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January 2022: Hamid Mir Predicted Imran Khan's No Confidence Motion Issue

Meengla

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Imran Khan is running away with conspiracy theories and his fanbois and allies in the media, especially in social media, are his partners in promoting those theories. Here I am posting an article by the Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir which clearly shows that Imran Khan would be in trouble if the Pakistani Establishment was going to be 'neutral' and it appeared to Hamid Mir in January 2022, when he wrote that article, that the Establishment was 'neutral'. I am going to highlight the parts to show that the NCM was in the planning for months--even years though the article may not show that --and that the NCM was not because of Imran's Russia visit which happened months after the article was written.

If you connect the dots you'd see that this is simply a case of sell-out politicians making some money before their terms expire. Nothing new in Pakistan's history. And mind you some of those sell-outs were cajoled into joining Imran Khan by the same Establishment which Imran Khan is targeting now. Also, it reflects very poorly on Pakistanis' self-esteem that an interview given to an American journalist in which Imran Khan said 'Absolutely Not' becomes the rallying cry for a 'movement'! Firstly, no Pakistani leader would have given the military bases to Americans anyway and I believe they were not even asked for; perhaps some 'over the horizon' permission were/are being given. The 'Absolutely No' slogan is 'Absolutely Opportunistic' from Imran Khan!

There are plenty of ways to attack the opposition! But Imran has chosen the wrong and dangerous line. And Imran has been flouting the Pakistani constitution to try to get what he wants. I am bringing this article as a separate topic for people to ponder over it with open minds.




Opinion: Why 2022 is shaping up to be a nightmare year for Imran Khan​


Imran Khan has always portrayed himself as the savior of Pakistan. He has often claimed that a country borrows a lot only if its leaders are corrupt. Pakistanis still remember him saying that he would rather kill himself than beg for loans.
But that isn’t how he’s acted since he became prime minister in 2018. In the three years since then, he’s broken all previous records on borrowing ($40 billion). Now, his opponents are callously demanding that he should honor his words and end his life because he has surrendered the financial sovereignty of Pakistan to the International Monetary Fund. Khan appointed a former IMF official as the head of the central bank, and now the IMF has drastically curtailed the Pakistani government’s control over the bank as well. Some experts are claiming that Pakistan has gone bankrupt. Can Khan save Pakistan from an economic collapse, or will his own government crumble before the next election in 2023?
Until recently, Khan was one of the luckiest prime ministers the country has ever known. Unlike most of his predecessors, he has never faced problems from the powerful military establishment. The opposition has been weak and divided. Khan has enjoyed three years of smooth sailing. Yet now, his own political survival is under threat.
The trouble really began in September, when his party resoundingly lost local government elections held in military residential areas. That defeat showed that he no longer enjoys wide popularity among the armed forces.
Then, in December, came another local government election in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), along the border with Afghanistan. Khan’s party, the Movement for Justice, has ruled this province since 2013 — yet in this election, it lost almost all the important cities of the province. This panicked Khan. Instead of trying to understand the actual reasons behind the defeat, he dissolved the party’s national organization. New nominations to party posts are creating resentment among party workers who were already demoralized by infighting among party leaders.
Imran Khan thinks that his party lost in KP because of a poor selection of candidates. Some of his close aides think differently. They blame rising inflation for the recent defeat. Khan ushered in 2022 with a huge increase in gasoline prices, the highest ever in the country’s history. Common Pakistanis are already being squeezed by rising prices. Khan, for his part, claims that Pakistan is one of the “cheapest countries in the world” (meaning, allegedly, that the cost of living is low). In fact, Pakistan is facing the highest rates of inflation in South Asia. The Pakistani rupee has broken all previous records for depreciation against the U.S. dollar.
Many of those who voted for Khan in 2018 are now dissatisfied by his performance. He has run through four finance ministers and six finance secretaries in the last three years. Khan has always blamed the corruption of previous governments for the country’s economic problems — but that excuse is wearing thin. His own government has failed to make any improvement on corruption.
His foreign policy is another disaster. He embraced the Afghan Taliban immediately after the fall of Kabul. He tried to help the Taliban regime by organizing a special meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Islamabad. But rather than listening to Islamabad, the Taliban has been defying Pakistan in a very arrogant manner. It has not only interfered with the Pakistani army’s efforts to build a fence along the border — it has also exchanged fire with the army in some places. Pakistan tried to use the new regime in Kabul to broker a peace deal with the Pakistani Taliban but so far that has failed. Now, the Pakistani army and the Taliban are coming face to face in border areas and killing one another.
It is interesting that Khan is supporting the Afghan Taliban but pro-Taliban elements in Pakistan are not supporting him. The ruling party in KP was recently defeated by a pro-Taliban party, the Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI-F). The chief of the JUI-F, Maulana Fazl ur Rehman, has been a vocal critic of the military’s interference in politics. He told me last week that the military establishment stayed neutral in the KP elections.


