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Imran Khan’s Fall From Grace Is His Own Fault: Claims Indian author

Imran Khan’s Fall From Grace Is His Own Fault​

With his populist bravado and anti-Western rhetoric, the Pakistani prime minister has stumbled into a trap of his own making.

Pakistan is once again facing a political crisis. In a country where democratically elected leaders are regularly ousted from office, that should not be entirely surprising.

Yet this time it is. Although Prime Minister Imran Khan was elected in 2018 with only a slender majority in the National Assembly, he seemed likely to serve out his term without incident. His personal popularity was unquestioned. The economy appeared to have bottomed out. The opposition was divided and in disarray, with corruption cases against most of its senior leaders.

Most importantly, Khan had the clear backing of Pakistan’s powerful military. And, last year, Khan received a shot in the arm thanks to the disorderly U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, which installed a friendly Taliban regime next door.

Now Khan faces a no-confidence motion brought by an enraged, united opposition that he might well lose. Even if he survives, he will find his political capital severely dented — and be even more in debt to the military.

In large measure, he has only himself to blame. Khan has been caught up in his own rhetoric. He stormed into office promising to build an Islamist welfare state, not a reform-minded and growth-focused modern economy. For decades, he had targeted the United States and the West as the source of Pakistan’s problems and he did not tone down that rhetoric in office. He insisted that every other political leader was corrupt and, in Trumpian fashion, that he alone could fix Pakistan.

This persecution of the opposition leadership created a strong incentive for parties and politicians who had long been rivals to unify. Meanwhile, despite all his anti-corruption rhetoric, many of his erstwhile supporters have noticed a conspicuous lack of new evidence being unearthed or new criminal cases being filed against the leaders Khan promised to hold to account.

But the biggest problem is the economy. Pakistan has never been able to solve its dependence on imports. When its rupee depreciates or oil prices increase, it immediately faces intolerably high inflation — well over 12% now, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine caused spikes in commodity prices, as compared to an average of 5% or so in the five years before Khan took office.

The central bank’s benchmark interest rate is touching 10%. The balance of payments may hit a record this year. The Pakistan rupee has lost about half its value since Khan took office.


Khan’s response has been characteristic: He has announced subsidies for petroleum products and electricity to cushion the impact on voters. Given his political promise was not responsible governance but a new welfare state, he could hardly have done otherwise.

His government and its partisans have responded angrily to suggestions that Pakistan’s economy is in trouble. An official statement from the Finance Ministry denounced “fabricated narratives” about the economy in the global media. They’ve implied that the pandemic and the Ukraine war are to blame for any difficulties.


But the fact is that growth was slowing sharply even before the Covid-19 pandemic, down from 6% in the financial year before Khan took office to just over 3% in 2018-19 and shrinking in 2019-20. Khan’s welfare-focused profligacy hasn’t helped. The fiscal deficit tops 7% and interest payments swallow up a third of the federal budget.

In order to try and fill the fiscal gap without making politically disruptive changes to the direct tax base, Khan’s government has focused on import taxes, which now provide over 40% of government revenue. But that has left Pakistan ever more disconnected from global value chains, which depend on both exports and imports being easy and minimally taxed.

A country in such a precarious position would normally be able to turn to the International Monetary Fund or other global institutions for help. But how can Khan possibly admit he needs aid from the West? While Pakistan has signed up to a $6 billion bailout from the IMF, Khan cannot be seen to undertake any of the reforms the Fund wants, as that would compromise his anti-Western stance.

 
There is nothing genuine from a paid indian journo who is a senior research fellow at an organisation 'observer research foundation' thats objective is to malign pakistan at every forum.

Its members are part of indian intelligentsia and their objective is to discredit pakistan and its leaders at every opportunity through the likes of 'Bloomberg'

You should remove this article and apologise to all pakistanis, your are doing the enemies bidding and posting it on a pakistani defence forum.

Shame on you calling yourself a pakistani

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This is more appropriate

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Imran did inherit bad economy. Maybe he could have done things differently, but that's all in hindsight. Going to IMF at start was an option, but one can not fault him for trying to explore other options.
 
Imran did inherit bad economy. Maybe he could have done things differently, but that's all in hindsight. Going to IMF at start was an option, but one can not fault him for trying to explore other options.

He made many mistakes...

1st he didn't go imf... Tried to take loans from other countries.

2nd - everything handover to IMF later.

And finally, he got the vote against the corruption and politicians.

But the country rank on corruption more deep down because he compromised with having corrupt people on his left and right.

I believe that imran khan is not corrupted but for him, too much to handle inside and outside corruptions..

General musharraf was a best leader that I have seen in the past 2 - 3 decades.. Also, the world was respected to him as well.
 
