Pakistan Election: No Matter Who Wins, the Army Will Rule the Roost

As Pakistan votes today (February 8), the fight is expected to be between Nawaz Sharif’s PMLN and Bilawal Bhutto Zardari’s PPP. Imran Khan’s party (PTI), stripped of its election symbol, is forced to field its candidates as independents.

On Tuesday, January 30, 1962, Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, a former prime minister of Pakistan, was arrested from his Karachi residence on ambiguous charges of anti-state activities, under the Security of Pakistan Act. His real crime, however, was opposing General Ayub Khan’s martial law regime. Sixty-two years later, on the same day and date last week, another ex-PM, Imran Khan was sentenced to a 10-year jail term, on a flimsy charge of leaking state secrets by making a diplomatic cable or cipher public. The French writer Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr’s famous phrase, “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose” or “the more things change, the more they stay the same”, has perhaps never rung truer.

Like Suhrawardy, who at the time of that arrest had already been disqualified from electoral politics through the martial law regime’s Elective Bodies Disqualification Order (EBDO), Imran Khan too was barred from elections last year and remains imprisoned after a conviction on corruption charges. That’s where the similarities between Suhrawardy and Imran Khan end though. Suhrawardy was an intellectual and political giant who stood firmly for parliamentary democracy, a pluralist nation state, and refused to endorse military rule. Imran Khan, on the other hand, is an authoritarian demagogue who was handpicked, groomed, installed into the high office, and sustained there by the army till they fell out.

In addition to imposing martial law four times, the Pakistan army has ruled indirectly for most of the country’s existence. To that end, the junta has manipulated the political process by creating or co-opting what it deemed ‘patriotic’ and pliant individuals and parties. The army’s chosen politicians, however, have invariably spun out of its orbit like Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, and some even locked horns with the brass, like Nawaz Sharif.

They all ultimately paid the price for standing up to the army. And Imran Khan’s fate was not going to be any different. Chairman Mao Zedong had famously said that “the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party”. The gist of Pakistan’s perennial civil-military imbalance is that those wielding the guns clearly believe that no political party – including the assorted king’s parties that they sired themselves – should ever be allowed to command the gun.

Also read: Rigged or Not, Polls Are the Only Option for Pakistan

So when in late 2021, then PM Imran Khan tried to assert himself and insisted on retaining his closest ally Lt. General Faiz Hameed in place as the director general of the ISI, the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa stonewalled him. Never mind that General Bajwa had himself presided over Imran Khan’s installation into high office in an arrangement called the hybrid regime. By that time Imran Khan had already been losing the confidence and support of the military establishment, largely due to a horrifying mismanagement of the economy and shoddy governance.

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan with Chief of Army Staff General Qamar Javed Bajwa. Photo: Twitter/PTIofficial

The generals who were rightly getting blamed for imposing and sustaining the disastrous Imran Khan project, decided to change horses. The opposition political parties saw the army’s proclamation that it would stay politically neutral, as a nod to lunge at Imran Khan. In April 2022, a rainbow coalition called the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), which included parties like the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN) and Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Islam, supported by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), ousted Imran Khan and his Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) party’s government through a no-confidence vote in the National Assembly. PMLN’s Shehbaz Sharif became the PDM government’s PM.

Imran Khan, however, trained his guns on General Bajwa, holding him responsible for his downfall. He also tried unsuccessfully to forestall General Asim Munir – whom he had removed as the DG ISI –becoming the new COAS. While this escalated tensions between Imran Khan and the brass, the latter remained rather restrained. But all hell broke loose when on May 9, 2023, the PTI leaders and workers rioted against military installations after Imran Khan’s arrest. Imran Khan seemed to have calculated that with pockets of support within the army, judiciary, and general public, he could bring down the army chief through a coterie of generals allied with him and also upstage the PDM government. It was a monumental miscalculation and misreading of the army’s discipline and unity of command.

The army cracked its whip and thousands of PTI cadres and leaders were arrested. Imran Khan himself was rearrested and has remained incarcerated since. Scores of PTI leaders were forced to repent and pledge allegiance to the army publicly and quit the party. Independent political groupings and even a new party were carved out of the PTI. Imran Khan went from being the army’s darling to its detested demon. But he remained popular with his cult-like followers, something which worried the brass deeply. The PDM government’s own dismal economic performance, lacklustre leadership like Shehbaz Sharif and total subservience to the junta, didn’t exactly capture the public imagination. The generals and the PDM, which virtually served as the hybrid regime on steroids, tried every trick in the book to buy more time to manage Imran Khan.

A vitiated political environment

The outgoing PM Shehbaz Sharif had the National Assembly dissolved a couple of days before its term ended, which pushed the due date for fresh elections to 90 instead of 60 days. The PDM appointed the army’s chosen minions to run the caretaker government, stacking the executive and administrative deck against Imran Khan. A scheduled change of guard in the Supreme Court of Pakistan (SCP) deprived Imran Khan of his patrons in the judiciary as well. The army, which through its allied judges had shielded Imran Khan in the past in assorted legal cases, now deployed the administrative and lower courts machinery to expedite proceedings against him.

On the other hand, the former three-time PM Nawaz Sharif, whom the army had gotten convicted and disqualified from politics, and was living in self-exile in London, returned and got those verdicts reversed. While the charges against Sharif were trumped-up and politically-motivated, the relief coming their way was also seen as a political rapprochement between the PML-N and the army to pave the way for his ascent to the high office for a fourth time. Nawaz Sharif, now bereft of his anti-establishment plank and shouldering the blame for the PDM’s abysmal performance, however, needed more time to reconnect with and re-energise his base. The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) delayed the polls citing a requirement to redraw the voting districts following an updated census.

While the PMLN, the PPP, and other parties finally got their election campaigns off the ground, the army was simply not ready to leave anything to chance. The brass wanted even the remotest possibility of Imran Khan’s electoral victory or even a respectable loss to vanish. And the ECP obliged and stripped the PTI of its iconic election symbol – a cricket bat – on the technical grounds that it had not held intra-party elections. In a country with an abysmal literacy rate and preponderance of rural constituencies, an election symbol carries both brand value and polling-day utility. The ECP’s decision was clearly a ploy to undermine both.

Also read: Upcoming Elections in Pakistan Put Spotlight on the Youth

The Peshawar high court overruled the ECP decision and restored the PTI’s election symbol, only to be overruled by the SCP. The otherwise well-respected Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa was widely criticised for a verdict that stood on very thin techno-legal ice. Without its leader who had been forced out of the chairmanship due to his legal predicament and an election symbol, the PTI, though not legally banned, was pushed out of the contest as an organised party. A bruised and battered PTI still managed to field a large number of candidates, who were now forced to run as independents and were whimsically given a confusing assortment of election symbols by the ECP. The army, however, was not satisfied still.

A day after the verdict in the cipher case, Imran Khan and his wife were given a 14-year prison term on charges of misappropriating from the Tosha Khana state repository, several gifts he had received while in the office. But two major strikes against Imran Khan in two days were still not enough for the army. Imran Khan and his wife were fined and condemned to seven years in prison, on one of the most ludicrous and sleazy charges in Pakistan’s checkered judicial history. The couple was charged with contracting their marriage in violation of an Islamic requirement of a post-divorce waiting period called Iddah before which a woman is not supposed to remarry. The army and its henchmen in the judiciary were plumbing new depths. Whatever the veracity of the allegations might be, the unholy haste with which the kangaroo courts delivered these rapid-fire verdicts points to the army’s desire to seal Imran Khan’s electoral fate totally and irrevocably.

A demonstrator participating in a protest in Hyde Park, London, against what activists claimed was a US-backed coup against Imran Khan, former prime minister of Pakistan. Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Alisdare Hickson/CC BY-SA 2.0 DEED.

Through these three verdicts, the army sought to paint Imran Khan as a national security risk, as well as a financially and morally corrupt leader, who not only stands a zero chance in this election but in the foreseeable future as well. There are other legal cases pending against Imran Khan, including those pertaining to the rioting against military installations, which could be expedited, especially, in the unlikely event of the PTI-backed candidates somehow mustering a victory on February 8. In that case, an eventual government reference to the SCP seeking to ban the PTI remains well within the realm of possibility. At the time of this writing, the election campaign has ended in Pakistan, but the crackdown against the PTI workers and hounding of its rump leadership and potential voters continues unabated.

Calls such as from the spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, urging the Pakistani authorities to ensure a free and fair election, are too little and too late. While the pre-polls rigging by keeping the PTI from running as party and crippling its electoral machinery should be enough to deliver the army’s desired verdict, election-day tinkering cannot be ruled out.

Army to have the final say

Assuming that the army has successfully vanquished Imran Khan come February 9, Pakistan will be looking at yet another civilian dispensation beholden to the junta. Nawaz Sharif, seen by many as the frontrunner, had started off by challenging the junta over its misadventures like the Imran Khan project. But along this campaign trail, he chose to hold his silence over the army’s disastrous role in political engineering, while castigating the judges responsible for his 2017 ouster. The PMLN, and for that matter, the PPP or any other political party’s calculus seems to be that by confronting the army over its political machinations, they risk falling out of favour with the brass. The army, for its part, has always had a penchant for introducing or picking multiple players and factions in the political arena. The tactic is conducive to the army’s strategic objective of retaining the ultimate power by coopting the politicians who, in turn, compete for its benefaction.