According to some reports, the new head of Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency, ISI, Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmad Anjum, is trying to keep a low profile. If true, that’s bad news for Khan. If the ISI remains neutral it will be difficult for Khan to defeat a no-confidence move in Parliament, where his majority is very thin. (He stirred up a huge fuss last year when he used the ISI’s support to maintain his party’s control in parliament.)
Khan is also facing an investigation by the Election Commission over irregularities in funds received from outside Pakistan. This case is a ticking time bomb for Khan. Unfortunately for him, that’s not the only potential disaster he’s likely to face in the year ahead.
 
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I think NCM was in the pipeline since last year and PDM could have been successful if PPP didn’t back out last time

The lettergate is a good story to sell the public and it is being sold and wildly accepted among the masses so PTI will reap the benefit of it.. in reality however it is not a big news as I don’t believe there was a foreign conspiracy in it
 
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I think NCM was in the pipeline since last year and PDM could have been successful if PPP didn’t back out last time

The lettergate is a good story to sell the public and it is being sold and wildly accepted among the masses so PTI will reap the benefit of it.. in reality however it is not a big news as I don’t believe there was a foreign conspiracy in it
Well if PDM can say PTI is backed by Israeli lobby, gave up sovereignty to IMF etc. then why cant PTI return the favor in kind? This is nothing new in politics. Second of all, PDM is an apologist in-front of west due to obvious reasons, so IK will hit them there. Thirdly, all of PDM is capable of selling their country - memo gate is a recent example, which NS and Military filed together against Asif Zaradari, in which foreign help was sought against Army chief.
I don’t think there was a conspiracy, as US doesn’t need one. It was business as usual for their officials to hand out demands which involved removal of PM. Opposition definitely was encouraged by these forces and they obliged in return.

About predictions, if you make a prediction every month that govt is going etc, then you are bound to get it right. Him and many other geo journalists have been making predictions since the first day of govt.
 
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I think NCM was in the pipeline since last year and PDM could have been successful if PPP didn’t back out last time

The lettergate is a good story to sell the public and it is being sold and wildly accepted among the masses so PTI will reap the benefit of it.. in reality however it is not a big news as I don’t believe there was a foreign conspiracy in it
Respect your opinion but world knows how America overthrow govts who misalign with American interests. IK govt too refused to become American slave and we know the result.
 
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I think NCM was in the pipeline since last year and PDM could have been successful if PPP didn’t back out last time

The lettergate is a good story to sell the public and it is being sold and wildly accepted among the masses so PTI will reap the benefit of it.. in reality however it is not a big news as I don’t believe there was a foreign conspiracy in it

The threat letter does mention NCV before the NCV was submitted by PDM. That is evidence enough to show that the US are involved since they knew beforehand.
 
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Imran Khan is running away with conspiracy theories and his fanbois and allies in the media, especially in social media, are his partners in promoting those theories. Here I am posting an article by the Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir which clearly shows that Imran Khan would be in trouble if the Pakistani Establishment was going to be 'neutral' and it appeared to Hamid Mir in January 2022, when he wrote that article, that the Establishment was 'neutral'. I am going to highlight the parts to show that the NCM was in the planning for months--even years though the article may not show that --and that the NCM was not because of Imran's Russia visit which happened months after the article was written.

If you connect the dots you'd see that this is simply a case of sell-out politicians making some money before their terms expire. Nothing new in Pakistan's history. And mind you some of those sell-outs were cajoled into joining Imran Khan by the same Establishment which Imran Khan is targeting now. Also, it reflects very poorly on Pakistanis' self-esteem that an interview given to an American journalist in which Imran Khan said 'Absolutely Not' becomes the rallying cry for a 'movement'! Firstly, no Pakistani leader would have given the military bases to Americans anyway and I believe they were not even asked for; perhaps some 'over the horizon' permission were/are being given. The 'Absolutely No' slogan is 'Absolutely Opportunistic' from Imran Khan!