Wow. An exclusive piece specially against IK who were claiming "we never asked for bases".
Sounds like Absolutely not has absolutely given third degree burns to many in the west.
Seething from it.
 
Immi ka to pata nahi as he's still our PM magar jis tarha se ye geedar ki khaal Wala tola expose hua hai it's their own fault.
 
The land of Pakistan was lenient in the last 74 years.

Everyone had a freehand.

But now it has ended.

Whoever goes against the idea behind creation of Pakistan will face humiliation, in sha Allah.


Imran Khan is just the representation of common man, he goes another Leader will come, and will be more fierce than him.

The crooks & thieves have no idea what is going to hit them.

PS: The Indians (hindutva goons) cheering on this forums will get a nerve wrecking surprise as well.
 
Insafis are finding fault with the article based on who wrote it, or where it is published, or who started this thread. But no one is debunking it based on the content. Guys shooting angry tangents is not going to make this go away. Debunk the assertions with facts.

When he says the Pakistan Rupee has lost almost half its value since last government, report the facts & tell the rest of us that PKR has lost ONLY about 40%, not 50%.

When he says that the benchmark interest rate is touching 10%, do remind us that it is ONLY 9.75%.

Come on guys, you can do

You need to first answer why sleeping with the enemy is ok.
 
"Absolutely not" rhetoric when there was not demand for airbases from US

Is that a quote that makes you "anti-Western"???????... Lol saying absolutely no foreign military bases??... Lol. Only slaves say "absolutely Yes" to things like that.

Imran Khan is just the representation of common man, he goes another Leader will come, and will be more fierce than him.

Lol... It looks like the return of Nawaz Sharif and Zardari or their children are the fierce lions you are dreaming of??..
 
Insafis are finding fault with the article based on who wrote it, or where it is published, or who started this thread. But no one is debunking it based on the content. Guys shooting angry tangents is not going to make this go away. Debunk the assertions with facts.

When he says the Pakistan Rupee has lost almost half its value since last government, report the facts & tell the rest of us that PKR has lost ONLY about 40%, not 50%.

When he says that the benchmark interest rate is touching 10%, do remind us that it is ONLY 9.75%.

Come on guys, you can do better.

At the outset I am mostly apolitical (only express my support when something like no confidence vote etc. comes up).

No statistics or anything will determine the future of PTI and IK. To me if this has to be fall from grace, then it is not of one person but the whole team. Opposition combined don't have a magic wand that will improve the situation as soon as IK is ousted. It will again be same show of blaming the previous government and their wrongs.

IK used the electable politics to his own benefit, the thing which most of the analysts ignore is that IK and his team may not have performed very well in the offices, but he now holds influence over a significant street power both domestic and international ...... that is something which he can always use to threaten any jarnail or future government. Similar to Tahir ul Qadri, Fazl ur Rehman and Rizvis .... the only difference is this one is no madressa generated but genuinely driven based on common people's grievances and misgivings this whole system has been dishing out to them.
 
"Absolutely not" rhetoric when there was not demand for airbases from US.

Again bashing EU in public gathering on writing a request letter to condemn Russia aggression, while same kind of letters were written to China and India among others, they dealt letters diplomatically instead of public bashing.
ofcourse for ppl like you, allowing drone attacks would be hero think in Pakistan which nawaz sharif did and you support it.

 
At the outset I am mostly apolitical (only express my support when something like no confidence vote etc. comes up).

No statistics or anything will determine the future of PTI and IK. To me if this has to be fall from grace, then it is not of one person but the whole team. Opposition combined don't have a magic wand that will improve the situation as soon as IK is ousted. It will again be same show of blaming the previous government and their wrongs.

IK used the electable politics to his own benefit, the thing which most of the analysts ignore is that IK and his team may not have performed very well in the offices, but he now holds influence over a significant street power both domestic and international ...... that is something which he can always use to threaten any jarnail or future government. Similar to Tahir ul Qadri, Fazl ur Rehman and Rizvis .... the only difference is this one is no madressa generated but genuinely driven based on common people's grievances and misgivings this whole system has been dishing out to them.
True. I agree.

IK should prove his majority in parliament & continue to be strong. If he can not do that, he must reorient his politics, his party, & his support.

IK would have won 2023 elections, had he organized his party well & played sensible politics. He did everything that was detrimental to his politics & is now paying the price. I used to tell myself that IK is a great leader but his advisors are bad. When he marched on Islamabad with TuQ, I had to conclude that he has advisors of his own liking and therefore he himself is at fault.

Machiavelli said that to see the quality of the ruler, notice the people around him. It is very much true.

You need to first answer why sleeping with the enemy is ok.
what do you mean by this nonsense comment?
 
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