Samuel Finer has noted in The Man on Horseback: The Role of the Military in Politics that “politically the armed forces suffer from two crippling weaknesses, which preclude them, save in exceptional cases and for brief periods of time, from running without civilian collaboration and openly in their own name … one weakness is the armed forces’ technical inability to administer any but the most primitive community. The second is their lack of legitimacy: that is to say their lack of moral title to rule”.

Also read: Watch | ‘Pakistan Election Already Decided, 8th February a Mere Formality’

Pakistan’s foremost human rights defender, the late and much-lamented Asma Jehangir had put it much more simply when she stated that the army’s generals are dangerous duffers out to ruin Pakistan. And by accounts of General Asim Munir’s interactions with the students at home and the Pakistani diaspora in Washington, D.C., Asma Apa was on the dot. One participant of the D.C. meeting described General Munir as an intellectual flyweight who underwhelmed the audience by his half-baked geopolitical views anchored in religious certitude and cliché verses that he misattributed to Pakistan’s national poet Allama Iqbal. Be that as it may, General Asim Munir, however, serves the army’s institutional imperatives and his sophomoric intellect would matter very little.

What remains of profound concern is that the Pakistan army, which considers itself the final arbiter of patriotism, national interest and the ultimate framer and executer of foreign and national security policies, has used the Imran Khan and PDM hybrid regimes to make a power and governance grab not seen since 1958 when General Ayub Khan imposed the country’s first martial law. The army got the PDM government to give constitutional and legal cover to its business enterprises and sweeping powers to its intelligence agencies. The army is much more deeply entrenched today than it was on the eve of the 2018 elections.

While the PMLN and the PPP made no mention of the civil-military relations, foreign policy, the simmering conflict in Balochistan and the disastrous security situation in several Pashtun regions, during the elections campaign, these are realities that would have to be grappled with. The army with its burgeoning business empire, a voracious appetite for budgetary allocations, and now a constitutionally-sanctioned seat at the economic policy table, is more deeply involved than ever in the fiscal affairs as well. Manifestos and rhetoric of the political parties, including the PTI’s, however, sounded more like a wish list rather than policy prescriptions for the deep economic crisis that Pakistan is in. No matter who forms the government will be dictated to by the army sitting atop the tutelary commanding heights.

History, however, informs us that even the weakest PMs like Muhammad Khan Junejo and Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali ended up having differences with the strongest army dictators, General Ziaul Haq and General Pervez Musharraf, respectively. Nawaz Sharif himself was ousted thrice by the army when he tried to assert his constitutional authority. The power dynamics of the de jure authority and de facto rulers is such that once in the office, the former invariably seeks agency that’s due to their moral title. None of this is lost on Imran Khan’s political opponents and the army with which they have made a common cause. But they still chose to destroy democracy in order to save it from Imran Khan.

That Imran Khan is a vindictive demagogue who had hounded not just his foes but friends as well and sought to perpetuate himself in the office through undemocratic means, is not moot. But even he should have had a fair judicial trial as well as a fair chance in the court of public opinion. The way the army has manipulated the executive, parliamentary, judicial and electoral machinery to keep Imran Khan out hasn’t just undermined those very institutions for here and now; it has set the stage for instability and political chaos for years to come. Pakistan’s already dysfunctional democracy has been dealt a near-fatal blow. No matter who wins the elections, it is the ‘dangerous duffers’ who will rule the roost.

Mohammad Taqi is a Pakistani-American columnist. He tweets @mazdaki.

Imran Khan Reveals Details of India-Pakistan ‘Peace Plan’ That Never Materialised

The former prime minister of Pakistan said that if the peace plan were to see the light of day, India would have made some concessions on Kashmir and Pakistan would have hosted Narendra Modi.

New Delhi: Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan has said that efforts were on in 2019 to work out a peace plan with India which could have also led to the visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Pakistan.

Speaking to the US-based think tank Atlantic Council on June 19, the former premier said that the proposed plan had the backing of Pakistan’s former army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa.

“Look, I don’t remember the trade talks. All I know is that there was supposed to be a quid pro quo. India was supposed to give some concession, give some sort of a roadmap to Kashmir, and I was going to then host Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi in Pakistan. But it never materialised. So, it never went further than that. That’s how it was,” he said.

Khan confirmed that the Pakistani side wanted to go ahead with the proposed peace plan despite India’s decision to dilute Article 370 and revoke the special status enjoyed by Jammu and Kashmir in August 2019. However, it should be noted that Pakistan continues to protest the changes effected by the Indian government in Jammu and Kashmir.

This is not the first time news emerged of a peace plan being worked out in the background by India and Pakistan, and Pakistan’s plans to host Modi. In April, Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir said that General Bajwa, during a press briefing, told journalists that he had “struck” a deal with India on Kashmir and that Prime Minister Modi would visit Pakistan. If things unfolded as planned, Mir claimed that Modi would have travelled to the historic Hinglaj temple in Pakistan in 2021. The proposal was a result of backchannel talks which had led to the announcement of observation of a ceasefire at the Line of Control in February 2021. However, the plan eventually fell through.

Also read: Was PM Modi to Visit Pakistan in April 2021? Here’s What Pakistani Journalists Have Been Saying.

Khan sought to explain why the peace plan did not materialise when asked about it by the interviewer. It is to be noted that Khan – who also held the commerce portfolio whilst he was prime minister – accepted the recommendations of the Cabinet’s Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) which favoured the limited resumption of trade ties with India in March 2021 as commerce minister. However, in an interesting turn, within six days, the same Khan as prime minister rejected the proposals in favour of trade ties with India. Even though Khan went back on proposals calling for normalisation of ties with India, General Bajwa continued to root for it. Khan served as prime minister between August 2018 and April 2022 whilst General Bajwa occupied the office between November 2016 and November 2022.

“Suddenly, on 5th August 2019, India unilaterally got rid of that treaty and the UN resolutions and took away the statehood. What were we supposed to do? A hundred thousand Kashmiris have been martyred in their quest for independence, and so what was Pakistan supposed to do? Accept the fait accompli? Or actually, stand with the people of Kashmir who had given such sacrifices? So that’s what we decided. And by the way, I tried my best before then to improve our relationship with India. In fact, my first statement was, ‘You come one step towards us, we’ll come two towards you’. I mean, I tried everything, but I came across this brick wall, and I realised it’s something to do with the RSS-BJP mentality where they’ve cashed in on hostility with Pakistan. That’s all…,” he explained.

The former prime minister also went on to add that “it was that first India would give some concession, then we would invite them to Pakistan”. “The concession was that they would gradually take steps that would undo what they had done on August 5 [2019]. But that never happened. So, we had never moved forward,” he added.

In the aftermath of the August 2019 Kashmir decision by India, Pakistan downgraded its diplomatic ties with India over the change in Kashmir’s status and decided not to post a high commissioner in New Delhi.

There is no comment yet from the Indian side on Khan’s remarks.

The former prime minister also responded to General Bajwa’s reported comments that Pakistan is not equipped to fight a war with India. He said General Bajwa had shared the same view with him too. “Look, even if that was the case, for an army chief to make these statement is so ridiculous. What army chief makes these foolish statements even if it is the case?” he said.

He also went on to add, “So, number one, yes, General Bajwa would make these statements, but I mean for an army chief, he is basically saying, ‘We are just too weak.’ You never make such a statement. But more to the point, who wants war with India? I mean, why would we want war with India? Why would anyone want to see a confrontation between the two countries?”

Relations between Khan and General Bajwa have been sour since the military stopped backing the former’s government, which led to his ousting in April 2022 in a parliamentary vote of confidence. Relations have soured further after supporters of Khan’s party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf attacked military infrastructure and establishment after the former prime minister was arrested in early May.

‘NSC Statement Didn’t Include Conspiracy’: Pakistan Army Refutes Ousted PM Imran Khan’s Claim

The Pakistan Army has also clarified that its chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, is not seeking an extension and will neither accept one.

New Delhi: Contradicting the claims of ousted Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan that there was a “conspiracy” behind the toppling of his government, the Pakistani military has clarified that the statement issued after the meeting of the National Security Commission (NSC) last month did not include the word “conspiracy”.

“As far as the military response about the NSC meeting is considered, that stance, in that meeting was fully given, and then a statement was issued…which clearly says what was concluded in that meeting. The words used are in front of you…as I said…the words used are clear. Is there any word such as conspiracy used in it? I think not,” Dawn quoted Major General Babar Iftikhar, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) director general, as saying.

Major General Iftikhar, from the media wing of the Pakistan Army, was answering a question posed by a journalist after a press conference on the recently held formation commanders conference at the General Headquarters.

The journalist in question had asked the army leadership’s response to Imran Khan’s claim of a “foreign conspiracy” to dislodge him, and whether the NSC had endorsed such a claim.

Pakistan deputy speaker Qasim Suri too cited the “NSC statement” among others to controversially block a no-confidence motion brought by the opposition against Khan initially. To buttress his claim, Suri had ruled that “circumstances show that there is a nexus between the no-confidence motion, foreign intervention and the activities of the state’s representatives deputed to Pakistan”. He had also said “foreign state was interfering in the internal affairs of Pakistan and Prime Minister Imran Khan was its primary target”.

