At the brink of turning 60, Imran Khan looks charming, handsome, fully in control of his mental and physical faculties and is also a writer to boot. His discipline, leadership skills and hard work won us the cricket World Cup and helped establish the nation’s first cancer hospital. With his colourful past and global exposure, one would expect him to be a determined realist, if not a thorough liberal. But he is not.
Politically, he has been a master of miscalculations. He entered electoral politics in 1997 when the PML-N swept the elections, he supported General (retd) Pervez Musharraf in the 2002 referendum and then boycotted the 2008 elections when he had a chance to make his first substantial impact. Many still laugh out loud at the faintest suggestion of him becoming the prime minister. But the movement he started is gaining momentum and one can only hope that this time something has really changed in him.
But the acerbic few are quick to point out that he has already made fatal miscalculations on foreign policy and defence matters. In a country which is at war with itself, he advocates a simplistic policy of non-violence against those who pose an existential threat to the polity. And at a time when the nation is reeling under the impact of lack of foreign empathy, he actively campaigns for a foreign policy of dramatic isolationism. And the cherry on the top is that on both issues, he has no elaborate plan, no detailed blueprint. And yet, neither he nor his supporters understand that the critics of his policies are not his personal enemies.
The story doesn’t end here. He has made countless unrealistic and unimaginative promises like eliminating corruption and terrorism in 90 days, introducing alternative sources of energy to control the all-pervasive power breakdowns and what some are calling IKnomics. Of course, these promises are music to the ears of a gullible people starved of hope. But the real problem lies not in making such promises, but in fulfilling them successfully. The Herculean task of winning an election looks like child’s play in comparison.
In his bid to win the elections, Imran Khan is setting himself up for post-election failure. And the people rallying around him are a motley crowd. Does this remind you of anyone else from Pakistani history? Soft on right wing political ideologies, deliberately ambiguous on political philosophy and helpless before the exaggerated expectations of their voters and supporters? Not one, but two individuals come to mind — Muhammad Ali Jinnah and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. And we all know that the political careers and personal lives of both the Quaid-e-Azam and the Quaid-e-Awam were nothing short of insurmountable tragedies. Mr Khan should learn from the mistakes of these stalwarts, not because of their failures, but because they, too, were taken hostage by their supporters.
In short, if Imran Khan really means business he needs to fold back his unrealistic promises and seize the moment. He has earned quite a few believers. Now is the time to influence them and change them with the truth. It is time to tell them how weak a country Pakistan has become and the possible outcomes that reality entails. Introduce a realistic roadmap and be honest. Or else sir, remember that you were warned.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (66)
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This country has experienced many realistic politicians and results are infront of everyone,lets taste the unrealistic now..i hope he would turn out to be bettet than so called realistic ones
Dear author, I think you have under estimated the gullibility of the PTI followers. Consider when Imran included all the same old hated,corrupt lotas and turncoats into its fold by justifying that it is a case of “real-politic’. Did you see any moral outrage or protests from the PTI sheeple for imran compromising his fundamental belief and moral ‘high ground’? NO!! In fact all the PTI sheeple went baaaa..baaaa..baa….! Once and if IK comes to power, he wont be able to fulfill most of his exaggerated promises, but he will blame or excuse away his failures on something(other political parties, US foreign policy etc.)but the PTI sheeple will accept it without any hesitations. Such is the power of the clueless cult leader!
Did anyone ever ask PPP or PML(N) for any roadmaps or blue prints about foreign policy..???? He has a clear stance about war on terror i.e. peace through dialogue. and our dear mian ji (Nawaz sharif) keeps on flipping his stances... he is too afraid to say anything against the talibans or the US. We always use to ask about the policies of Imran Khan, but never from mian ji. Imran has given policies for local govts, energy crisis, police system, land system... but in a jalsa or a TV show, it cant be explained. For the least, he has identitifed the problems which is a big thing in itself. Identifiying the problem is a first step towards the solution.
I accept him as even as a "failed unsuccessful Politician". I will support him no matter what. because the option is Zar-Sharif.
imran has a dream and we wish him best of luck! we know him very well he will try his best and the rest is is Allah's hands........
