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'The new chief' Opinion By Syed Talat Hussain

Well in my opinion which dosent matter much ....Like Sir Gen SIR Zia-ul-haq ..........he was President as well as Army Chief ....and the next Army chief denies to take responsibility as NEW 1 .....Saying he have taken all the pressure and must finish what he have started ......we cant allow him to leave the office ...and remain only President ........that great person was again in that C-130 ......so Gen Baig by passed four GENERALS to become COAS ......Sir Gen SIr ...Must Finish what His majesty started ....as Zarb e Azb ..........why r we in so hurry to let Him GO .....or this is NOT WE .....THE PAKISTANIES
 
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Sorry i can remember .... More worse things about GEO it happened to be a pain for it self while it was SiR Gen Sir P.M ruling ......it leaked a news internationally which was prohabitted then did it again after a warning ....why because its help inside the Army circles .....And then Sir forcefully closed it whole PVT MEDIA started aggetation .....BIG BOSS of that time pointed out to civilians LOOK what all of them are doing supporting one who is wrong ...means all the Media (PVT) is ..??? is that why Sir Gen Sir Zia-ul-Haq ....put ban on this department its strictly GoV terrotery .....even no chappa khana was allowed so nothing can be published without gov check .....including news paper any novel digest etc etc etc it makes peoples mind and wrong spreads .....NO NO NO
 
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From the recent "leaks" it doesnt seem tht Nawaz has confidence in army as an institution.. Whether true or false, but the "leaks" were made, from govt for a particular reason...to bring army under international pressure and make them look as bad guys...to the extent of giving indian media an opportunity to exploit it... It was music to indian ears........which shifted the entire narrative from kashmir to civil military relations.... It means...tht nawaz still hold tht old grudge against army.
There is no way the leaks could be true. These were at best an extension of media propaganda that India had on against Pakistan for a few weeks now. There moles and touts in the media orchestrated all that and the more hue and cry Army would have made, the more legitimacy the leaks would have got. But Army approached it professionally and the Govt as well acted rather maturely (or they had to), and I am sure as we speak, the person responsible would not be finding it easy to sit even on a soft sofa.

But, yes incident like this can create bad air between the institutions as one can only trust enough given the trust levels are already on the lower side.

If I give you my take on the matter of extension and new chief and if I may be allowed to weave a theory or two here..The PTIs call for Islamabad lock down might just have establishment's backing this time. (1) COAS might wrap up the government under extreme public pressure (PTI dharna pressure) (2) COAS might wrap up the govt under emergency act if the Govt tries force on the dharna participants. (3) Just the presence of dharna participants in Islamabad will ensure Govt cannot risk taking the decision of change of command so extension is almost inevitable

So I am forced to change my view on the matter that COAS will go away on time. Interesting yet challenging times ahead
 
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There is no way the leaks could be true. These were at best an extension of media propaganda that India had on against Pakistan for a few weeks now. There moles and touts in the media orchestrated all that and the more hue and cry Army would have made, the more legitimacy the leaks would have got. But Army approached it professionally and the Govt as well acted rather maturely (or they had to), and I am sure as we speak, the person responsible would not be finding it easy to sit even on a soft sofa.

But, yes incident like this can create bad air between the institutions as one can only trust enough given the trust levels are already on the lower side.

If I give you my take on the matter of extension and new chief and if I may be allowed to weave a theory or two here..The PTIs call for Islamabad lock down might just have establishment's backing this time. (1) COAS might wrap up the government under extreme public pressure (PTI dharna pressure) (2) COAS might wrap up the govt under emergency act if the Govt tries force on the dharna participants. (3) Just the presence of dharna participants in Islamabad will ensure Govt cannot risk taking the decision of change of command so extension is almost inevitable

So I am forced to change my view on the matter that COAS will go away on time. Interesting yet challenging times ahead
that supposed leak was a master stroke by Nawaz..
he knows COAS is going so it was his parting shot knowing well COAS is too busy with transition of leadership

PM house later denied leaking this report to Dawn which was all planned

Nawaz cant say things directly to someone he doesn't likely he does it from other people and media.
 
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that supposed leak was a master stroke by Nawaz..
he knows COAS is going so it was his parting shot knowing well COAS is too busy with transition of leadership

PM house later denied leaking this report to Dawn which was all planned

Nawaz cant say things directly to someone he doesn't likely he does it from other people and media.
If that's the case, it would be too naive to believe ISI/Army doesn't know it. So, in that case 30th October might just be the beginning of end of NS regime.
 
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The new chief
Home / Today's Paper / Opinion / The new chief
By Syed Talat Hussain
October 10, 2016
Print : Opinion
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The writer is former executive editor of The News and a senior journalist with Geo TV.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has to do many things to deal with a tough domestic and regional situation, but few are as important as his decision on the appointment of the new army chief. While he has chosen to keep mum on that score, there are strong reasons to argue that he should speak his mind and decide not just on time but immediately as to who is the next man leading one of the world’s strongest, nuclear-ready armies.

