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Army Tightens Grip on Pakistan as Imran Khan’s Popularity Wanes

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Army Tightens Grip on Pakistan as Imran Khan’s Popularity Wanes
Bloomberg News
June 10, 2020, 2:30 AM GMT+5:30

  • National carrier, housing, pandemic response run by military

  • Experts say it is a sign of Imran Khan’s dwindling influence
1000x-1.jpg

Imran Khan Photographer: Michael Reynolds/EPA/Bloomberg

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The generals are back in control in Pakistan -- unofficially that is.



There’s now more than a dozen former and current military officials in prominent government roles, such as running the state-owned air carrier, the power regulator and the National Institute of Health, which is leading the country’s pandemic response. Three of those appointments happened in the last two months.



The military’s heightened profile comes as Prime Minister Imran Khan sees his influence and popularity dwindle due to a slowing economy, high consumer prices and corruption investigations involving his close aides. Analysts have long seen army support as critical for Khan’s party, which holds 46% of seats in parliament, to hold together a government that relies on several smaller coalition partners to stay afloat.



In some ways, this is nothing new: The military is Pakistan’s most powerful institution and has directly ruled the country for large parts of its seven-decade history. Yet it’s a far cry from the “New Pakistan” Khan promised when he took office back in 2018.



“By appointing an increasing number of current and retired military officials in key positions, the government is ceding what little space civilians had in developing and executing policy in the country,” Uzair Younus, non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said by phone. “The military’s overt and covert role in governance continues to grow.”

Key Roles
Many in Pakistan can see the shift during government virus briefings on state television, in which uniformed current army officers are seen assisting the government’s pandemic response. Retired lieutenant general Asim Saleem Bajwa is now Khan’s communication adviser and also oversees the implementation of about $60 billion in Pakistan investments as part of China’s Belt-and-Road Initiative.

At least 12 army loyalists in the cabinet also took part in dictator-turned-President Pervez Musharraf’s administration, which ended in 2008. That includes Interior Minister Ijaz Shah and Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Khan’s finance adviser.

The greater military involvement even has the support of civilian government advisers such as Zaigham Rizvi, member of Naya Pakistan Housing Program taskforce in charge of running Khan’s main economic project of building low-cost houses. Two army officers were appointed to the body last month.

“There was a feeling that if we give the majority leadership to the army, the army has a good system,” said Rizvi, who worked at World Bank for 10 years as an housing expert. “They get things done.”

Pakistan’s army declined to comment. Nadeem Afzal Chan, a spokesman for Khan, wasn’t immediately available, while Information Minister Syed Shibli Faraz didn’t respond to a request for a comment.

Economic Distress
Khan has long dismissed allegations that he was too close to the military, saying in 2017 ahead of his election win that any notion that he’s an army stooge was a “bizarre conspiracy.” Last year he told local media “the army is standing with me.”

Yet economic distress from the pandemic is again raising tensions. Pakistan is the most infected nation in Asia after India, with more than 108,000 coronavirus cases and about 2,200 deaths.

The economy is forecast to contract for the first time in 68 years, with the central bank expecting the economy to shrink 1.5% in the year ending June. The nation received debt relief from the Paris club andan emergency loan of $1.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund in April, and is among countries seeking debt relief.

Questions over the army’s role in running the government came to the fore when the virus started escalating in March. While Khan addressed the nation and urged citizens to remain calm, it was the army spokesman who announced the lockdown the next day. Most of the press statements from the country’s virus nerve center, chaired by Planning Minister Asad Umar, are produced by the army’s media wing -- complete with its byline and logo.

On March 24, Khan was visibly annoyed when reporters asked him “who is in charge here?” Although there was no reference to the military, he threatened to leave abruptly.

Then in late May, his aviation minister, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, defended the national carrier’s performance and its military leadership following a passenger plane crash in the financial capital, Karachi. “It’s not a crime to appoint people affiliated to the military,” he said.

Diminishing Power
Khan’s hold on power will likely continue to diminish as current and retired army officers, as well as army-backed political appointees, assume more executive authority, said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia. He noted Khan will come under further pressure as Pakistan’s economic challenges continue to mount.

“The army has signaled its dissatisfaction with Khan’s handling of the coronavirus lockdowns -- there are also indications that the army has not been happy with the handling of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor as well as governance in Punjab, the largest province,” Rafiq said. “We’ve seen the chief military spokesman openly push for a tougher lockdown and a retired army officer assume roles as a government spokesman and top CPEC administrator.”

The military last year had already begun taking a more active role in policy making beyond foreign and national security policy, with Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa meeting top business leaders privately to find ways to boost the economy. The country’s Parliament adopted a law in January giving Bajwa a three-year extension starting from November 2019 and he was also made a member of a government’s economic board.