Also read: At Massive Rally, Pak PM Imran Khan Claims Foreign Powers Behind Conspiracy to Overthrow His Govt

After a prolonged political turmoil, Shehbaz Sharif was sworn-in as the new Prime Minister of Pakistan on Monday, April 11. Imran Khan had lost a no-confidence vote.

On the other hand, he also asserted that Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa was not seeking an extension and would neither accept one.

“No matter what, he will be retiring on November 29, 2022,” the spokesman said, adding that General Bajwa was “unwell” on the day Sharif took office and had to skip the oath-taking ceremony.

Apparently ruffled by a vicious social media campaign against it, the Pakistan Army on Thursday said that it had “nothing to do with politics” and would remain “apolitical”.

He said that Pakistan’s survival solely relied on democracy, and its strength lay in the institutions, be it parliament, Supreme Court or the armed forces.

He also rubbished the rumors about the threat of martial law at the height of the recent political turmoil. “There will never be martial law in Pakistan.”

To a question about the opening of courts in the middle of the night when the battle for the no-confidence vote was going on, he said that it was a decision by the courts and the army had nothing to do with it.

He also vehemently rejected the media reports about the visit of the army chief and the ISI chief to the PM House ahead of his decision to leave the official residence. “Totally untrue. Nobody went there. In the entire process, there was no interference by the army. Let me put this thing to rest,” he stated.

Major General Iftikhar said that there was no truth about the army chief having meetings with the opposition leaders in Pakistan or outside Pakistan in the days leading up to the no-confidence vote.

He said that then prime minister Khan had approached the army chief to help find a solution to the political crisis.

“It is unfortunate that our political leadership was not ready to talk. So the army chief and DG ISI went to the PMO and three scenarios were discussed,” he said, recalling that one was that the no-confidence motion should be held as it was.

The other were that the prime minister resigns or the no-confidence motion was retracted and the assemblies were dissolved.

“No option from the establishment was given,” Iftikhar said.

Khan had claimed that the “establishment” had given him three options: “resignation, no-confidence (vote) or elections” after the Opposition filed a no-trust motion against him in parliament.

The powerful Army, which has ruled the coup-prone country for more than half of its 73-plus years of existence, has hitherto wielded considerable power in the matters of security and foreign policy.

Khan, who was ousted from power early this week, had apparently also lost the support of the powerful Army after he refused to endorse the appointment of the ISI spy agency chief last year. Finally, he agreed, but it soured his ties with the powerful Army.

In response to a question, the spokesman said that the army was on board with the visit of then Prime Minister Khan to Russia. But termed it “embarrassing” when Russia launched an attack on Ukraine when Khan was in Moscow.

The spokesman said that the United States had not asked Pakistan to provide army bases after withdrawing from Afghanistan. “But if the US had asked for the bases, the army’s response would have been the same as that of PM Khan,” he said.

Maj Gen Iftikhar said that the government of the day was responsible to take action if somebody targeted the Army.

To a question about relations between former premier Khan and COAS Bajwa, Maj Gen Iftikhar said that the army chief had a “relation of mutual respect with him”.

He also said that protest rallies by Imran Khan were a part of the political process and there was nothing wrong with them.

Maj Gen Iftikhar also said that the word “conspiracy” was not used in the statement issued after a meeting of the National Security Committee last month. He said that the minutes of the NSC meeting could be declassified if the government decided.

About the threatening letter and the protest launched later on, he said the protest can be launched for various reasons. This demarche was issued because there was a statement about interference and undiplomatic language.

Talking about India, he alleged that there was always a “danger of a false flag operation” as it was a “habit of India”, but they were keeping eye open and there was no unusual activity on the eastern border.

He urged the people to avoid using negative language against the armed forces.

To a question about an attack on an army soldier by the workers of some political party in Lahore, he said that the attackers were arrested and would be prosecuted according to the law.

(With PTI inputs)

Pakistan: Trouble in Hybrid Regime’s ‘Paradise’ Over Appointment of ISI Chief

A PM trying to create his or her lobby in the army is seen as an attempt to undermine the outfit’s discipline. The ISI, as influential as it is, is still supposed to strictly follow its de facto remit laid down by the army.

“I can see he’s not in your good books,’ said the messenger.

‘No, and if he were I would burn my library.”

– William Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing

A ruckus has been going on in Pakistan over the appointment of a new Director General Inter-Services Intelligence (DG ISI).

What is generally considered a routine matter in which the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) recommends a name – or a few to choose from – to the Prime Minister, became a matter of intense speculation when the incumbent PM Imran Khan dithered to affix his approval to the change of guard.

With the ISI’s deep and dubious involvement in Pakistan’s domestic politics as well as its cross-border machinations, the appointment of its DG is always an area of interest but what really fuelled the rumour mills is that there is a virtually hybrid regime at the helm in Pakistan that is supposed to function like a well-oiled machine in such matters.

The army under the present COAS General Qamar Javed Bajwa, had installed Imran Khan after an election heist in 2018 for the manifest purpose of using him as a titular civilian head of the government, while the junta actually ruled from behind this façade. There was supposed to be no trouble in this paradise, let alone a standoff between Bajwa and Khan.

So, what really happened? Is there much ado about nothing and will the two kiss and make up or would the rift deepen and the chasm widen?

Lt General Nadeem Ahmed Anjum. Photo: Twitter/@Ufaqmujahid.

The issue started when the Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR), along with several routine transfers and appointments, also announced that Lt General Nadeem Ahmed Anjum, who is serving as the commander of the Corps V at Karachi will replace the Lt General Faiz Hameed Chaudhry as the DG ISI.

General Faiz (known thus in Pakistan) was appointed to command the army’s Corps XI, headquartered at Peshawar. The catch was that the ISPR had made the announcement before the PM’s secretariat issued the notification approving the new DG ISI’s appointment. For his part, PM Khan has always wanted to not only retain General Faiz as the DG ISI but to eventually appoint him as the COAS in November 2022, when General Bajwa steps down after completing his extended term.

Installing Imran Khan as its puppet PM had been the army’s longstanding project, fostered by several army and the ISI chiefs. But it was on General Bajwa’s watch that it came to fruition in 2018. General Bajwa first appointed the then Major General Faiz – his junior from the Baloch Regiment – in charge of the ISI’s Directorate C, where he did the legwork to undermine Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N’s) government and subsequently steal the elections for Imran Khan. Within four months of becoming a lieutenant general, Faiz was appointed the DG ISI in June 2019.

He replaced Lt General Asim Munir, who had a mere nine-month stint – shortest in the ISI history – as the director. The Bajwa-Imran-Faiz trio has since worked together without much friction, with the PM essentially doing the army’s bidding without questioning or invoking any rules and the brass ignoring his occasional tantrums and consistent incompetence as the chief executive.

So, what gives?

While the army would’ve had no issues with Imran Khan working with its chosen new DG ISI towards securing a second term, even by manipulating the 2023 elections, it frowns as an enterprise over the civilians – even its handpicked ones – personally teaming up with individuals in the general staff.

A PM trying to create his or her lobby in the army is seen as an attempt to undermine the outfit’s discipline. The ISI, as influential as it is, is still supposed to strictly follow its de facto remit laid down by the army, and it really does.

When established in 1948, the ISI de jure came under the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, and through that body reported to the ministry of defence and the PM. And there is no evidence to the contrary that this pecking order was every changed officially and legally. The very name inter-services – implied that the ISI could not be under any one service chief. The Australia-born British Major General Sir Walter Joseph Cawthorn, who had opted to join the Pakistani armed forces, and the Lucknow-born Brigadier (later Major General) Syed Shahid Hamid had conceived the idea of the ISI and patterned it after the British military intelligence apparatus, with a Joint Intelligence Bureau (JIB) whose remit was the foreign espionage and a Joint Counter-intelligence Bureau (JCIB), which was responsible for counter-intelligence operations within the military.

Also read: Pakistan Military, ISI Installed ‘Puppet Govt’ of Imran Khan, Says Ex-PM Sharif

General Hamid became the agency’s first chief and General Cawthorn its second and, to date, the longest serving head. Both laid the foundation for tremendous growth of the ISI from a measly, understaffed organisation in a single-story building in Karachi, to a robust outfit making its mark, but still reporting to the PM.

All of that changed with Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s 1958 martial law, with all powers vested in him and the civil and military bureaucracies – not just the ISI – reporting to him. With three more martial laws and another three decades of the army ruling from behind-the-scenes, the de facto reporting hierarchy and the remit became permanent. Contrary to the popular belief, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was not the first one to create the political cell(s) in the ISI. It was the FM Ayub Khan who deployed the JCIB – a precursor of the Directorate C – to manipulate domestic politics on his behalf. Bhutto indeed ordered the DG ISI major (later Lt) General Ghulam Jilani Khan – whom he retained in that position through his tenure – to create cells against his political opposition in the 1970s only to see it backfire and the wily generals impose a martial law.

Various civilian PMs tried to wrestle back the command and control but failed. In 1989, Benazir Bhutto appointed a well-read but retired Lt Gen. Shamsur Rahman Kallue as DG ISI to replace the jihadist General Hamid Gul. Failing to dissuade her, the COAS at the time, General Mirza Aslam Beg had the serving officers stonewall the retired general to the extent that he earned the moniker no-clue Kallue.