Whos stopping you, why dont you leave then? :P
@Absar: If jinnah would have lived longer, he would have been assassinated by the military + breaucracy combination just like banga bandhu sheikh mujibur rehman. Jinnah died at the right time before militar gets him. Cheerio
The only thing that you can expect from an Imran Khan led government is financial probity at the top. Other than that his policies are doomed to failure and are naive. He'd declare unilateral peace with the militants who'd like to make Pakistan into a Taliban ruled country.
If only IK was secular and west-leaning what a difference he could have made with his honesty and hard work. Instead of peace with the terrorists he would have led an all out war against them like Sri Lanka and finished them off for good. He could have radically altered our education system, shutting down the madrassahs and replacing them with decent, secular government schools. He could have ensured that to become a cleric in this country you'd need to have approved education and a license. He'd shutdown the thousands of extra mosques that serve no purpose but to provide a livelihood to the people running them. He would get rid of the blasphemy law, streamline the courts and empower women. Finally he would reach out to the countries of the world and improve Pakistan's standing and friendships.
Alas that's a pipe dream the reality doesn't beat thinking about.
The author wants to say that Pakistan is weak and can't get out of crisis. Lame approach i must say .. we can stand on our own two feet, if we want to. and InshAllah with Imran Khan we will make Pakistan one of the best countries of the world. Take that - we will do it.
@Amjad
we have asked him this question DIRECTLY and we are given satisfactory answers. we are pleased with what we have heard from him directly
If you have a 'satisfactory answer' 'directly' why don't you share it with other readers, instead of bashing the 'so called sold media'?
I am assuming that no state secrets are involved here. .
Disappointed article.Look at IK life.He is life time achiever
I hate the world liberal. We use it seldom knowing what it means. You just lost me in the very first paragraph.
Are you satisfied with the current govt policies or do anyone know how Nawaz Sharif wants to handle the current security problems? No why bother to analyze other parties if you can get readers by bashing Ik only.
yeh yeh, whatever, my vote and that of my whole family (and by the way by their own individual choices) is going still to IK.........
@Haris Khan: I am sorry to disagree with you my friend. This question and such as this should be asked by us, the people of FATA, not by people sitting in Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi or even Peshawar. It was the will of all these people to have a go at FATA and launch an operation against us and you guys got the wish fulfilled ( by you i mean those supporting it ).. so you do not have to ask this question "why, Where, When and HOW do we deal with them ( taliban etc )? . we have asked him this question DIRECTLY and we are given satisfactory answers. we are pleased with what we have heard from him directly . its just the so called sold-out media (print and electronic) that they never highlighted it and when they did, it was to make mockery of it. Imran Khan has clearly won over our trust, our elder's trust. we have faith in him and trust me when you have trust of tribal elders, consider 50% of your problems solved at that very moment.
so stay cool guys, this has nothing to do with you guys, its our problem and we will deal with it. you guys just take care of the other problems.
Just like anybody we like Imran khan because we hate the Zardari and the Shareef policies. If Zardari could become the president by chance ,i think we could installed anybody to be the president, than what to say about Imran Khan to be the one. If these are his unrealistic policies ,at least he is trying to evaluate his policies. Though most of his thoughts are in incubation.
Unimaginatively, the writer has compared the Imran Khan with the leaders of that calibre like of Mohammed ali Jinnah and Z.A Bhutto.I think the writer has raised the stature of Imran khan rather than lessening it. Now Khan has to prove that he is leader of that stature.
the writter wants to take hope away from us. We will not let him get away with it. All our hopes and dream are with imran khan. We are going to vote for pti. Take care!!!!!!!!!!
Nothing new same old arguments against Imran Khan. he is the best option.
other wise keep selecting PPP and PMLN if you like their political correctness so much
Oof i don't see any warnings or criticisms for the other politicos - lets start with them first, IK least of our worries
On corruption, Imran is often quoted out of context. He has clarified on a number of occasions that his statement about addressing corruption within 90 days is about top level corruption, whereas lower level corruption will take a lot longer. His point is simply that if he and his cabinet are clean themselves and if they appoint honest and competent people in key positions, then top level corruption will indeed come under control. To add to this, he will create an independent NAB so that if anyone indulges in any wrong-doing, he will be prosecuted. Sounds very sensible and doable. What's the problem with that?
