Watching the emergence of Imran Khan, I am reminded a little of Nawaz Sharif’s rise to power, although there are some important differences in the precise circumstances of the latter. The biggest difference is that Nawaz Sharif rose from ‘within the ranks’ so to speak. He had already been chief minister of Punjab for two terms before he became prime minister in 1990 and made his bid for party leadership — first in the PML and second in the IJI — by presenting himself as the alternative to Junejo.
Junejo had displeased his khaki masters because his government had dared to talk about a cut in defence expenditures and because it dared to chart an independent course in the endgame in Afghanistan that was shaping up following the Soviet withdrawal. Long before Junejo jolted Zia by signing the Geneva Accords that gave the world the commitment that Pakistan would not interfere in Afghanistan after the Soviets pulled out, Junejo’s government had talked about sharing the pain of a sharp reduction in government expenditures with the military. A fiscal adjustment had become inevitable in view of a massive piling up of government debt during the three years of Junejo’s rule — from 1985 to 1988.
Nawaz Sharif presented himself as a willing accomplice for the military, but it didn’t take long for him to figure out that his place in the scheme of things was not what he had imagined. He had been brought in by the military establishment for two principal reasons. The first was to continue the privileged access to the country’s resources — both fiscal and natural — that the military had become accustomed to during Zia’s decade. And the second was to provide political cover for a regional geopolitical ball-game that the military had been hatching ever since the withdrawal of the Soviets from Afghanistan, a ball game that sought to pin down India’s army in the mountains of Kashmir using jihadi auxiliaries and the overthrow of Najibullah’s government in Afghanistan.
Towards this end, the nine-party alliance that was cobbled together for Nawaz Sharif in the form of the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (IJI) had a platform very similar to that of the PTI. The IJI presented itself as the party of economic reform on the one hand, and the party of a muscular and aggressive foreign policy on the other. It’s well to remember that most of Pakistan’s lasting economic reforms began under the IJI — from the Sales Tax Act to the power sector reforms that eventually culminated in the Private Power Policy of 1994 — and all were vigorously advanced during the first Nawaz Sharif government. Also, it’s worthwhile to remember that it was during this time that Najibullah’s government in Afghanistan was overthrown and the Kashmir jihad began in earnest, nearly bringing the two countries to full-scale war in 1991.
But following his dismissal, Nawaz Sharif learned his place in the scheme of things. The second time Sharif made his bid for power, he campaigned on making peace with India. His government presided over the most remarkable and impressive foreign policy feat in Pakistan’s history, when it took relations with India from the nadir of May 1998 to the Lahore Declaration of February 1999. In a mere six months, two countries that had been threatening each other with nuclear weapons were speaking of peace and friendship with each other. Only a democratically elected government could command the kind of credibility to pull this off. But, at the same time, he repeatedly invoked the Taliban as heroes and presented their model of government as some sort of example for Pakistan. Was he playing ball in the West to buy some space in the East, the same thing Benazir had tried before him?
Perhaps, but Kargil taught him who the country really belonged to all along, and if that wasn’t enough, the ease with which he was ousted, tried and sent into exile certainly showed to the world whose country this really is.
Now fast forward to the present. One more time, a candidate emerges in Pakistan’s political scene promising economic renewal coupled with a muscular foreign policy. One more time, the promise of economic renewal is coming in the shadow of a looming adjustment in government expenditures, an adjustment made necessary by the massive accumulation of government debt over the preceding four years. One more time, the candidate promises an aggressive and muscular foreign policy as a superpower conflict begins to wind down in Afghanistan. And rest assured, one more time the candidate will ride the same learning curve that those who came before him in this game rode to their misfortune. I wonder how will he react when he inevitably learns that his place in the whole scheme is only to secure the military’s privileged access to the country’s resources on the one hand, and to provide cover for whatever new geopolitical ball game is being hatched in GHQ following the American withdrawal from Afghanistan, on the other?
Pakistan cannot hate and hope at the same time. We cannot growl at our neighbours and gnash our teeth at the world community forever. We cannot search for stability at home and remain a purveyor of instability abroad. Economic renewal will never come in the context of an aggressive relationship with our neighbours and the world community, in the context of unending instability, in the subordination of economic priorities to geopolitical fantasies. If Imran Khan genuinely wants to be a candidate for change, he must shed the belligerent rhetoric and messianic overtones and talk of peace with our neighbours. That would be change we could bank on. All else is only pocket change that jingles merrily in a khaki pocket. Let’s hope he doesn’t take a decade to figure out that his place in the new scheme is to either play ball in PM house, or play solitaire in prison.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 29th, 2011.