There are plenty of ways to attack the opposition! But Imran has chosen the wrong and dangerous line. And Imran has been flouting the Pakistani constitution to try to get what he wants. I am bringing this article as a separate topic for people to ponder over it with open minds.




Opinion: Why 2022 is shaping up to be a nightmare year for Imran Khan​


Imran Khan has always portrayed himself as the savior of Pakistan. He has often claimed that a country borrows a lot only if its leaders are corrupt. Pakistanis still remember him saying that he would rather kill himself than beg for loans.
But that isn’t how he’s acted since he became prime minister in 2018. In the three years since then, he’s broken all previous records on borrowing ($40 billion). Now, his opponents are callously demanding that he should honor his words and end his life because he has surrendered the financial sovereignty of Pakistan to the International Monetary Fund. Khan appointed a former IMF official as the head of the central bank, and now the IMF has drastically curtailed the Pakistani government’s control over the bank as well. Some experts are claiming that Pakistan has gone bankrupt. Can Khan save Pakistan from an economic collapse, or will his own government crumble before the next election in 2023?
Until recently, Khan was one of the luckiest prime ministers the country has ever known. Unlike most of his predecessors, he has never faced problems from the powerful military establishment. The opposition has been weak and divided. Khan has enjoyed three years of smooth sailing. Yet now, his own political survival is under threat.
The trouble really began in September, when his party resoundingly lost local government elections held in military residential areas. That defeat showed that he no longer enjoys wide popularity among the armed forces.
Then, in December, came another local government election in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), along the border with Afghanistan. Khan’s party, the Movement for Justice, has ruled this province since 2013 — yet in this election, it lost almost all the important cities of the province. This panicked Khan. Instead of trying to understand the actual reasons behind the defeat, he dissolved the party’s national organization. New nominations to party posts are creating resentment among party workers who were already demoralized by infighting among party leaders.
Imran Khan thinks that his party lost in KP because of a poor selection of candidates. Some of his close aides think differently. They blame rising inflation for the recent defeat. Khan ushered in 2022 with a huge increase in gasoline prices, the highest ever in the country’s history. Common Pakistanis are already being squeezed by rising prices. Khan, for his part, claims that Pakistan is one of the “cheapest countries in the world” (meaning, allegedly, that the cost of living is low). In fact, Pakistan is facing the highest rates of inflation in South Asia. The Pakistani rupee has broken all previous records for depreciation against the U.S. dollar.
Many of those who voted for Khan in 2018 are now dissatisfied by his performance. He has run through four finance ministers and six finance secretaries in the last three years. Khan has always blamed the corruption of previous governments for the country’s economic problems — but that excuse is wearing thin. His own government has failed to make any improvement on corruption.
His foreign policy is another disaster. He embraced the Afghan Taliban immediately after the fall of Kabul. He tried to help the Taliban regime by organizing a special meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Islamabad. But rather than listening to Islamabad, the Taliban has been defying Pakistan in a very arrogant manner. It has not only interfered with the Pakistani army’s efforts to build a fence along the border — it has also exchanged fire with the army in some places. Pakistan tried to use the new regime in Kabul to broker a peace deal with the Pakistani Taliban but so far that has failed. Now, the Pakistani army and the Taliban are coming face to face in border areas and killing one another.
It is interesting that Khan is supporting the Afghan Taliban but pro-Taliban elements in Pakistan are not supporting him. The ruling party in KP was recently defeated by a pro-Taliban party, the Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI-F). The chief of the JUI-F, Maulana Fazl ur Rehman, has been a vocal critic of the military’s interference in politics. He told me last week that the military establishment stayed neutral in the KP elections.


According to some reports, the new head of Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency, ISI, Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmad Anjum, is trying to keep a low profile. If true, that’s bad news for Khan. If the ISI remains neutral it will be difficult for Khan to defeat a no-confidence move in Parliament, where his majority is very thin. (He stirred up a huge fuss last year when he used the ISI’s support to maintain his party’s control in parliament.)
Khan is also facing an investigation by the Election Commission over irregularities in funds received from outside Pakistan. This case is a ticking time bomb for Khan. Unfortunately for him, that’s not the only potential disaster he’s likely to face in the year ahead.