Similarly, Nawaz Sharif insisted and appointed Lt General Ziauddin Butt as the DG in 1998 as he suspected that the army-proposed General Aziz Khan would destabilise his government, only to be ousted a year later in a coup in which General Khan played a key role. In 2008, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) government made a half-cocked attempt to place the ISI under the ministry of interior but withdrew it swiftly, after drawing the ire of the brass. Parliamentary attempts in 2014 and 2017 to legislate over the ISI’s structure and mandate were also blocked by the army.

The bottom line is that even though the ISI remains an intra and supra-services body, the army sees and runs it as one of its corps. In fact, with its burgeoning numerical strength and resources, the ISI is larger than most corps. The military historian Shuja Nawaz has noted:

“In addition to the three-star general head of the ISI, there are six two-star major generals responsible for each of the wings of the agency, more than even in a corps headquarters of the regular army. The overwhelming majority of the staff at senior levels is from the army.”

And each one of these officers – and even contractors – has his umbilical cord attached to the parent outfit. The Pakistan army is many things, but one thing it is not: ill-disciplined. The ISI remains a powerful agency in service of the army, not a policy-making entity. It prepares for and executes domestic and foreign policy goals set by the army brass, not define them.

Contrary to the perception, especially in the west, the ISI is neither a rogue entity nor a separate power center within the army. The chief is the army, and army the chief. Anything or anyone seen to be challenging the power and decision-making structure is not tolerated.

The brass acts collectively to protect the chief with or without his explicit orders. For example, the October 12, 1999 coup d’état was launched by the generals in the GHQ, while the ousted COAS General Musharraf, was still airborne en route from Sri Lanka. In the rare instances, where the army chiefs, like Field Marshal Ayub Khan or General Pervez Musharraf, eventually became a liability, it is the top brass’ collective decision to put them out to the pasture.

Imran Khan’s tight embrace of General Faiz and instance on retaining him on the pretext of the evolving situation in Afghanistan didn’t hold water with the brass. The army knew that the duo’s bear hug had multiple other reasons. The worst kept secret in Islamabad is Imran Khan’s delusional reliance on the supernatural for temporal decision-making. His wife is said to be a religious soothsayer who directs the PM whom to pick and when for key official positions.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan with appointed DG ISI General Faiz Hameed. Photo: Twitter/@alisalmanalvi.

Imran Khan’s second ex-wife had caused ripples when she wrote in her tell-all book that she had once found her “new husband lying naked on a white sheet, rubbing kaali daal (black lentils) all over himself…,” ostensibly to ward off a “black magic” spell.

Islamabad is abuzz with similar rumours that the PM Khan has been advised by his wife to cling on to General Faiz, at least for several months, if not more. But the army was not just miffed over their blue-eyed PM running the show through voodoo; it is also upset at General Faiz’s personal ambition to become the army chief in a quid-pro-quo with Imran Khan.

One could argue that an arrangement like that won’t be much different than the extension that General Bajwa squeezed out of Imran Khan after installing him. But the army apparently saw that aberration as serving its institutional needs at the time. Additionally, General Faiz is seen as too controversial due to his very public personal involvement in domestic and foreign policy affairs.

His signature appeared on a deal with religious zealots he himself is believed to have propped up to undermine Nawaz Sharif in 2017, over which he was chastised by a Supreme Court justice.

In a different matter, a high court judge had accused the general of asking him to manipulate judicial proceedings. The victory lap that General Faiz took in Kabul after the Taliban victory was also splashed across media everywhere. Most recently, Nawaz Sharif’s daughter and political heir-apparent, Maryam Nawaz Sharif accused General Faiz of planning, orchestrating, and influencing the legal proceedings against her. General Faiz Hameed Chaudhry, therefore, is seen as a liability by the army, which historically has had only one DG ISI – General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani – become the COAS.

So, what lies ahead? There has been a flurry of activity and assorted pronouncements from the Imran Khan camp.

A coterie of ministers went to see General Bajwa, after which the COAS met with the PM and the issue was ostensibly resolved, only that it wasn’t. As of this writing, the PM house has not issued any notification confirming a new DG ISI. Instead, the information minister has suggested that the PM may interview the individuals proposed by the army chief, before deciding on one. This by itself is going to be a huge departure from the past practice.

Also read: With the US’s Exit, Pakistan Army’s Grip on Afghanistan Is Now Complete

Whereas there is a precedent for the army submitting several names for DG ISI, the PM interviewing the “candidates” is unheard of. For example, in the final years of the General Zia-ul-Haq’s brutal dictatorship, the army had submitted 5 names to the PM Muhammad Khan Junejo, out of which he “picked” the jihadist General Hamid Gul. There is a possibility that the army may go through with some manner of a song-and-dance to let its puppet get over his tantrum. On the other hand, Imran Khan may see the “divine light” courtesy his spiritual advisor wife and sign off on General Anjum’s name. The third possibility is that the standoff continues till one side blinks, but chances are that it won’t come to that since neither Imran Khan, nor the army has any great alternatives immediately.

Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif

Former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Photo : Reuters/Mohsin Raza/Files

The opposition parties are rightly seeing this as a mere lovers’ tiff and not a battle for civilian supremacy. The army, under General Bajwa, was completely out of line to announce the DG ISI’s appointment without the PM actually signing a notification. On the other hand, the PM, who has delegated any and all domestic and foreign policy matters to the COAS, just realised that he has merely been carrying water for the army these past three years. The army might be itching to put Imran Khan in his place, and he may be craving a political martyrdom, but for now both might have to go through some therapy and reconcile.

The foremost opposition party, the PMLN led by Nawaz Sharif and his daughter Maryam, has shown no inclination to clean up the hybrid regime’s mess. With a bleak economic forecast at home and a mega mess in Afghanistan, largely of Pakistan’s own making, the PMLN – or the PPP for that matter—do not appear willing to throw a lifeline to the junta. By all accounts, and his public pronouncements, Nawaz Sharif is unwilling to settle for a mere ouster of Imran Khan without the army actually allowing for a hard reset in the civil-military relations equation. The army, for its parts, would be happy to let another political party replace Imran Khan so long as the terms of contract are similar.

So, for the foreseeable future, a large party with popular support like the PMLN won’t step in to pull the army’s chestnuts out of fire. That means that the army will have to work with Imran Khan for now while preparing ground for another pliable dispensation. The trouble in the hybrid regime’s paradise has rendered several people as damaged goods. First and foremost, the too-clever-by-half General Faiz has zero chance of becoming the COAS even if he drags on as a lame duck DG ISI for a few more months. The collateral damage truly is General Nadeem Anjum, who became controversial even before taking the office he was designated for.

And while General Bajwa is likely to come out of this morass unscathed, he won’t be looking at another extension come November 2022. But above all, Imran Khan seems to have burnt his bridges with the army. He has worked really hard to get himself out of the army’s good books. And if he were still there, chances are that they would burn their library.

Mohammad Taqi is a Pakistani-American columnist. He tweets @mazdaki.

Russia Agrees to Supply Military Equipment to Pakistan, to Hold More Joint Exercises

“We stand ready to strengthen the anti-terrorist potential of Pakistan, including by supplying Pakistan with special military equipment,” Sergei Lavrov said.

New Delhi: A day after his visit to India, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov assured Pakistan that it was ready to supply “special military equipment” to strengthen Islamabad’s counter-terror capabilities and agreed to hold additional joint military exercises.

Lavrov arrived in Islamabad on Tuesday afternoon after a short visit to India. He was greeted by Pakistan’s foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on arrival at the airport. Lavrov had previously visited Pakistan in 2012.

On Wednesday, the Russian foreign minister went to the Army headquarters in Rawalpindi to “call on” the Pakistani army chief, Qamar Javed Bajwa.

As per the Inter-Services public relations statement, the Pakistani army chief stated that he “reciprocated” Russia’s desire for bilateral military cooperation.

He also added that Pakistan welcomed all initiatives for peace in Afghanistan. “We have no hostile designs towards any country and will keep on working towards a cooperative regional framework based on sovereign equality and mutual progress, COAS concluded,” said the ISPR press note.

Earlier in the day, Lavrov had held formal delegation-level talks with Qureshi at the foreign ministry, followed by a press conference.

In his opening remarks, Lavrov said, “We stand ready to strengthen the anti-terrorist potential of Pakistan, including by supplying Pakistan with special military equipment”. He didn’t elaborate further on the equipment, but Russia had previously supplied Mi35 helicopters to Pakistan.

He added that both countries have also agreed to hold additional joint exercises in the mountains and sea “to combat terrorism and piracy”.

Pakistan and Russia have already held five editions of their joint military drill, Druzbha, which was first held in 2016.

According to Dawn, Pakistan foreign minister said that Pakistan had “looked at our cooperation in defence and counterterrorism and we feel that we have within our framework of dialogue [involving] strategic stability and counterterrorism opportunities of interaction and we feel we can help each other”.

“I am grateful to the foreign minister that he has acknowledged the progress Pakistan has made in defeating and reversing terrorism and extremism and they’re more than happy to further build our capacity on that,” he said.

After Lavrov met with Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan, the official communique said that there was an affirmation to expeditiously conclude the requisite legal process for the ‘Pakistan Stream’ (North-South) Gas Pipeline project and commence the work as early as possible” was also reaffirmed, it said.