The conventional wisdom on the appointment of the next man in is to wait till the final moment and let the one at the helm of affairs to spend his last days in the prestigious office with full focus. Also it is pure courtesy that the outgoing man be treated well and not given the sense that his departure is desperately awaited. In case of General Raheel Sharif there are added reasons for a polite and civilised send-off. He has developed a stature and profile that requires a suitable culmination.

However, circumstances are such that niceties need to be curtailed and decisions made about his successor. This can be done by extending the warmest of farewells to General Sharif and without taking anything away from what is his due. What advantages does the country reap from a six-week early breaking of news about the next army chief? There are many.

Consider this. Pakistan is facing a long-term Fabian strategy by its arch-enemy, India. Signs are legion that Delhi is preparing for enduring hostility. Its diatribe against Pakistan is steady. It has announced plans to seal the international border with us and has amassed extra forces on the Line of Control. Media nationalism is at its peak and, other than the business-driven interests of investors, there aren’t any significant voices even from the so-called doves in the entertainment industry to preach sanity to Modi.

So the three critical elements – military resource, policy statement and public sentiment – are all in alignment within an international environment that India is making a constant effort to shape against Islamabad. Its encirclement plans also include regional alliances that are bankrolled by Delhi on the condition that they would make Pakistan look like the villain of the piece at all international forums. Washington is absolutely on board on all of this; in fact there is reason to believe that elements within the US have encouraged India to pursue the policy of inflicting a few cuts on Pakistan.

This multilayered hostile situation demands detailed response. It requires spreading the maps of Pakistan’s vulnerabilities on a vast table and doing a thorough debate on the way forward. This also involves working out a deep and well-directed consensus with the entire mainstream political leadership about the years to follow. One or two National Security Committee meetings are exercises in emergency response. These do not draw up a strategic road-map.

Indian moves are expansionist. Its designs are determined by its core desire to whittle Pakistan down. LoC crossfire is just the tip of the iceberg of a cold war that is here to stay in South Asia for years to come.

Clearly, an army chief who is barely two months away from his retirement cannot, even with the best of intentions and planning, create a military doctrinal framework to deal with India’s new aggressive stratagems. He has no time to carry out internal war-gaming on possible scenarios that this new situation has the potential of creating. The more so since the recent spurt of Indian warmongering is not just unprecedented in scale but also unique in its declared intent to support, promote and cause Pakistan’s fragmentation along sectarian and regional lines.

Earlier India used to plan. Now it is executing these plans. This has made it essential to revise some of our standard assumptions about Delhi’s capacity and its commitment to sustaining jingoism against Islamabad.

A new chief announced at this juncture will set the ball rolling for military planning and coordination with the civilian leadership for years ahead. It will end this now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t environment and get everyone to focus on the real tasks. The longer the issue of the next man in lingers on, the more precious time is wasted in useless pursuits and speculation. In this sense, Pakistan really needs to move on (pun unintended) with the next phase of military leadership, whose head, once decided, can then do his team selection and human resource deployment while General Raheel Sharif makes his farewell calls.

The other significant reason that makes a before-time announcement of the new army chief imminently sensible is the handing-over process and debriefings. There is a routine way such stuff is handled. Generally, the change of guard has its procedural formalities of passing the baton to the next one in line. But often the dead-end transfer of responsibilities of the office of the chief of army staff to the newcomer is hampered by the urgency of the change of command. The new man comes in. The old one goes out. There isn’t much time in-between for substantive orientation, exchange of notes and advice. This is why almost all army chiefs pretty much start anew and don’t draw on the experience of the predecessor.

Sometimes the challenge is compounded by circumstances and personality clashes. General Ziaul Haq did not have time to brief General Mirza Aslam Beg whose successor, General Asif Nawaz, came in an environment hardly conducive for a friendly and professional interface with his outgoing boss. General Pervez Musharraf wasn’t exactly fond of General Jehangir Karamat whose policies he openly criticised and belittled. He did not have a great equation with General Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani, whom he almost replaced months after grudgingly appointing him as the army chief.

Similarly General Raheel Sharif is not known for his friendship with General Kayani, many of whose initiatives have been reversed or stalled in the last three years. These personal matters have historically rebelled against the process of ‘handing over’ and have deprived the institution the value of shared wisdom.

In the present situation, it is critical that this transfer of power is done on the back of detailed interaction between the outgoing and incoming chiefs. It cannot just be a handshake, a salute and a bouquet of good-wishes. It has to be a deliberate, extensive and many-phased interaction spread over the remaining weeks of General Raheel Sharif’s tenure. From Afghanistan’s peace puzzle to the CPEC, from India touching Pakistan’s nuclear threshold to Washington double-timing Islamabad, from Karachi’s seedy politics to Fata’s final settlement, from the army’s internal financial and administrative affairs to building a core consensus with the civilian leaders on counterterrorism’s next-generation plans, a million things need to be told and explained.

As an article on leadership development, quoting the example of a Relay Race, says: “It is not enough to run the race. We also pass our mission to the next generation. We must hand off the baton at the right time, and must do it well.”

