While the controversy was playing out, it seemed as if memogate may ultimately be responsible for a seismic shift in relations between the civilians and the military. All that remained to be seen was which direction the balance of power would shift. Ultimately that shift failed to materialise although for once, the civilians were actually able to look the military leadership in the eye and not cower. In Pakistan, that represents progress of a kind. And while just about everyone came out of the memogate controversy having sullied their reputations, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani ended up smelling of roses. He cast-off the image of a timid yes-man who would simply drift along with the political winds. He fired the military-approved defence secretary and he lashed out against the army and the ISI chiefs and vowed that they wouldn’t be given any further extensions. There may have been no concrete shift in the military-civilian dynamic but at least there was a rhetorical shift.
A succession of Supreme Court rulings against the government led many to believe that the Court may have revealed itself to be more sympathetic to the military rather than the civilians. The judicial commission it set up to investigate the memogate issue more thoroughly, is still in place but without Haqqani and Ijaz in the country, it looks as if it will be impossible for it to come up with a credible judgment. Hopefully, this means that the government can breathe easy and serve out its term without the hindrance of ginned-up controversies.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 1st, 2012.
COMMENTS (10)
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Everybody who sensationalised a non-issue like Memogate stands exposed. Shame!!!
Time for the Courts to get back to their real work.
@HoneyBee: ya u r right
I think the editor is right, Whatever was the damage caused by MI, the one thing good about this whole episode is that the politicians did not buckle to the army supported by the judiciary. In the eye to eye confrontation, the military blinked. This may be a good omen for Pakistan
a flop drama a ISI chief . . .!!!
Thanks for a balanced editorial keeping the high standards of journalism. The SC and three CJ's of H. Courts are public servants and should not waste any more time in this baseless case. Even Mansoor Ijaz's sudden interest has subsided for strange reasons and there is no basis to continue this case. In this fiasco nobody won but Pakistan and its reputation has taken another hit.