Onus Is on Pakistan: India Reacts to Pak Army Chief’s Call for Resolving Kashmir Issue Peacefully

Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa had earlier stated, “Pakistan and India must resolve the longstanding issue of Jammu and Kashmir in a dignified and peaceful manner as per the aspirations of people of Jammu and Kashmir…”

New Delhi: After the Pakistani army chief called for a resolution of the Kashmir issue in a “dignified and peaceful manner”, India said that the onus was on Pakistan to create a terror-free environment for “normal neighbourly relations”.

On Tuesday, Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa had stated, “Pakistan and India must resolve the longstanding issue of Jammu and Kashmir in a dignified and peaceful manner as per the aspirations of people of Jammu and Kashmir…”

Speaking at the graduation ceremony of the Pakistan Air Force Asghar Khan Academy, Bajwa stated that Pakistan stands “firmly committed to the ideal of mutual respect and peaceful co-existence”.

“It is time to extend a hand of peace in all directions However, we will not allow anybody or any entity to misinterpret our desire for peace as a sign of weakness,” he added.

Two days later, India’s response was to reiterate that it was up to Pakistan to take the first step.

“Our position is well-known. India desires normal neighbourly relations with Pakistan in an environment free of terror, hostility and violence. The onus is on Pakistan for creating such an environment,” said Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Anurag Srivastava at weekly online briefing.

What Does the Death of Barelvi Firebrand Khadim Rizvi Mean For Sectarian Politics?

While the venom he has spewed and hate that he has spread will continue to simmer for foreseeable future, Rizvi will be a hard act to follow.

The death of Allama Khadim Hussain Rizvi, a rabble rousing Sunni cleric, last week, has bookended a particularly virulent phase in Pakistan’s sectarian politics.

Rizvi, who was just 54, is said to have died of an unknown cause. He had delivered a blistering speech, directed mainly at the country’s military establishment, just three days before his demise. Abdullah Hameed Gul, son of Pakistan’s jihadist spy master General Hameed Gul, and a Rizvi ally, suspects foul play.

In that address, Rizvi had spoken for about 28 minutes, including eight minutes of the Qira’t or lyrical recitation of the Quran, without appearing short-winded, coughing or wincing. By his tone and tenor, however, he did appear subdued and out of his element. His own son and now his successor Saad Rizvi, however, attributed the death to a respiratory illness.

Rizvi was known for his fiery oratory in Urdu and Punjabi, peppered with Arabic verses of the Quran, the Hadith (sayings of Prophet Muhammad), Persian poetry of Allama Muhammad Iqbal, and choice expletives. He was the head of a religio-political party Tehrik-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), a radical grouping of the Barelvi subsect of Sunni Muslims. He literally weaponised Barelvism in a way unparalleled in the post-Partition Indo-Pakistan.

Also read: In Pakistan, Acquittal of Christian Woman Accused of Blasphemy Shines Ray of Hope

His funeral, held at the national monument, Minar-e-Pakistan, was attended by tens of thousands of his devotees. Instant condolences came from the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa and the army-backed Prime Minister Imran Khan.

People gather to attend funeral services for Khadim Hussain Rizvi, leader of religious and political party Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP), at the Minar-e-Pakistan monument as the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Lahore, Pakistan November 21, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Mohsin Raza

Khadim Rizvi had shot to prominence a decade ago, when he resigned his government job to lead charge against the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader and governor of Punjab, Salmaan Taseer. He smeared Taseer for committing blasphemy against Prophet Muhammad and contributed to the chorus calling for the governor’s death. Taseer, who also owned the liberal newspaper Daily Times, was pleading for mercy on behalf a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, who was languishing in prison after being wrongfully accused of blasphemy after a petty squabble with Muslim women in her village, and faced a death penalty.

A year later, a policeman from the governor’s security detail, Mumtaz Qadri, shot and killed him. Qadri was inspired by Barelvi clerics like Rizvi, whose war cry is to defend the shan (honor) and Khatm-e-Nabuwwat (finality) of Prophet Muhammad. The apotheosis of prophethood with Muhammad is a fundamental belief among all Muslims, but Barelvis take it to another level, and the trope has served as a rallying point and vector for the political Barelvism.

The TLP mobilised the street against caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad published in European countries. Rizvi’s last act was one such campaign against the French government and President Emmanuel Macaron for defending the free speech.

Also read: To Mock or Not to Mock Religions, That Is the Question

The TLP has served as a useful political force-multiplier for the Pakistan army, over the past several years. It was used effectively to shakedown the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz’s (PMLN) elected government in 2017, when Khadim Rizvi and his hordes paralysed Rawalpindi and the next-door federal capital Islamabad, through a sit-in protest. The pretext was a demand for the government to reverse a change in an oath pertaining to the finality of prophethood.

The real motive, however, was to teach the PMLN’s supremo and three-time PM, Nawaz Sharif, a lesson. Sharif had been pushing for civilian supremacy over the army in running the country’s affairs. His government had also brought treason charges against the former army dictator, General Pervez Musharraf, for the 1999 coup d’état.

The army was bitter but unable to mount an overt putsch, it opted for subversion through assorted political proxies like Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) and religio-political ones like Khadim Rizvi and before him another Barelvi cleric, Dr. Tahir-ul-Qadri. The TLP was more than happy to oblige.

Khadim Hussain Rizvi of religious and political party Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP), gestures to his supporters during a protest against the cartoon publications of Prophet Mohammad in France and comments by the French President Emmanuel Macron, in Karachi, Pakistan November 7, 2020. Picture taken November 7, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Akhtar Soomro

It saw it as an opportunity to gain the Pakistan army’s patronage and regain the political ground the Barelvis had lost to the rival Sunni subsect, Deobandis since the rise of jihadism in the 1980s. Just a few weeks prior to that particular protest, the TLP had also made its electoral debut in a by-election against Sharif’s late wife in his Lahore constituency. The seat had fallen vacant after the former PM had been disqualified on fabricated graft charges. The army had tried to undercut Sharif’s conservative vote bank through deployment of the TLP and another newly-minted party, Milli Muslim League, which is but a front for the Salafist Jama’t-ud-Dawa (JuD).

Kulsoom Nawaz Sharif won that contest but the TLP bagged over 7,000 votes, right behind the runner-up PTI. In the 2018 general elections the TLP was the third largest vote-getter – behind the PMLN and PTI and ahead of the PPP – in Punjab, the country’s largest province, in the 2018 general elections, though it didn’t win any seats there. But the army’s patronage – in full public display – notwithstanding, the TLP Barelvis were playing political catch-up to the Deobandis.

The Barelvi revivalist movement was, in fact, a response to the Deobandi revivalism in 19th-century India, pioneered by Ahmad Riza Khan (after whom Khadim Hussain called himself Rizvi) in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh.

Darul Uloom Deoband. Photo: Public domain

After the shock of British colonial power upending the Muslim rule over India subsided, a political and doctrinal assessment and introspection commenced within the vanquished community. The Muslim population of India was heterodox as any other community of the subcontinent, if not more. Both the analyses and the proposed remedies were as diverse as the sections of the community. The resulting weltanschauung or worldview could be broadly categorised into traditional or conformist, fundamentalist or orthodox, and modernist political interpretation of Islam and its role in the recovery of the sagging Muslim fortunes.

The fourth approach was a secularist orientation of assorted varieties, ranging from liberal and Marxist, to nationalist and militant. There was a considerable overlap, exchange and confrontation among these religious and areligious paradigms.

The Deoband seminary founded in 1867 sought to purify the subcontinental Muslims of what it perceived as the heretical practices that they had adopted over a millennium of interface with the native religions. It represented the fundamentalist vision of restoring the austere Islam of the Prophet Muhammad’s era. While both schools of thought (masalik) subscribed to the Sunni Hanafi denomination of Islam, they differed enough in creed and practice to go on to virtually become adversarial subsects.

The Barelvis consider Prophet Muhammad as the divine light (nur) created by God. In their view, the Prophet, though physically deceased, remains an eternal power in the religious cosmos that grants wishes and intercedes on a believer’s behalf with God not just for salvation in the hereafter but also for mundane day-to-day matters.

The pirs and sheikhs are considered to be the Prophet Muhammad’s agents, acting as a conduit between the devotee and him. In all cases these perceived holy men trace their biological or spiritual lineage (shajrah) to Prophet Muhammad. The Prophet’s honor, sayings and practice, therefore, have not just an overwhelming preeminence in Barelvism but any perceived affront to those is to be defended with force, when possible.

The Deobandi variant of Sunnism holds Prophet Muhammad in high esteem but labels the esoteric Barelvi beliefs and practices as bida’t (heresy and innovation) or even worse, shirk (trespassing on God’s oneness or polytheism).

But the puritans of Deoband were in a numerical minority, and actually remain so to date. The reaction came from Ahmad Riza Khan, who organised the vast majority of traditionalist madrassas (seminaries), ulama (clerics), and pirs (saintly men presiding over shrines and Sufi orders). He enlisted massive help from the Hejazi clerics of Arabian Peninsula, who themselves were facing the spectre of Najdi fundamentalism of Wahhabi variety.

Armed with a battery of fatwas (religious edicts) from over 250 clerics, including Hejazis, Riza Khan – called Ala Hazrat or ‘exalted sir’ by his followers – came out swinging against the Deobandis, in his 1905 book Hussam al-Harmain (Sword of the Two Holy Mosques).