On terrorism though, I would agree with the author that Imran is oversimplifying the issue. He seems to believe that all the militants will suddenly agree to behave themselves the moment they are offered talks and everything will be hunky dori within 90 days. That sounds like building castles in the air. Also, how does Imran intend to fulfil his promise that he will not let any militants use Pakistan's soil to plot attacks against other countries?
comparing Imran Khan with Bhutto in anyway is very strange - can anyone ever highlight those similarities??? there are absolutely none.
Poorly analyzed Imran's politics...
Does Imran has any formula to unite pakistanis who are divided on religious, sectarian and tribals bases. How will he fight against intolerance, bigotry and injustice if he allies himself with parties like Jamaat Islami, and taliban. I think he is just another politician with no agenda to solve these problems.
First of all IK doesnt say to stop all corruption in 90 days , he always mentions top level corruption, i dont understand why people misquote this. Secondly lot of people say he doesnt have a plan/blue print etc etc.....What about the others PML(N), PPP etc do they have a plan, have they come up with something? if yes then where is it.They all have there chances and they have miserably failed.
@Sheheryar
Crap – Wasted 3 minutes of my life!!
And then some on writing this comment.
But it is still better than waking up after the elections one day and realising, "Crap- Wasted 3 years of my life!!"
What Imran Khan says is nothing but common sense. If top leadership is honest, 90% of corruption is already controlled. If all posts are filled on merit then automatically governance will become better. I think Imran Khan needs to tell this to our nation and he is already doing that. Creating more negativism by saying nothing can improve in future will do no good to Pakistan.
while i am an IK fan.. i agree to everything writer has said. All facts are true.
Think 100%, you'll probably reach somewhere 70%. Think 50% and you'll be in the trash hovering around 20%. It's time to change our mentality, only then our country will change.
So what do you say we vote for Zardari or Nwaz? My vote is for PTI.
IK is the problem.
@Shahid Jamil: LOL. a good one. i am not sure if some folks would understand that you are being sarcastic here.
@salman: best analysis by far. I guess our politicians have succeeded in stopping us from dreaming and dreaming big. IK will do wonders for Pakistan, i can see it.
@Iron hand: and what happens to Pakistan if PPP or PMLN wins election? you will get much faster to being Somalia likd then with IK. i guarantee you this buddy.
He has made countless unrealistic and unimaginative promises like eliminating corruption and terrorism in 90 days,
'mind you, he did not said it', what he promised was that he would eliminate the top corruption in 90 days, he is not that stupid to claim this much huge, what you inferred is your choice. Watch capital talk, his recent interview with Hamid Mir, and behold and listen aptly what he said. dont create confusion among the readers...
Contradictory to the core. First you say political miscalculations, then you say he's making people dream. What else is politics all about? He is painting himself as a savior and in fact he is, he has never failed in what he set out to achieve.
And again the same childish argument "how to stop corruption in 90 days". Mere Bhai, the moment an honest man walks into the PM office, 70-80% corruption ends. He should say 90 mins, not 90 days. 90% of the corruption by order of magnitude takes place in the PMs cabinet, so why can't you stomach the fact that it can be put to an end if an honest man is at the helm?
BlackJack, may be you should think about elections in India for a change...
It is not very accurate analysis. Imran Khan has never said he wants to adopt isolationism. What he said Pakistan should withdraw from this so called war on terror. He maintains Pakistan should mantain friendly relationship with US. When he is referring to corruption, he is referring to high level corruption
utter rubbish !
Almost all of IK campaign political platform is superficial, illogical and won't stand up to serious review but that doesn't seem to matter. What matters is that he has promised change --- and everyone knows that what you have now is pretty bad. Whether IK gets elected or not your days of isolation are probably right around the corner.
Excellent.
I couldn't agree more with the writer. Imran Khan notwithstanding his honesty and clean record has taken realism a bit too far. He has outlined his targets without ever giving a road map to achieve them. But it all comes down to the fact that compared to others he is a much better option and worth a try. For my part, Imran Khan has my support if not my faith.