It's in late Oct/Nov after US attache visited both SS and Nani on the same day. After that things began to move.

A little bit of research who let this dog off the leesh and feeding him informarion/propaganda will lead you directly to local collaborators.

Surprise the people are from establishment.

Go to the other threads you will find good information.
 
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Imran Khan is running away with conspiracy theories and his fanbois and allies in the media, especially in social media, are his partners in promoting those theories. Here I am posting an article by the Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir which clearly shows that Imran Khan would be in trouble if the Pakistani Establishment was going to be 'neutral' and it appeared to Hamid Mir in January 2022, when he wrote that article, that the Establishment was 'neutral'. I am going to highlight the parts to show that the NCM was in the planning for months--even years though the article may not show that --and that the NCM was not because of Imran's Russia visit which happened months after the article was written.

If you connect the dots you'd see that this is simply a case of sell-out politicians making some money before their terms expire. Nothing new in Pakistan's history. And mind you some of those sell-outs were cajoled into joining Imran Khan by the same Establishment which Imran Khan is targeting now. Also, it reflects very poorly on Pakistanis' self-esteem that an interview given to an American journalist in which Imran Khan said 'Absolutely Not' becomes the rallying cry for a 'movement'! Firstly, no Pakistani leader would have given the military bases to Americans anyway and I believe they were not even asked for; perhaps some 'over the horizon' permission were/are being given. The 'Absolutely No' slogan is 'Absolutely Opportunistic' from Imran Khan!

There are plenty of ways to attack the opposition! But Imran has chosen the wrong and dangerous line. And Imran has been flouting the Pakistani constitution to try to get what he wants. I am bringing this article as a separate topic for people to ponder over it with open minds.




Opinion: Why 2022 is shaping up to be a nightmare year for Imran Khan​


Imran Khan has always portrayed himself as the savior of Pakistan. He has often claimed that a country borrows a lot only if its leaders are corrupt. Pakistanis still remember him saying that he would rather kill himself than beg for loans.
But that isn’t how he’s acted since he became prime minister in 2018. In the three years since then, he’s broken all previous records on borrowing ($40 billion). Now, his opponents are callously demanding that he should honor his words and end his life because he has surrendered the financial sovereignty of Pakistan to the International Monetary Fund. Khan appointed a former IMF official as the head of the central bank, and now the IMF has drastically curtailed the Pakistani government’s control over the bank as well. Some experts are claiming that Pakistan has gone bankrupt. Can Khan save Pakistan from an economic collapse, or will his own government crumble before the next election in 2023?
Until recently, Khan was one of the luckiest prime ministers the country has ever known. Unlike most of his predecessors, he has never faced problems from the powerful military establishment. The opposition has been weak and divided. Khan has enjoyed three years of smooth sailing. Yet now, his own political survival is under threat.
The trouble really began in September, when his party resoundingly lost local government elections held in military residential areas. That defeat showed that he no longer enjoys wide popularity among the armed forces.
Then, in December, came another local government election in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), along the border with Afghanistan. Khan’s party, the Movement for Justice, has ruled this province since 2013 — yet in this election, it lost almost all the important cities of the province. This panicked Khan. Instead of trying to understand the actual reasons behind the defeat, he dissolved the party’s national organization. New nominations to party posts are creating resentment among party workers who were already demoralized by infighting among party leaders.
Imran Khan thinks that his party lost in KP because of a poor selection of candidates. Some of his close aides think differently. They blame rising inflation for the recent defeat. Khan ushered in 2022 with a huge increase in gasoline prices, the highest ever in the country’s history. Common Pakistanis are already being squeezed by rising prices. Khan, for his part, claims that Pakistan is one of the “cheapest countries in the world” (meaning, allegedly, that the cost of living is low). In fact, Pakistan is facing the highest rates of inflation in South Asia. The Pakistani rupee has broken all previous records for depreciation against the U.S. dollar.
Many of those who voted for Khan in 2018 are now dissatisfied by his performance. He has run through four finance ministers and six finance secretaries in the last three years. Khan has always blamed the corruption of previous governments for the country’s economic problems — but that excuse is wearing thin. His own government has failed to make any improvement on corruption.
His foreign policy is another disaster. He embraced the Afghan Taliban immediately after the fall of Kabul. He tried to help the Taliban regime by organizing a special meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Islamabad. But rather than listening to Islamabad, the Taliban has been defying Pakistan in a very arrogant manner. It has not only interfered with the Pakistani army’s efforts to build a fence along the border — it has also exchanged fire with the army in some places. Pakistan tried to use the new regime in Kabul to broker a peace deal with the Pakistani Taliban but so far that has failed. Now, the Pakistani army and the Taliban are coming face to face in border areas and killing one another.
It is interesting that Khan is supporting the Afghan Taliban but pro-Taliban elements in Pakistan are not supporting him. The ruling party in KP was recently defeated by a pro-Taliban party, the Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI-F). The chief of the JUI-F, Maulana Fazl ur Rehman, has been a vocal critic of the military’s interference in politics. He told me last week that the military establishment stayed neutral in the KP elections.