Riza Khan declared the Deobandi triumvirate – Qasim Nanautavi, Rashid Gangohi and Ashraf Ali Thanvi – infidels. He also went after other sects and subsects of Islam, like the orthodox Ahl-e-Hadith, the Shiite, and also the Ahmadiyya, whom both the Sunni and Shia deemed to be outside the pale of Islam. Riza Khan and his disciples also made it a point to assert their numerical majority and used the term Ahl-e-Sunnat-wal-Jama’t (people who follow the Prophet’s Sunnah and are in majority) or Sawad-e-Azam (the largest party or group).

A protest against Ahmadiyyas in Pakistan. Photo: Reuters/File

The rival masalik also had divergent approaches to politics and the freedom movement.

While they were not overtly opposed to the British rule at the outset, they subsequently took different trajectories. The Deobandis eventually developed a formidable nationalist and anti-colonial bent that resulted in formation of the religio-political party, Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Hind (JUH). It joined hands with the Indian National Congress, and both struggled together for independence of the joint Indian homeland.

The Barelvis, on the other hand, maintained a collaborative relationship with the British. Ahmad Riza Khan even pronounced British India the Dar-ul-Islam or a land safe for Islam and the Muslims. They were not able or desiring of organizing into a single political party either. The Barelvi pirs and sheikhs preferred to maintain their local and regional political preeminence by collaboration with the colonial rulers, and later on, the post-colonial ones as well.

They opted to join outfits like the All India Muslim League (AIML) or before that, the Punjab-based Unionist Party. Leader of the AIML and later founder of Pakistan, M.A. Jinnah initially remained averse to the clergymen, mixing of religion and politics, and even dissed Mahatma Gandhi’s use of religious tropes and symbols.

His support base consisted largely of the Islamic modernists of Aligarh variety, in the Muslim minority provinces. Fundamentalist a la Deoband and modernists like Abul Ala Maududi of the Jama’t-e-Islami (JI) lost no love for Jinnah. But all of that was to change after the AIML’s disastrous showing in the Muslim majority provinces in the 1937 elections. Once a secularist, Jinnah set out to actively court and recruit the very same political clergy that he had once despised.

Pakistan’s Islamisation thus started almost decade before its birth, and long before any army dictator or adventurist general came along.

Unfortunately, even many secular Pakistani intellectuals have been remiss in clearly pointing out that watershed moment. For example, the Marxist sociologist, professor Hamza Alvi had written:

“It was not until 1952 that Jinnah’s unworthy successors turned away from that secular ideal and began to exploit the worn-out rhetoric of religion to restore their failing political fortunes. They cried out that ‘Islam was in danger’.”

Alvi and many others have anchored such revisionist claims almost solely in Jinnah’s August 11,1947 speech, in which he indeed spoke about religious and personal freedoms. In the same essay, Alvi went on to rightly blame the army dictators General Yahya Khan and General Zia-ul-Haq for coopting the religio-political forces to seek legitimacy, but with a twist. He wrote:

“Sweeping aside Jinnah’ s clear statement about Pakistan ideology, his successors belatedly redefined it. In 1969 General Yahya Khan’s minister, General Sher Ali, declared that ‘Islamic ideology’ was to be ‘Pakistan ideology’. This solution was projected backwards into the past and historians (in Pakistan and also abroad) have taken up the task of justifying that bogus claim.”

Sadly, Alvi’s own claim is only partially true. As early as 1939, Jinnah was assuring Deobandi cleric Ashraf Ali Thanvi that “religion could not be divorced from politics in Islam”. The AIML’s recruitment drive brought to its fold Deobandis like Thanvi, Maulana Zafar Ahmed Ansari, Maulana Shabbir Ahmed Usmani, and even the school’s founder Qasim Nanautavi’s grandson, Zahir Qasmi.

Through the agency of these clerics, Jinnah was able to turn the tables on the Congress-allied JUH. Shabbir Ahmed Usmani, et al carved the Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Islam (JUI) out of the JUH. The JUI were to declare at its 1945 Calcutta conference that the two-nation theory in origin is the proclamation of the Quran and is not the invention of any man.

“On this ground this conference declares that the 100 million Muslims in the subcontinent of India are a distinct and independent nationality and a nationality of peculiar constitution which is grounded on the righteous principles of the Islamic millat and Shariat and not on the basis of race, colour, geography … This session wholeheartedly supports the demand for Pakistan and the division of India.”

Similarly, the AIML recruited dozens of Barelvi pirs and sheikhs from the Northwest Frontier, Sindh, and above all, the Punjab provinces. Pirs of Manki, Zakori, Makhad, Golra, Taunsa, Sial, Multan, and so on filled the ranks of the AIML. The Barelvi umbrella group, All India Sunni Conference, unlike the Deobandis, did not transform into a political party until after the creation of Pakistan, when the group became Jamiat-e-Ulama-e Pakistan (JUP) in 1948.

Jinnah could also count on massive support from the Shia clergy and assorted other smaller Muslim communities of India.

Whether this massive enlisting of the clerics, theologians and pirs was just realpolitik on Jinnah’s part and he eventually intended to stick to his August 11, 1947 speech, we shall never know; he died a year after that speech. He was not much of a writer and didn’t leave any written treatise about the orientation of the state he founded. His speeches and letters are interpreted by his detractors and admirers according to their own political leaning.

Also read: It’s Time We Absolve Jinnah

But one thing is certain that the outcome of having such a massive religio-political contingent could only be the each one of them jockeying for their brand of Islam become the state’s grundnorm. And this is exactly what happened from the day the country’s first constituent assembly went to work.

Squabbling sectarian cliques and parties have vied for constitutional and political space since. Almost every political party, including the secular ones, have engaged, appeased or allied with the religious outfits. The army, which has directly or indirectly ruled the country for the better part of its existence, however, has remained their chief patron. The mullahs have exacted their pound of flesh when they could.

For example, the secular PPP, supported by the leftist National Awami Party (NAP), the JUI, JUP, JI and PML factions, had introduced the infamous Second Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan, which declared the Ahmadiyya as apostates. The army dictator General Zia-ul-Haq’s rule saw an even larger space ceded to the zealots of all shades. He introduced the blasphemy laws, which became the bane of life not just for non-Muslims but also Muslims in Pakistan, and still remain on the books.

General Zia-ul-Haq. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

While both Barelvis and Deobandis owned this virulent mutation, Zia’s jihad venture in Afghanistan, sponsored by the Saudis and the USA, enlisted manpower and assistance from the JI and a faction of JUI, empowering them tremendously in the process. The domestic fallout of the Afghan jihad and later the army’s Taliban project was domestic sectarian terrorism by the Deobandi, Salafi and assorted other fundamentalist groups. Barelvis, Shias and Ahmadis have remained at the receiving end of the terror unleashed by these outfits.

As for the intra-Sunni Barelvi-Deobandi schism manifesting in the political arena, the two groups have essentially continued along their conventional trajectory. The Deobandis have largely worked the political landscape through the JUI and its various factions and radical offshoots. The Barelvis have gravitated towards mainstream political parties like the PPP, PMLN and even the PTI.

The notable exception had been the JUP under the late Maulana Shah Ahmed Noorani, when it won seven national assembly seats from West Pakistan in the 1970 general elections. But after that even the JUP chose politics of alliances and electoral adjustments with both the adversarial sectarian parties and the secular ones like the PPP and the defunct Pakistan Tehrik-e-Istiqlal.

In fact, Noorani had founded and headed a multi-party religio-political conglomerate Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), which included the JUI, JI, Ahl-e-Hadith and a Shia outfit.

Khadim Rizvi’s odious stint was, therefore, an exception to the rule in Barelvi agitation and politics in that he flew solo. He was able to energize the Barelvi rank and file in its traditional stronghold Punjab, flex militant muscle, and extract concessions from the state and patronage from the army. While the venom he has spewed and hate that he has spread will continue to simmer for foreseeable future, his TLP may not remain a viable vector for it.

Rizvi was a vile but hard act to follow.

His son, who has been appointed the party’s new chief lacks the education, experience, oratory and zealotry of his father. It is unlikely that the assorted pirs and sheikhs who had agreed upon Rizvi’s leadership would pledge their allegiance to his son. For all practical purposes, Rizvi was a flash in the Barelvi political pan. His unexpected demise would slow down but not stop the runaway train of fanaticism in Pakistan.

For that to happen, the country and its leaders need to introspect and decide what went wrong, and when.

The writer is a Pakistani-American columnist. He tweets @mazdaki)

Pak Opposition MP Says Abhinandan Was Released As Army Chief Feared India’s Attack

Sardar Ayaz Sadiq said the Pakistan Army chief’s “legs were shaking” when foreign minister S.M. Qureshi said India would attack if the IAF Wing Commander wasn’t released.

New Delhi: It was a day when remarks made by Pakistani leaders on the 2019 Pulwama attack and its aftermath – both in opposition and in government – came to dominate headlines, as they tried to score political points.

First, a top opposition leader stated that Pakistan Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa was perspiring and his “legs were shaking” as foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said during a meeting that if Indian Air Force Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman was not released, India would attack Pakistan.