While many democracies appoint retired military officers to senior government positions, it becomes a problem if the civilians aren’t calling the shots, according to Michael Kugelman, a Washington, D.C. based South Asia senior associate at The Wilson Center.

“And herein lies the risk to democracy,” he said. “If retired generals are more influenced by their former bosses than by their current bosses, then democracy is not being properly served.”

— With assistance by Faseeh Mangi, Ismail Dilawar, and Khalid Qayum

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-on-pakistan-as-imran-khan-s-popularity-wanes
 
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When you take U-Turns on everything against whatever you have said in past 20 years, then why blame others for your blunders, false claims, deception....
 
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Yes general Bajwa is about to make an announcement on PTV as we write. Bloomberg is part of the media cabal that never has anything positive to report regarding Pakistan.

'said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia'

Some dubious sources there, what's their expertise in the region i.e. presence, footprint of work etc?

http://vizierconsulting.com/


They should ask Waz Ltd, defence affairs experts based in London.
 
.
Yes general Bajwa is about to make an announcement on PTV as we write. Bloomberg is part of the media cabal that never has anything positive to report regarding Pakistan.

'said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia'

Some dubious sources there, what's their expertise in the region i.e. presence, footprint of work etc?

http://vizierconsulting.com/


They should ask Waz Ltd, defence affairs experts based in London.
the author themselves are controversial too...just look them up...all of them are part of same group that runs Indian media
 
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Worst part is that imran khan might have had real potential to really change Pakistan but we will never know as he is not in control. A hugely wasted opportunity.
 
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“They get things done.”
simplest answer.

also, on economy (and off topic), i have a question: can the govt force businesses to earn a specific per% of their revenue through exports?
 
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simplest answer.

also, on economy (and off topic), i have a question: can the govt force businesses to earn a specific per% of their revenue through exports?
How will you force the customers to buy in foreign countries ?
 
.
Army Tightens Grip on Pakistan as Imran Khan’s Popularity Wanes
Bloomberg News
June 10, 2020, 2:30 AM GMT+5:30

  • National carrier, housing, pandemic response run by military

  • Experts say it is a sign of Imran Khan’s dwindling influence
1000x-1.jpg

Imran Khan Photographer: Michael Reynolds/EPA/Bloomberg

Share


Tweet


Post


Email
The generals are back in control in Pakistan -- unofficially that is.



There’s now more than a dozen former and current military officials in prominent government roles, such as running the state-owned air carrier, the power regulator and the National Institute of Health, which is leading the country’s pandemic response. Three of those appointments happened in the last two months.



The military’s heightened profile comes as Prime Minister Imran Khan sees his influence and popularity dwindle due to a slowing economy, high consumer prices and corruption investigations involving his close aides. Analysts have long seen army support as critical for Khan’s party, which holds 46% of seats in parliament, to hold together a government that relies on several smaller coalition partners to stay afloat.



In some ways, this is nothing new: The military is Pakistan’s most powerful institution and has directly ruled the country for large parts of its seven-decade history. Yet it’s a far cry from the “New Pakistan” Khan promised when he took office back in 2018.



“By appointing an increasing number of current and retired military officials in key positions, the government is ceding what little space civilians had in developing and executing policy in the country,” Uzair Younus, non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said by phone. “The military’s overt and covert role in governance continues to grow.”

Key Roles
Many in Pakistan can see the shift during government virus briefings on state television, in which uniformed current army officers are seen assisting the government’s pandemic response. Retired lieutenant general Asim Saleem Bajwa is now Khan’s communication adviser and also oversees the implementation of about $60 billion in Pakistan investments as part of China’s Belt-and-Road Initiative.

At least 12 army loyalists in the cabinet also took part in dictator-turned-President Pervez Musharraf’s administration, which ended in 2008. That includes Interior Minister Ijaz Shah and Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Khan’s finance adviser.

The greater military involvement even has the support of civilian government advisers such as Zaigham Rizvi, member of Naya Pakistan Housing Program taskforce in charge of running Khan’s main economic project of building low-cost houses. Two army officers were appointed to the body last month.

“There was a feeling that if we give the majority leadership to the army, the army has a good system,” said Rizvi, who worked at World Bank for 10 years as an housing expert. “They get things done.”

Pakistan’s army declined to comment. Nadeem Afzal Chan, a spokesman for Khan, wasn’t immediately available, while Information Minister Syed Shibli Faraz didn’t respond to a request for a comment.

Economic Distress
Khan has long dismissed allegations that he was too close to the military, saying in 2017 ahead of his election win that any notion that he’s an army stooge was a “bizarre conspiracy.” Last year he told local media “the army is standing with me.”

Yet economic distress from the pandemic is again raising tensions. Pakistan is the most infected nation in Asia after India, with more than 108,000 coronavirus cases and about 2,200 deaths.