According to some reports, the new head of Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency, ISI, Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmad Anjum, is trying to keep a low profile. If true, that’s bad news for Khan. If the ISI remains neutral it will be difficult for Khan to defeat a no-confidence move in Parliament, where his majority is very thin. (He stirred up a huge fuss last year when he used the ISI’s support to maintain his party’s control in parliament.)
Khan is also facing an investigation by the Election Commission over irregularities in funds received from outside Pakistan. This case is a ticking time bomb for Khan. Unfortunately for him, that’s not the only potential disaster he’s likely to face in the year ahead.
Congrats. Lets see how long he would defend the army....
All veils are removed.
The champions of democracy are merely mirasi of their favourite man.
Lets see how long the bonhommie of hamid mir and Pakistan army exist.
The couple is dommed. It wont last.
 
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The threat letter does mention NCV before the NCV was submitted by PDM. That is evidence enough to show that the US are involved since they knew beforehand.

The quoted part is what Imran Khan also quotes and it is such a laughable connection that it normally wouldn't even require a response! So Americans knew beforehand that makes Americans as the instigator of the NCM?? Oh Bhai, things in Pakistan are not so hidden! Honestly, I just can't believe how gullible people are. In their hatred for the opposition, people are giving a blank check to Imran Khan. But at least @TheDarkKnight is honest enough to say that this is politics and Imran doing the same as the PMLN/PPP etc did to Imran Khan.
But Imran Khan was the sitting Prime Minister of Pakistan when he implicated America by showing the letter in a public meeting. There could have been severe economic consequences for Pakistan and Imran still lied about the American connection. That shows a deranged, irresponsible personality and if he is ever going to come back to power then he needs to stop acting like a Goddamned spoilt brat!
 
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Imran Khan is running away with conspiracy theories and his fanbois and allies in the media, especially in social media, are his partners in promoting those theories. Here I am posting an article by the Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir which clearly shows that Imran Khan would be in trouble if the Pakistani Establishment was going to be 'neutral' and it appeared to Hamid Mir in January 2022, when he wrote that article, that the Establishment was 'neutral'. I am going to highlight the parts to show that the NCM was in the planning for months--even years though the article may not show that --and that the NCM was not because of Imran's Russia visit which happened months after the article was written.

If you connect the dots you'd see that this is simply a case of sell-out politicians making some money before their terms expire. Nothing new in Pakistan's history. And mind you some of those sell-outs were cajoled into joining Imran Khan by the same Establishment which Imran Khan is targeting now. Also, it reflects very poorly on Pakistanis' self-esteem that an interview given to an American journalist in which Imran Khan said 'Absolutely Not' becomes the rallying cry for a 'movement'! Firstly, no Pakistani leader would have given the military bases to Americans anyway and I believe they were not even asked for; perhaps some 'over the horizon' permission were/are being given. The 'Absolutely No' slogan is 'Absolutely Opportunistic' from Imran Khan!

There are plenty of ways to attack the opposition! But Imran has chosen the wrong and dangerous line. And Imran has been flouting the Pakistani constitution to try to get what he wants. I am bringing this article as a separate topic for people to ponder over it with open minds.