COMMENTS (42)
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@Farah Tahir: How would IK grab power through ISI if we were not to vote for him. So how is ISI really involved if what IK is doing is to create mass appeal for the potential voters and is trying hard to rally them behind his promise to deliver based on his credibility and corruption free background without any evidence of using state money or machinery for launching him? More so, all the people joining his party are doing so because of mass appeal instead of arm twisting like in the case of Musharaf's era so why can't you work out the math if ISI is involved or rally is needed in IK's equation.
pls guys... open ur eyes to reality before it gets too late... do NOT vote for imran khan. his rehtoric is contrary to his actions. he's a frustrated man & is desperate to grab power be it through ISI. my vote will never go to him !!!
Even if everything written over here would have been making sense, (which it doesn't make to me), I still will vote for PTI.
Khurram Hussain - you are 110% correct. These PTI supporters will realize one day when it dawns on them.
I'll vote for PTI because PTI is better than PPP and PML N ....simple.
I watched Imran Khan’s interview on BBC Asia talk show a few months back. He sounded hollow and with no substance at all. He was not offering any solution for issues. He was just giving general well meaning sound bites which maybe he thinks people want to hear. He sounded like a man with no intrinsic values. But he still built a cancer hospital for his fellow citizens. So maybe he has something of value to offer but it is not coming across right. Time will tell. It looks like he has “institutional” support so he will win. He had no clear road map on any issue, from economy to terrorism we are unable to trace out any solid policy by Immi Khan. He is building castles in air, practical things are far different. It is not time to offer mere lip service but to take practical steps.
Nawaz provided an opportunity to the army because of his corruption and poor governance and the army could see that masses were all ready to distribute sweets in they helped them get rid up of nawaz. The other reason was that nawaz never acted as a democrats, he was a civil dictator, who always tried to undermine the beurocracy, the judiciary and all other institutions. Now any one including ik, who will repeat the same mistakes, will likely face the same fat.
Khurram - where are you getting your information on PTI's foreign policy from? I can't believe how wrong you have got it! One hundred and eighty degrees wrong! People like Meekal Ahmed also surprise me with their comments. You guys are meant to be well informed. How depressing it is to hear misinformation from you. . IK is sincere and is willing to sacrifice his all for the good of Pakistan. If you don't know that yet, you and the likes of Meekal have missed the big picture about IK and PTI. Honestly! . The so called educated lot (from all walks and ethnicities) should be getting involved in establishing a clean government. If you think the Establishment is a problem then get involved - it will back off when it sees a strong and clean civilian government in place. . Don't just comment from the sidelines . . . GET INVOLVED . . . and be ready for a long haul.
Was that funny or what. Lameness written all over it
@No BS: NO BS plz. NS paid over 2 million rs tax in 2010.
@No BS: did u check with harry potter aka imran khan? We (imran khan) have peace with mqm now.
I don't understand these media personalities... first they presented IK as an alternative.. once he got himself established in the political world now they want to drag him back to the point zero.. And the most amazing thing comparing with Sharifs and Zardaris.. please give us a break!!!
When I saw Khurram's article and the choice of topic I said for once i would get to understand why ppl think IK may have been an establishment figure with the help of facts and concrete logic as that has been the hallmark of Khurram's writings. However, I feel the article lacks the luster i had expected from it. While it draws similarities between Nawaz Sharif's and IK's rise to fame he misses out on the mass appeal IK generates due to his agenda of hope and immense credibility to back it up which Nawaz doesn't have and the fact that IK chose the difficult path of actually mobilizing the ppl through hard work, consistency and opting out of patronage as opposed to behind closed door politics that Mian Sb has always done.
@Ivan:
...and the Taliban.
you're absolutely right except for one thing. this guy will have the peopel with him and he is what you might call arrogant enough or crazy enough to take an eyeball to eyeball stance with the military. whatever the end result is i know that he wont lie down and play dead. thats just not his style. You wrote on history, we are looking at the future. every cycle must end someday, maybe the time is now but i do know that if we go with the existing options this cycle shall continue.
He gives us hope, and for those who havnt had any in years sometimes that is enough!!
@Tehreeq-e-Insaaf FATA Agree 100%. If Imran can be accused of a personality flaw, it is his dictatorial tendency and his ego. Why would "the establishment" be so foolish to pick such a headstrong person to do their bidding?
Great article ! Analogy between Nawaz and Imran might not be perfect but similarities exist. Now that Mr. Shareef has learnt from his mistakes and is an existential threat to the establishment, they have brought in another pawn, who will go through the same learning process. One can clearly see that through a large number of turn coats and bureaucrats in his ranks, IK has also changed his tone by not saying a word against the military establishment or MQM etc.
On the one hand, the party is promising economic renewal in the country. And on the other hand, it is promising to ramp up the militarisation of Pakistan’s state and society. These are two incompatible agendas and this incompatibility has already been discovered by the last ‘establishment politician’, Imran Khan’s predecessor — Nawaz Sharif.
History repeats itself. First as a tragedy. Second as a farce.