The economy is forecast to contract for the first time in 68 years, with the central bank expecting the economy to shrink 1.5% in the year ending June. The nation received debt relief from the Paris club andan emergency loan of $1.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund in April, and is among countries seeking debt relief.

Questions over the army’s role in running the government came to the fore when the virus started escalating in March. While Khan addressed the nation and urged citizens to remain calm, it was the army spokesman who announced the lockdown the next day. Most of the press statements from the country’s virus nerve center, chaired by Planning Minister Asad Umar, are produced by the army’s media wing -- complete with its byline and logo.

On March 24, Khan was visibly annoyed when reporters asked him “who is in charge here?” Although there was no reference to the military, he threatened to leave abruptly.

Then in late May, his aviation minister, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, defended the national carrier’s performance and its military leadership following a passenger plane crash in the financial capital, Karachi. “It’s not a crime to appoint people affiliated to the military,” he said.

Diminishing Power
Khan’s hold on power will likely continue to diminish as current and retired army officers, as well as army-backed political appointees, assume more executive authority, said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia. He noted Khan will come under further pressure as Pakistan’s economic challenges continue to mount.

“The army has signaled its dissatisfaction with Khan’s handling of the coronavirus lockdowns -- there are also indications that the army has not been happy with the handling of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor as well as governance in Punjab, the largest province,” Rafiq said. “We’ve seen the chief military spokesman openly push for a tougher lockdown and a retired army officer assume roles as a government spokesman and top CPEC administrator.”

The military last year had already begun taking a more active role in policy making beyond foreign and national security policy, with Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa meeting top business leaders privately to find ways to boost the economy. The country’s Parliament adopted a law in January giving Bajwa a three-year extension starting from November 2019 and he was also made a member of a government’s economic board.

While many democracies appoint retired military officers to senior government positions, it becomes a problem if the civilians aren’t calling the shots, according to Michael Kugelman, a Washington, D.C. based South Asia senior associate at The Wilson Center.

“And herein lies the risk to democracy,” he said. “If retired generals are more influenced by their former bosses than by their current bosses, then democracy is not being properly served.”

— With assistance by Faseeh Mangi, Ismail Dilawar, and Khalid Qayum

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-on-pakistan-as-imran-khan-s-popularity-wanes

pakistanis are happy with army's active role in running govt of pakistan, their influence in every department of pak govt is welcomed by pakistanis . so no problem should be for others .
 
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How will you force the customers to buy in foreign countries ?
that depends on the industrialists. good marketing, quality products etc. just have to implement some sort of a structure to force them to do it. rest is on them.
 
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So the disinformation mill is underway as expected from certain cliques of dishonorable people...We have been listening to the ouster of PM Khan since the day he got elected.. Nothing will change because there is a firm ,core support that will stick with him... I know , people taunt him by saying U-Turn khan but that is irrelevant in the eyes of his supporters because in grand scheme of things , u-turns always happen and is done by every one... People who consistently point that out have either never read history or have malicious intent.

Bottom line is Khan will prevail , with or without military support... Unlike previous civilian leaders , his clout is enough to over-shadow military.

Yes general Bajwa is about to make an announcement on PTV as we write. Bloomberg is part of the media cabal that never has anything positive to report regarding Pakistan.

'said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia'

Some dubious sources there, what's their expertise in the region i.e. presence, footprint of work etc?

http://vizierconsulting.com/


They should ask Waz Ltd, defence affairs experts based in London.
 
. .
Army Tightens Grip on Pakistan as Imran Khan’s Popularity Wanes
Bloomberg News
June 10, 2020, 2:30 AM GMT+5:30

  • National carrier, housing, pandemic response run by military

  • Experts say it is a sign of Imran Khan’s dwindling influence
1000x-1.jpg

Imran Khan Photographer: Michael Reynolds/EPA/Bloomberg

Share


Tweet


Post


Email
The generals are back in control in Pakistan -- unofficially that is.



There’s now more than a dozen former and current military officials in prominent government roles, such as running the state-owned air carrier, the power regulator and the National Institute of Health, which is leading the country’s pandemic response. Three of those appointments happened in the last two months.



The military’s heightened profile comes as Prime Minister Imran Khan sees his influence and popularity dwindle due to a slowing economy, high consumer prices and corruption investigations involving his close aides. Analysts have long seen army support as critical for Khan’s party, which holds 46% of seats in parliament, to hold together a government that relies on several smaller coalition partners to stay afloat.



In some ways, this is nothing new: The military is Pakistan’s most powerful institution and has directly ruled the country for large parts of its seven-decade history. Yet it’s a far cry from the “New Pakistan” Khan promised when he took office back in 2018.



“By appointing an increasing number of current and retired military officials in key positions, the government is ceding what little space civilians had in developing and executing policy in the country,” Uzair Younus, non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said by phone. “The military’s overt and covert role in governance continues to grow.”