Opinion: Why 2022 is shaping up to be a nightmare year for Imran Khan​


Imran Khan has always portrayed himself as the savior of Pakistan. He has often claimed that a country borrows a lot only if its leaders are corrupt. Pakistanis still remember him saying that he would rather kill himself than beg for loans.
But that isn’t how he’s acted since he became prime minister in 2018. In the three years since then, he’s broken all previous records on borrowing ($40 billion). Now, his opponents are callously demanding that he should honor his words and end his life because he has surrendered the financial sovereignty of Pakistan to the International Monetary Fund. Khan appointed a former IMF official as the head of the central bank, and now the IMF has drastically curtailed the Pakistani government’s control over the bank as well. Some experts are claiming that Pakistan has gone bankrupt. Can Khan save Pakistan from an economic collapse, or will his own government crumble before the next election in 2023?
Until recently, Khan was one of the luckiest prime ministers the country has ever known. Unlike most of his predecessors, he has never faced problems from the powerful military establishment. The opposition has been weak and divided. Khan has enjoyed three years of smooth sailing. Yet now, his own political survival is under threat.
The trouble really began in September, when his party resoundingly lost local government elections held in military residential areas. That defeat showed that he no longer enjoys wide popularity among the armed forces.
Then, in December, came another local government election in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), along the border with Afghanistan. Khan’s party, the Movement for Justice, has ruled this province since 2013 — yet in this election, it lost almost all the important cities of the province. This panicked Khan. Instead of trying to understand the actual reasons behind the defeat, he dissolved the party’s national organization. New nominations to party posts are creating resentment among party workers who were already demoralized by infighting among party leaders.
Imran Khan thinks that his party lost in KP because of a poor selection of candidates. Some of his close aides think differently. They blame rising inflation for the recent defeat. Khan ushered in 2022 with a huge increase in gasoline prices, the highest ever in the country’s history. Common Pakistanis are already being squeezed by rising prices. Khan, for his part, claims that Pakistan is one of the “cheapest countries in the world” (meaning, allegedly, that the cost of living is low). In fact, Pakistan is facing the highest rates of inflation in South Asia. The Pakistani rupee has broken all previous records for depreciation against the U.S. dollar.
Many of those who voted for Khan in 2018 are now dissatisfied by his performance. He has run through four finance ministers and six finance secretaries in the last three years. Khan has always blamed the corruption of previous governments for the country’s economic problems — but that excuse is wearing thin. His own government has failed to make any improvement on corruption.
His foreign policy is another disaster. He embraced the Afghan Taliban immediately after the fall of Kabul. He tried to help the Taliban regime by organizing a special meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Islamabad. But rather than listening to Islamabad, the Taliban has been defying Pakistan in a very arrogant manner. It has not only interfered with the Pakistani army’s efforts to build a fence along the border — it has also exchanged fire with the army in some places. Pakistan tried to use the new regime in Kabul to broker a peace deal with the Pakistani Taliban but so far that has failed. Now, the Pakistani army and the Taliban are coming face to face in border areas and killing one another.
It is interesting that Khan is supporting the Afghan Taliban but pro-Taliban elements in Pakistan are not supporting him. The ruling party in KP was recently defeated by a pro-Taliban party, the Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI-F). The chief of the JUI-F, Maulana Fazl ur Rehman, has been a vocal critic of the military’s interference in politics. He told me last week that the military establishment stayed neutral in the KP elections.


According to some reports, the new head of Pakistan’s powerful intelligence agency, ISI, Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmad Anjum, is trying to keep a low profile. If true, that’s bad news for Khan. If the ISI remains neutral it will be difficult for Khan to defeat a no-confidence move in Parliament, where his majority is very thin. (He stirred up a huge fuss last year when he used the ISI’s support to maintain his party’s control in parliament.)
Khan is also facing an investigation by the Election Commission over irregularities in funds received from outside Pakistan. This case is a ticking time bomb for Khan. Unfortunately for him, that’s not the only potential disaster he’s likely to face in the year ahead.
Don’t waste your energy . If all what Hamid Mitta says Is true than you should also believe what he said about Army
 
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IK was only in trouble because he rejected the USA's request/order for the basis for this purpose the head of the CIA paid a secret visit on the 06th of June 2021, to Pakistan but the request/order was not met and the plans hatched to overthrew the IK government, believe it or not as one likes:

CIA chief told drone bases won’t be hosted

Baqir Sajjad SyedPublished June 9, 2021




136
CIA Director William Burns testifies during a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing about worldwide threats, on Capitol Hill in Washington on April 14. — Reuters