-Karl Marx
So true.
Bhuttu's New Pakistan, Half of Jinnah's Pakistan, now IK's New PAkistan slogan stands for what?
"OUTRAGEOUSLY Inaccurate" Comparison... Imran Khan has not emerged from Out-of-the-Blue SUDDENLY.... He has struggled 15 Long Years for "This Moment".... Why would the ESTABLISHMENT want / bear a Person who has been a LEADER (cynics also say DICTATOR) all along... Even His sheer EGO makes him "Unfit" for any such CHOICE by the so-called ESTABLISHMENT.... Musharraf wanted to make him PM after 2002 Elections but had to be content with Jamali only because KAPTAAN was a "Hard Nut to Crack" ... and that He was NOT ready to be a "Rubber Stamp"......
PTI supporters!!! Its not necessary you oppose every view point just because you support PTI. Your party is in the emergent stage and sooner you take advise on mistakes better sailing in the troubled waters; ahead.
Undue criticism! Give a break to him and us! We need to give IK a chance for what he is offering. Cannot try again the same old corrupt lot. IK deserves a chance! Please support him and give him a chance.
many journalis are tilted towards bashing imran because they think it makes them loook smart. lol
@amer
Imran doesn’t criticize the use of private militant groups to wage proxy wars in other countries. He provides legitimacy to Taliban as our strategic assets. In a recent rally of banned militant organizations in Lahore, his special message was read to the public. Dialogue and withdrawal from FATA means giving out a piece of land to extremists where our strategic assets can nurture and prosper. He equates Taliban with tribals, although Taliban have killed thousands of tribal. He says that banned organizations were in the control of the military before 911, as if there is nothing wrong with having militant groups. And has no solution as to how these groups would be neutralized. These are exactly the kind of ideas held by the mullah military alliance, and this will only lead to global isolation.
yeh yeh watever, my vote's still for team IK............
Mr. Khan is a Trojan Horse of Khakis.
Imran Khan is indeed talking of peace. He is against militancy in Kashmir. He wants peace with India through trade and confidence building measures. He is of the view that Pakistan should get out of War against Terror; and peace agreements with tribes in KPK. He has made this things clear several times.!
It seems that the fundamental assumption you are making is that rapid growth of PTI is because of its backing from establishment and secondly, PTI will condone bloated defense expenditures. For the first one, although PTI rise is exponential, it has more to do with the shift in fundamental factors altogether. For example, you fail to notice the young demographics of the nation and increased accessibility to electronic media, which makes up the nucleus of PTI campaign. For the second assumption, IK has hinted few times that our nation needs books more than weapons.
brilliant!!!! best of journalism in Pakistan.
P.S vote still goes to Imran
I did not know you are a political-economist as well. This is excellent.
You forgot to mention that the final nail in Junejo's coffin was the Ojhir Camp blast. I was in Planning and we foolishly ran up to the roof to look at the show. Lucky no missile came our way.
He wanted it investigated. He was a dead duck thereafter.
How DARE this little civilian mouse from Sind (of all places) dare to put the army under investigation?!
Great piece. Loved it.
Whine whine whine. This is all you can do. Pakistanis got two choices: Sit down and let things go the way they are going and have been going with the same political parties for the past 20 years OR Go and vote for Imran Khan and atleast TRY to make a change. If it works or not, let's leave that upto Allah. Atleast we tried. These better off Pakistanis who probably hesitate to call themselves Pakistanis also have no much at stake here. They themselves will never do anything worthy for the country nor will they stop mocking anyone who tries to do that
"I wonder if Imran Khan realises that a fatal contradiction lies at the heart of the message the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) is sending out to the electorate". A truthful reflection on sunami of 25th dec in karachi
Can you please explain?
"On the one hand, the party is promising economic renewal in the country. And on the other hand, it is promising to ramp up the militarisation of Pakistan’s state and society."
How is pulling out of a US War on terror and constant talk of solving our problem through dialogue ramping up militirsation?
Can america , russia, europe, and others sighned the Geneva convention for not to interfare in world fare????
What exactly makes you believe that he is pursuing an aggressive and belligerent stance with neighbours?? Are you insinuating that by pulling out someone else war i.e. be rational and defensive of your own people and country, he is being a macho-man?? The whole article is based on a false impression and a myth, to say the least.
I wonder which world the author lives in. Imran Khan has repeatedly denounced confrontation with neighbours and spoken against militarism. Yet the author seems to think his rhetoric is 'belligerent'. Imran bashing seems to be so cool these days.
Please spare us these old rants.....who else will collect taxes in Pakistan???
Zardari (no declared income or tax records available) Mian Sharif (5,000 tax) or Altaf bhai (how much tax he pays for this poor nation and how much does he pay to her majesty's government?)
Thanks for hitting that nail on the head!!!