Key Roles
Many in Pakistan can see the shift during government virus briefings on state television, in which uniformed current army officers are seen assisting the government’s pandemic response. Retired lieutenant general Asim Saleem Bajwa is now Khan’s communication adviser and also oversees the implementation of about $60 billion in Pakistan investments as part of China’s Belt-and-Road Initiative.

At least 12 army loyalists in the cabinet also took part in dictator-turned-President Pervez Musharraf’s administration, which ended in 2008. That includes Interior Minister Ijaz Shah and Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Khan’s finance adviser.

The greater military involvement even has the support of civilian government advisers such as Zaigham Rizvi, member of Naya Pakistan Housing Program taskforce in charge of running Khan’s main economic project of building low-cost houses. Two army officers were appointed to the body last month.

“There was a feeling that if we give the majority leadership to the army, the army has a good system,” said Rizvi, who worked at World Bank for 10 years as an housing expert. “They get things done.”

Pakistan’s army declined to comment. Nadeem Afzal Chan, a spokesman for Khan, wasn’t immediately available, while Information Minister Syed Shibli Faraz didn’t respond to a request for a comment.

Economic Distress
Khan has long dismissed allegations that he was too close to the military, saying in 2017 ahead of his election win that any notion that he’s an army stooge was a “bizarre conspiracy.” Last year he told local media “the army is standing with me.”

Yet economic distress from the pandemic is again raising tensions. Pakistan is the most infected nation in Asia after India, with more than 108,000 coronavirus cases and about 2,200 deaths.

The economy is forecast to contract for the first time in 68 years, with the central bank expecting the economy to shrink 1.5% in the year ending June. The nation received debt relief from the Paris club andan emergency loan of $1.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund in April, and is among countries seeking debt relief.

Questions over the army’s role in running the government came to the fore when the virus started escalating in March. While Khan addressed the nation and urged citizens to remain calm, it was the army spokesman who announced the lockdown the next day. Most of the press statements from the country’s virus nerve center, chaired by Planning Minister Asad Umar, are produced by the army’s media wing -- complete with its byline and logo.

On March 24, Khan was visibly annoyed when reporters asked him “who is in charge here?” Although there was no reference to the military, he threatened to leave abruptly.

Then in late May, his aviation minister, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, defended the national carrier’s performance and its military leadership following a passenger plane crash in the financial capital, Karachi. “It’s not a crime to appoint people affiliated to the military,” he said.

Diminishing Power
Khan’s hold on power will likely continue to diminish as current and retired army officers, as well as army-backed political appointees, assume more executive authority, said Arif Rafiq, president of New York-based Vizier Consulting, a risk advisory firm focused on the Middle East and South Asia. He noted Khan will come under further pressure as Pakistan’s economic challenges continue to mount.

“The army has signaled its dissatisfaction with Khan’s handling of the coronavirus lockdowns -- there are also indications that the army has not been happy with the handling of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor as well as governance in Punjab, the largest province,” Rafiq said. “We’ve seen the chief military spokesman openly push for a tougher lockdown and a retired army officer assume roles as a government spokesman and top CPEC administrator.”

The military last year had already begun taking a more active role in policy making beyond foreign and national security policy, with Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa meeting top business leaders privately to find ways to boost the economy. The country’s Parliament adopted a law in January giving Bajwa a three-year extension starting from November 2019 and he was also made a member of a government’s economic board.

While many democracies appoint retired military officers to senior government positions, it becomes a problem if the civilians aren’t calling the shots, according to Michael Kugelman, a Washington, D.C. based South Asia senior associate at The Wilson Center.

“And herein lies the risk to democracy,” he said. “If retired generals are more influenced by their former bosses than by their current bosses, then democracy is not being properly served.”

— With assistance by Faseeh Mangi, Ismail Dilawar, and Khalid Qayum

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-on-pakistan-as-imran-khan-s-popularity-wanes

Little insecure indian posting BS. Bloomberg aka ARSE-berg writes this news by assistance from three well known arse-holes Faseeh Mangi, Ismail Dilawar, and Khalid Qayum .... says it all. :lol:
 
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Well the analysis is flawed and authors are shady beside said this IK and army were close from the day one of this govt and its a good thing that he is collaborating with institutions instead of backstabbing them just like nawaz and zardari. To me there is zero meaning in democracy and civil supremacy. Things should move inside Pakistan whether it be through or without civilians

10 years from now, Afridi fanboys will say the same thing about him. Reality is, IK's fan base doesn't exist outside KPK and internet.
If imran will make his property in seven continents from looted money then everyone will be happy to replace him
 
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mods please close the thread . the moment i saw the title i got it that it is going to be some non sense by some indian which it was. the patwaris will play to the indian tunes.
 
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