CIA Director William Burns testifies during a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing about worldwide threats, on Capitol Hill in Washington on April 14. — Reuters
ISLAMABAD: Government officials have privately begun confirming a secret visit to Islamabad of CIA Director William Burns and are suggesting that he was firmly told that Pakistan would not host the spy agency’s drone bases on its territory.
This comes after New York Times in an article published on June 6 claimed that Mr Burns had travelled to Pakistan for meetings with Army Chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and ISI Director General Lt Gen Faiz Hamid to explore the possibility of counterterrorism cooperation between the two sides.
Read: US-Pakistan talks on military bases reach impasse: report
The Central Intelligence Agency is said to be looking for bases around Afghanistan from where it could gather intelligence on Afghanistan and execute counterterrorism strikes after the completion of troop withdrawal from there.
Meanwhile, US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, in response to a question about the US seeking a drone base in Pakistan, said: “We have had constructive discussions in the military, intelligence and diplomatic channels with Pakistan about the future of America’s capabilities to ensure that Afghanistan never again becomes a base from which Al Qaeda rises or any other terrorist group can attack the United States.”
Although the exact date of the CIA director’s hours-long trip has not been disclosed by either side, it is believed to have taken place in late April.
William Burns ‘secretly’ visited Islamabad to explore possibility of counterterrorism cooperation
The purpose of quietly sharing of information by the Pakistani officials with select journalists at this stage apparently looked to dispel the impression that the two sides were engaged in negotiations on hosting of US drone bases by Pakistan.
New York Times article had at one point said that American officials believed that Pakistan wanted to allow the US to access a base. But, it indicated that Pakistani officials were setting very stringent conditions.
“In discussions between American and Pakistani officials, the Pakistanis have demanded a variety of restrictions in exchange for the use of a base in the country, and they have effectively required that they sign off on any targets that either the CIA or the military would want to hit inside Afghanistan, according to three Americans familiar with the discussions,” as per the article.
Discussions between Pakistan and the US on this issue over the past few weeks have taken place at multiple levels — between Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, NSA Moeed Yusuf and his American counterpart Jake Sullivan, Gen Bajwa and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, COAS/DG ISI and CIA chief, and the army chief and the US charge d’affaires.
Officials said the CIA chief wanted to meet Prime Minister Imran Khan, but was plainly told that only counterpart meeting between heads of government of the two countries was possible.
The government’s insistence on counterpart meeting also stems from its anger over the absence of engagement at the highest level since US President Joe Biden took office in January.
The officials further said the CIA chief was categorically conveyed that no US operation would be allowed from Pakistani territory. They rather suggested to have asked the Americans to hand over the drones to them for carrying out the strikes against terrorist targets.
Published in Dawn, June 9th, 2021

 
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Hamid Mir and PMLN supporters, both waste of sperm
 
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The quoted part is what Imran Khan also quotes and it is such a laughable connection that it normally wouldn't even require a response! So Americans knew beforehand that makes Americans as the instigator of the NCM?? Oh Bhai, things in Pakistan are not so hidden! Honestly, I just can't believe how gullible people are. In their hatred for the opposition, people are giving a blank check to Imran Khan. But at least @TheDarkKnight is honest enough to say that this is politics and Imran doing the same as the PMLN/PPP etc did to Imran Khan.
But Imran Khan was the sitting Prime Minister of Pakistan when he implicated America by showing the letter in a public meeting. There could have been severe economic consequences for Pakistan and Imran still lied about the American connection. That shows a deranged, irresponsible personality and if he is ever going to come back to power then he needs to stop acting like a Goddamned spoilt brat!
I would only clarify that IK may be exaggerating the truth, but the letter does seem genuine and threats were made. Probably opposition was not in an active conspiracy, but they definitely received some encouragement. Maybe the role of a super power was to just tell Pak Army to back off, and let other forces succeed? So I wouldn’t say this is completely a lie or completely true. At the end this domestic Pakistani politics and people indulge in conspiracy based allegations etc.
 
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the NCM was in the planning for months--even years

Everybody and their grandmother knows that the NCM had been in the works ever since IK took office. It is the only means, short of violent protests, that the opposition could get rid of him.

This article actually SUPPORTS Imran Khan's narrative. The PDM was a circus going nowhere fast until the US stepped in and 'convinced' some MNA to support the NCM. It is no secret that the result of the vote hinged on a few individuals, and the US helped shift the balance against Imran Khan.
 
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