even now, legally. They were given a lot of freedom because Pakistani body-politic is very soft, very cautious in dealing with insurrections: Even the thugs of Lal Masjid were given a lot of space and, very regretabbly, a lot of media time.

Imran Khan perhaps has good intentions; but Qadri and his mullah brigade is very bad. Too bad, Imran, as another blunder, still trucked with the Qadri thug. Imran is no leader. He has never felt pressures in his life to 'think things through'. He is an idiot.
 
Good to see that the army has stopped jumping at any opportunity to take power.

No more bailing out politicians who, in the past, created issues and problems knowing that if they can start enough ruckus, the army will jump in and sack the sitting government.
 
This is a well-written article, the last sentence being painfully the best:

An obituary of change - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

An obituary of change


Pakistan has got the worst of all possible worlds - a government that won't govern and an agitating opposition that doesn't care about governance.

Pakistan's army commanders expressed concern and said they support democracy.....


It is not the job of the army to support democracy, merely to help uphold the constitution. The statement of "support for democracy" is vague (probably deliberately so) and could mean anything.
 
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If this continues and let us say the agitators manage to make Nawas Shariff resign, There will be an election and even if IK manage to win with large majority, How long will it take for NS supporters use the same tactics and say IK has rigged the election???? This is not good for pakistan (when i look from outside)
 
Nawan election karwa lo, inna rolla paya hoya aee.
Nawaz te Imran da karadau, pure Pakistan nu zarror musibat ch pana e:lol:
On topic, both TuQ and IK's eyes on two things, one, Army took over, that's their Inqilab:cheesy: 2nd is they looking for other big parties to join them MQM/JI etc
And reason is very simple both TuQ and IK don't have any huge support for their claims, from past 25 days specially IK crying and crying in every speech PAKISTANIO come and help me to make me Prime Minister, other day he said the peoples who not joining him are selfish and equal to animals, coz animals just think about themselves:logic:really?:no:
 
Pakistan's feudalistic halka-based politics is getting bashed. The embattled feudals would be running to Raihan Sharif to take over and interdict this. Throughout Pakistan's political history we have seen this classical clash between the elites and the have-nots. ZAB had identified this and played his cards accordingly. But his insincerity and over-ambition had proved fatal.
 
No they don't like DEMOCRAZY, the plan is to wait & see, they don't want to intervene directly because of corrupt politicians (PPP, PML-N, JUI, ANP & so on) who are enemy of Pakistan & PA. In the end it will be PA who will clean Pakistan from all these corrupt politicians, who have only come to power by fake votes & mandate to harm Pakistan in every possible way.
 
Pakistan has got the worst of all possible worlds - a government that won't govern and an agitating opposition that doesn't care about governance.

It is no wonder the country is the mess that it is.
 

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