Tensions between India and Pakistan escalated in the aftermath of the Pulwama terrorist attack which killed 40 CRPF troopers. While India conducted an air raid on terrorist camps in Balakot on Pakistan’s side on February 26, the Pakistan Air Force made incursions into Indian airspace on the next day. In a dogfight that ensued, Wing Commander Varthaman was into custody after his MiG-21 Bison jet was shot down. The IAF officer also took down a PAF F-16 jet.

Recalling the tension in Islamabad after India bombed a terror training camp in Pakistan’s Balakot on February 26, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Sardar Ayaz Sadiq criticised the Imran Khan government over its response, saying that the opposition has supported the government on every issue, including Kashmir and Varthaman, but it will no longer be appropriate to provide any further support, Dunya News reported on Wednesday.

Sadiq, who was the speaker of the National Assembly during the PML-N government, made the statement earlier on Wednesday in parliament that foreign minister Qureshi had said in an important meeting that if Varthaman was not released, India would attack Pakistan at 9 pm that night and for “God’s sake we should let him go”.

He was released on the night of March 1.

Sadiq further claimed that the foreign minister had said this in a meeting between parliamentary leaders, including those of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and PML-N, and Army chief General Bajwa whose “legs were shaking and he was perspiring”.

The leader did not mention the date of the meeting nor if he was also part of it.

The developments came after minister for communication Murad Saeed moved a government-sponsored resolution condemning the speeches of the leaders of the Pakistan Democratic Movement, a grouping of opposition parties. Saeed promoted these speeches promote the “narrative of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his security adviser Ajit Doval” at a public meeting, according to Pakistani newspaper The News. “You will continue to promote India’s narrative if you do not get NRO and I make it clear that these corrupt people will not get NRO,” Saeed said, according to the report. The NRO is a controversial ordinance that was issued by former president Pervez Musharraf granting amnesty to politicians and bureaucrats who were accused of corruption.

After his statements went viral on social media, Sadiq claimed that his words were being “misquoted and misreported”.

The Director General of Inter-Service Public Relations, Major General Babar Iftikhar even held a press conference on Thursday to “correct the record” regarding the Balakot airstrikes, Dawn reported.

“A statement was given yesterday which tried to distort the history of issues associated with national security,” he said, not taking any names.

Stating that it was “extremely disappointing and misleading” to link the Indian air force officer’s release as government weakness, he added, “This is in fact equivalent to making controversial the Pakistani nation’s clear supremacy and victory over India, and I think this is not acceptable to any Pakistani.”

He also stated that it gave handle to the Indian media to “take advantage” in the information domain.

“This same narrative is being used to minimise India’s defeat and loss,” stated. “In these conditions, when enemy forces have imposed a hybrid war on Pakistan, we will all have to move forward with great responsibility.”

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s science and technology minister Fawad Chaudhry made a seeming faux pas when his words were interpreted as a claim for Pulwama terror attack.

Humne Hindustan ko ghus ke maara (We hit India in their home). Our success in Pulwama, is a success of the people under the leadership of Imran Khan. You and we are all part of that success,” minister Fawad Chaudhury said in the national assembly, NDTV reported.

When there was an uproar in the assembly, he rephrased, “Pulwama ke waqiyeh ke baad, jab humne India ko ghus ke maara (When we hit India in their home after the incident at Pulwama)”.

He further clarified in a tweet that he was only referring to Pakistan’s counter air strike in Indian territory.

This report updated with related comments of Pakistan DG ISPR and the minister for science and technology.

Imran Khan Incapable and Clueless, Has Betrayed People of Pakistan: PDM

The Pakistan Democratic Movement has launched a three-phased anti-government movement under an “action plan” to oust the Khan-led Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) government.

Karachi:  Prime Minister Imran Khan is “incapable and clueless”, and his government is worse than a dictatorship, leaders of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), an alliance of 11 opposition parties, alleged at its second rally here.

The PDM, which was formed on September 20, 2020, has launched a three-phased anti-government movement under an “action plan” to oust the Khan-led Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) government.

Under the plan several rallies public meetings and demonstrations will be held across the country, before a “decisive long march” to Islamabad in January next year. The first of these rallies was held on Friday in Gujranwala near Lahore.

“This incapable and clueless prime minister will have to go home,” Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) chief Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said at the Bagh-e-Jinnah, which was packed with people including supporters and workers of the alliance’s members.

History has proved that the biggest dictators could not survive and “what standing does this puppet have?”, Zardari said targeting Prime Minister Khan and added that “this is not a new fight but this will be a decisive fight”.

The rally here also marked the 13th anniversary of the twin blasts in Karsaz that targeted the homecoming procession of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in 2007. The blast left around 200 people dead and several injured.

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) vice presidents Maryam Nawaz and Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party chairman Mehmood Achakzai and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl (JUI-F) leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman were among the leaders of opposition parties who attended the rally.

The PPP also invited Mohsin Dawar, who heads the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), to address the gathering at the Bagh-e-Jinnah.

Maryam Nawaz, daughter of exiled former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, attacked the PTI government for declaring opposition leaders and her father as “traitors”.

“When answers are demanded, you say we are traitors,” said the PML-N vice president.

Fatima Jinnah, the sister of Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah, was also declared a traitor, Maryam Nawaz told the gathering.

Also read: Pakistani Dissidents in the US Blame the Military for Country’s Multiple Crises

“So do not scare us (by declaring us) traitors,” the PML-N vice president said and added that “when you (Khan) are pressed for answers, you hide behind the armed forces”.

“You bring the army into disrepute. You use them (army) to hide your failures. Who gave you this right? she asked.

Remember this, “one or two personalities are not the entire institution, but one or two people can defame the entire institution, and when they take the cover of that institution, they cause heavy losses to that institution”, Maryam Nawaz said.

“We cannot respect those who violate their oaths. Is Nawaz Sharif wrong in saying that the army should not interfere in politics?” she said.

Sharif has accused the military and Pakistan’s intelligence agency ISI of being behind his ouster as premier and installing their “puppet government” by bringing Imran Khan into power.

He made the accusations while addressing the first power show of the alliance of opposition parties in Gujranwala via video link from London.

Supporters of Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), an alliance of political opposition parties, wave flags as they listen to their leaders during an anti-government protest rally in Karachi, Pakistan October 18, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Akhtar Soomro

Sharif, the 70-year-old leader of the PML-N who was ousted from power in 2017 by the apex court on graft charges, on Friday for the first time directly named army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa and ISI head Lt. General Faiz Hameed for interfering in the elections of 2018 to ensure the victory of Khan.

Prime Minister Khan warned on Sunday he would be getting tough with the opposition and would ensure Sharif is brought back from London and put in jail for his deeds.

The Islamabad high court through newspaper advertisements has asked Sharif to appear before it by November 24, 2020, to avoid being declared a “proclaimed offender”.

Also read: Nawaz Sharif Has Now Gone for the Pakistan Army’s Jugular

Maryam Nawaz said Khan’s speech was of a defeated man who was worried about the support the PDM had gathered in a short time.

Bilawal, in his speech, lashed out at Khan for “betraying” the people of Pakistan and said the rise of “fascism” in the country had weakened Pakistan’s position on Kashmir and other issues.

Mohsin Dawar, who was one of the first speakers at the rally, termed the PDM as a “beginning for real democracy and civilian supremacy” in the country.

He criticised the incumbent government for filing “baseless cases” against political workers, whether they were from Waziristan, Gilgit Baltistan, Baluchistan or Sindh.

The cases, Dawar claimed, were filed due to political differences. The current regime is “worse than a dictatorship, he said.

“I consider this government to be worse than a dictatorship,” Dawar said.

The PDM will hold rallies in Quetta on October 25, 2020, Peshawar on November 22, 2020, Multan on November 30, 2020, and then a rally in Lahore on December 13, 2020.

Opposition leaders have announced that they would use all political and democratic options, including no-confidence motions and mass resignations from Parliament to seek “the selected” prime minister’s resignation.

Pakistan’s Army Continues to Mollycoddle Terrorists and Hound its Critics

There are enough reasons to be skeptical about the recent sentencing of JuD chief Hafiz Saeed.

Pakistan’s all-powerful army has a long history of siring, pampering and letting loose jihadi terrorists, at home and across borders. It has also sold-out or shunned certain jihadis when they have spun out of its orbit, and occasionally fought them when they bucked its diktat. It has signed scores of agreements with the jihadis, feted and garlanded their leaders, and appeased them when it wanted. No civilian leader or government has had any say in this project nor the ability to curtail its blowback.

The recent news that Ehsanullah Ehsan, the ex-spokesman of the infamous terrorist group, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) – who was in the Pakistani army’s custody for over two years – has fled to Turkey, shows that the top khaki brass continues to mollycoddle terrorists of assorted hues. The army has many problems, but poor discipline is certainly not one of them. It is an extremely organized outfit with a top-down, well-knit and well-defined command and control structure. A most-wanted, high-profile terrorist escaping from its detention is unimaginable. The army’s coyness about Ehsan’s escape and its friendly media rationalizing Ehsan’s “contributions” to the army’s effort to neutralise the TTP smacks of collusion, not incompetence on the part of the captors. And there is no way in hell that the army has cut a deal with a top TTP operative, without the knowledge and approval of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Qamar Javed Bajwa in the current instance.