Doing it well in the present context means doing it now and doing it gracefully. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif will be failing in his duty to the need of the hour and of the nation if he were to keep this decision pending till the last minute. He should be open and swift about it. Announcing the decision on time is a constitutional requirement. Sounding it out to the person replacing General Sharif now is the requirement of the country’s strategic interests. By letting this selection linger on is an expensive policy Pakistan cannot afford.

The country needs to plan ahead, politically and militarily. It is confronted with a set of rough challenges. There is no time to stand on ceremony. The new chief’s nomination is the call of our times.

Email: syedtalathussain@gmail.com

Twitter: @TalatHussain12
nicely written article
and good Advice to Nawaz with a belief he means well for the Pakistani state and has the view and wisdom to look beyond himself and his family.
but reality is that his vengeance and revenge knows no bounds no limits, he has his score to settle with the army and he is not fond of this COAS, it is his time and he will make the departure miserable and uncomfortable for Raheel if he can get away with it.

the "leaked" story to Dawn is just a hint .. what line PM Nawaz is thinking on.

God Bless Pakistan

If that's the case, it would be too naive to believe ISI/Army doesn't know it. So, in that case 30th October might just be the beginning of end of NS regime.
I wish NOT

this sham of a democracy MUST stay. if your hint is towards military takeover then it will help the Indian narrative (against Pakistan) which the article talks about. politically Nawaz is secured.. he has his family in primary positions and has PPP, ANP etc (excluding PTI) on his side through threats, blackmail or bribes. NAP, Judiciary and civil administration is under his thumb as well. if he could help it.. he would rather see Ishaq Dar , Abid Sher Ali or Hassan Nawaz as next COAS.. then his kingship is realised and then House of Sherifs can rule us "justly" for centuries to come.
 
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nicely written article
and good Advice to Nawaz with a belief he means well for the Pakistani state and has the view and wisdom to look beyond himself and his family.
but reality is that his vengeance and revenge knows no bounds no limits, he has his score to settle with the army and he is not fond of this COAS, it is his time and he will make the departure miserable and uncomfortable for Raheel if he can get away with it.

the "leaked" story to Dawn is just a hint .. what line PM Nawaz is thinking on.

God Bless Pakistan


I wish NOT

this sham of a democracy MUST stay. if your hint is towards military takeover then it will help the Indian narrative (against Pakistan) which the article talks about. politically Nawaz is secured.. he has his family in primary positions and has PPP, ANP etc (excluding PTI) on his side through threats, blackmail or bribes. NAP, Judiciary and civil administration is under his thumb as well. if he could help it.. he would rather see Ishaq Dar , Abid Sher Ali or Hassan Nawaz as next COAS.. then his kingship is realised and then House of Sherifs can rule us "justly" for centuries to come.
It's like nature is conspiring against NS if you can see behind the 30th Oct call. All his might and riches would have been done and dusted by now had RS decided to be the last push for an already falling wall during previous dharna, but he chose to neutralize the situation instead. I am not sure he will stay neutral this time around. Neither the uncertain borders situation nor the increasingly apparent intentions of NS justify that. I can see RS still wearing Army uniform beyond November.

P.S: Agreed that this will please India diplomatically but there are always moderate options available to appease the annoyed international community. Like, an option to conduct general elections at a short notice.
 
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It's like nature is conspiring against NS if you can see behind the 30th Oct call. All his might and riches would have been done and dusted by now had RS decided to be the last push for an already falling wall during previous dharna, but he chose to neutralize the situation instead. I am not sure he will stay neutral this time around. Neither the uncertain borders situation nor the increasingly apparent intentions of NS justify that. I can see RS still wearing Army uniform beyond November.

P.S: Agreed that this will please India diplomatically but there are always moderate options available to appease the annoyed international community. Like, an option to conduct general elections at a short notice.

As much as I would like Gen Raheel Sharif to end this sham democracy and impose martial law..but one thing is for sure.. Even when he was first selected as COAS, i was sure tht he will never impose Martial law.. Even during the previous dharna i was sure tht he wont do it... Why? Because of his family legacy.. As much as the public would love it...but the media and politicians them calls them dictator and i almost knew tht he would never want to ruin(?) his family legacy by being called a dictator..tht people would say tht brother of Shabbir sharif became a dictator.. Because we have heard tht he is quite conscious of his family legacy....so we can be sure tht while his term is nearing end, he would never impose martial law..although i would love it to happen.
For the same reason, i think he will mever accept an extension too, since he has already made a public announcement regd tht in january, so he will never go back on his words..
You know...in the present circusmtances..i think the best option would be to wrap up the system..and bring a civilian technocratic govt for few years... Do strict and ruthless accountability, and then say after 5 years...conduct elections.,,
In the current system, no matter, even if elections happen a 100 times, things will go from bad to worse.. So the safest and best option is to bring a civilian technocratic setup for few years, with a civilain head of state....shun politics and then have elections after major corrupt peole have been punished...
 
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