Regardless of whether Ehsan made good his escape on his own or was allowed to flee, the buck stops with General Bajwa. That the man who, on behalf of the TTP and later its breakaway incarnation Jamat-ul-Ahrar (JuA), had gleefully claimed the slaughter of thousands of Pakistanis and the maiming of others, including Nobel-laureate Malala Yousufzai went scot-free on General Bajwa’s watch is a disgrace in its own right. But a bigger humiliation is the Pakistani army’s criminal silence over this matter. After all, among the TTP’s most heinous crimes were the wholesale killings of schoolchildren at the Army Public School (APS), Peshawar, murderous attacks on the army itself and desecration of servicemen’s corpses by playing football with their severed heads.

The outgoing Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR), Major General Asif Ghafoor had boasted in April 2017: “I want to take this opportunity to announce that Ehsanullah Ehsan, the former spokesperson of the TTP and a leader of the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, has turned himself in to our security agencies.” Ehsan was never brought to book or faced any trial.

Also Read: In Pakistan, the Army Chief Got an Extension, but the Game Is Still on

Now he has walked away, without as much as a rap on the knuckles, right out of the Pakistan army’s safehouse. After the parent of a child killed in the APS attack filed a petition, the authorities had, however, told the Peshawar high court that they “would continue to keep him under custody and investigation”. Ehsan has claimed in an audio clip attributed to him that he had opted to flee as the army didn’t keep its end of the bargain. He had clearly been cut a deal, otherwise two years is more than enough time to indict, prosecute and punish a terrorist who loudly and repeatedly owned the murders of thousands of innocents, on behalf of his outfit(s).

The army had paraded him before the cameras and then sat him down – clad in a crisp salwar-kameez suit and waistcoat—with a chosen television anchor for an ostensibly confessional statement. However, Ehsan – appearing extremely comfortable – essentially had indicted the Afghan and Indian intelligence agencies for propping up the TTP. The TTP’s baby-faced butcher, who had gleefully claimed scores of attacks and threatened many more, was being housed in a villa in Peshawar’s suburban Hayatabad Township, in the midst of civilians, indicating that there wasn’t even an intention of bringing him to justice. Ehsan also sired a child during this sham custody.

Ehsanullah Ehsan. Photo: Screengrab

Kid-glove treatment of terrorists

The Pakistani army’s kid-glove treatment of its favourite terrorists isn’t anything new. The author Arif Jamal had noted that Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operatives had lived largely under custody, enjoyed conjugal visit privileges and while in jail, the mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attacks, “Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi even fathered a son who is being raised as an LeT jihadist”. Jamal wrote that the jihadists had nicknamed the boy Maulana Adialavi, after Rawalpindi’s Adiala prison, where he had been conceived.

One, therefore, has to look at the just-announced conviction of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, the chief of the LeT’s parent outfit Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD), on terror-financing and organiSing charges, with industrial-strength suspicion. The verdict was perfectly timed before a key meeting of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), in Paris on February 16. In its October 2019 review, the FATF had kept Pakistan on its grey list and given it till this February to take more measures to avoid being placed on the blacklist.  Blacklisting by the FATF, a powerful inter-governmental body that monitors terror-financing, and makes policy recommendations to financial entities and governments about threats to the international financing systems, could be a major blow to Pakistan’s sagging economy, which got an International Monetary Fund (IMF) lifeline just last year.

It is not just that the Pakistan army continues to hug its terrorist proxies tight but also that it is systematically and constantly hounding the critics of its jihadist project, which indicates that those policies and practices are very much in place.

The latest target

The latest target of the army’s war on dissent is Gul Bukhari, a fearless human rights activist and opinion writer. Bukhari – who happens to be the daughter of a retired general and daughter-in-law of another one – has been a fierce critic of the army’s anti-democratic policies and its jihadist practices, for years. She had to flee Pakistan after she was abducted by the army’s operatives in June 2018. This time around, Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has apparently issued notice for Bukhari to appear before it. The charge against her is – wait for it – terrorist activities by virtue of criticizing the army on social media. And if she fails to appear before the FIA, her property can be confiscated. Everyone and their aunt knows in Pakistan that the FIA’s anti-terrorism wing would not have initiated such frivolous and malicious proceedings without the army twisting its tail. Pakistan is under virtual martial law, with Prime Minister Imran Khan merely serving as a civilian fig leaf under General Bajwa.

Social activist Gul Bukhari. Photo: Reuters/Mohsin Raza

Gul Bukhari is not the first journalist to face the army’s wrath and she won’t be the last. In fact, one of the first actions of the Pakistan army was to muzzle the independent media, when the first military dictator, General Ayub Khan, clamped martial law. A respected left-liberal publishing house, the Progressive Papers Limited (PPL) was taken over at gunpoint by Ayub Khan’s regime in April 1959. The PPL ran the English daily, Pakistan Times, the Urdu daily Imroze, and an Urdu periodical Lail-o-Nahar. The Pakistan Times had been brought out by the veteran Marxist Mian Iftikharuddin, who had joined the Muslim League, at the prodding of none other than the country’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Not only were the publications taken over but the printing press was appropriated and the properties of Mian Iftikharuddin threatened. In an article titled ‘Ayub’s attack on Progressive Papers’, the venerable editor of the Pakistan Times, Mazhar Ali Khan was to write in 1972:

“Many will probably conclude that the dictatorship’s gravest crime was its deliberate destruction of press freedom, because so many other evils flowed from this act of denying to the people of Pakistan one of their fundamental rights”.

This was true then and remains truer now. I have been one of the earliest causalities of the Pakistan army’s present war on dissent, along with the respected Baloch rights champion Mir Muhammad Ali Talpur and veteran editor Rashed Rahman. The noose continued to tighten from there on, with prominent writers, journalists, and even former parliamentarians getting purged out of the publications that had carried their work for years. The common denominator was that all of the sanctioned media personalities were critical either of the Pakistani army’s domestic encroachment into the political domain or its policy to prosecute foreign policy goals through the use of jihadi proxies or both.

Believing its own lies and half-truths

The Pakistani army, for its part, seems to believe its own lies and half-truths, the most pernicious one of which is that it is the guardian of Pakistan’s geographical and ideological frontiers. Nothing can be farther than truth. The army in Pakistan remains a colonial construct in its mindset and actions. It was nothing but a continuation of the British Indian Army, through the regiments, which Pakistan had inherited at the 1947 Partition of India.

It anointed itself as the praetorian guard over the new state in just over a decade but never developed a national character. In its theory and practice, the Pakistani army has maintained a disdain for free speech and dissenting opinions, just like its precursors did during the British Raj. Even the harassment of journalists and targeting their possessions is a direct continuation of the colonial era. One of the first actions of the British Raj after seizing Delhi in 1857 was to hang Maulvi Muhammad Baqir, the owner-publisher of Delhi Urdu Akhbar, and burn his property to ground. Later on, the British seized – at gunpoint – the press and even personal library of the Communist Party of India’s leader Maulana Hasrat Mohani. Mohani had refused to divulge the real name and identity of a contributor who had written an article critical of the British colonial power, in his paper Urdu-e-Mua’lla.

Activists and media persons aren’t the only ones facing the army’s wrath. In the inglorious colonial tradition of jailing politicians and arresting leaders, the army has, through its civilian façade, orchestrated the arrest of two former PMs, Nawaz Sharif and Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, one ex-president Asif Zardari, assorted parliamentarians on trumped-up graft allegations, and political leaders like Manzur Pashteen on cooked-up law and order charges. All of them have opposed the army’s political ambitions, to a varying degree. Pashteen also flayed the army’s double game of showcasing to the world that it is fighting jihadi terror, while harbouring the same terrorists.

File photo of Pakistan army chef General Qamar Bajwa and Prime Minister Imran Khan in Miranshah. Credit: Khyber TV

Pakistan’s army is unlikely to change its ambitions, strategy and tactics to subdue the Pakistani people without political forces closing ranks to confront it. Civil society activists, rights defenders and advocates, journalists and media persons can certainly raise awareness about what the Pakistan army’s role and goal is, but only organised political parties can do the heavy lifting.

The army has succeeded thus far by playing political parties, or groups within them, against each other. The only way forward is for the parties to close rank on a minimum common program to push the army back towards borders and barracks. Pakistan’s major political parties had signed, what they called a Charter of Democracy (CoD), nearly 15 years ago with the intent to forge unity to push and keep the army out of the country’s political arena. The former PMs, Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto, were the prime movers of the process.

An updated CoD is the need of the hour but with Nawaz Sharif facing serious health issues and Benazir Bhutto tragically gone, does the available political leadership have the will and wherewithal to pull off something like that? One seriously doubts that, but politics is the art of the possible. And that is where the dissident voices, writers, activists have a role to play – by prodding, nudging and cajoling the politicians to rise to the occasion.

Postscript:

In the most recent development, Pakistani authorities are now seeking to implement laws to gag social media. This ominous move is patterned after China, where the authoritarian state controls social media with an iron fist. In Pakistan, social media has played a vibrant role as a vehicle for dissent. After the traditional media was muzzled, social media platforms have so far been the firewall that the Bajwa-Imran hybrid regime hasn’t been able to cross successfully. Defending these last vestiges of freedom of expression would be imperative for political leaders and cadres, as well as the rights activists.

Mohammad Taqi is a Pakistani-American columnist. He tweets @mazdaki.