"....introducing alternative sources of energy to control the all-pervasive power breakdowns.." We can not get any Hydro-electricity from the rivers flowing out of hindia because hindians take out( steal) all the electricity from our water. I think IK's intellect is well suited for path breaking projects already well researched, such as harnessing power of jinns and underground gassification of the thar coal reserves.
Again..same old theories.
Farrukh saab, looks like "just another column", bash-imran-gain-attention type. Nothing new.
Why don't you come forward and give some solutions? Oh you are a critic, and an intellectual. right. Well Pakistan had Quaid e Azam and he made a difference. He couldnt complete the task but he did accomplish something. On the other side, There have been and there are dozens of columnists, intellectuals, writers, poets, TV anchors(list goes on) in Pakistan. They havent made any difference for the masses of this country. So? Should I ignore Imran and start following Najam Sethi because he is a "determined realist"?
No thanks.
1) Realistic promises don't win elections. You're criticizing him for being a bad politician but at the same time warn him not to make big promises. Remember the slogan "Yes We Can" ? Maybe we couldn't but the guy's still in the white house and doing much better than McCain. 2) Corruption at the top can be eliminated within 90 days. If your ministers are not corrupt then your secretaries can't be corrupt and so on. Point being no more railway, hajj and RPP scams. The other kind of small corruption has become culturally accepted and will take time to root out. 3) The man has shown flexibility in his stance and he also relies a lot on experts' opinions.These two are signs of intelligence and something every leader should have. Once he comes to power we will definitely see reorientation in some of his stances. 4) You missed that some of his solutions concerning power are very practical if you take a deeper look at his policy and the ailments of Pakistan's power sector you will realize that immediately. He's not only focusing on alternative sources. In fact a large part of his power policy is based on improving the existing power infrastructure and shifting to coal, which if you ask power experts is the way to go for Pakistan.
Nice article . PTI Supporter
Well said. Imran should instead follow the example of the successful political leaders in Pakistan. To quote a few names, Asif Ali Zardari, Yousaf Raza Gilani, Nawaz Shrif, Shahbaz Sharif, Shujaat Hussain, Pervaiz Ilahi, Qaim Ali Shah, Faisal Saleh Hayat, Zulfiqar Mirza, Aslam Raisani, Ishrat ul Ibad, Shahi Syed, Ghulam AHmed Bilor, Zulfiqar Khosa, Ghulam Mustapha Khar, Mumtaz Bhutto, Latif Khosa, Fazl ur Rehman, Babar Awan, Aitezaz Ahsan, Altaf Bhai, and many other similarly illustrious previous and current heavy weights who have really helped make Pakistan in to a great, prosperous and vibrant country and were always able to lead and not follow their supporters.
Respectfully that is where you got it all wrong Imran Khan is more of an idealist and a dreamer.....He dreams big for Pakistan.
Nelson Mandela also said It always seems impossible until it is done.....
and by the way if we look at Imran Khan's accomplishments all seemed impossible but he accomplished all of them..
If he's elected, his policies will fail, his supporters will blame foreign conspirators for the failures, and Pakistan's death spiral toward Somalia-like anarchy will continue.
Is this what passes as "analysis" these days?
In the end truth and honesty wins. Imran khan despite his mistakes has come a long way and he will seize the moment. On the other hand both PPP and PML- N despite being in power multiple times didnt learn anything from their mistakes
I totally agree with you. Imran Khan is totally unrealistic and his statements seem immensely exaggerated, people like you should write more articles that might knock some sense into him.
But then again, it is these qualities of IK that gave us a world class "free" cancer hospital and a world class "free university" dishing out foreign degrees for free in a remote part of the country. When IK thought about opening Shaukat Khanum, people told him to open a free dispensary or a small hospital. He has a habit of not listening to people, and I hope that he never reads this article and if he does, he pays no heed to it. We're not looking for mediocrity in IK.
blah blah blah...blah blah blah...again no point to make - same old stories and allegations we hear every day,and start criticizing..and by the way when di IK mention foreign policy of dramatic isolationism??he made it clear that we wont like to be isolated in the world and will have ties with all the countries in the world inc india and US.. now grow up columnists please.. but yes the task of irradicating corruption in 90 days is a strange one,but be it more than 90,atleast he's willing to do something against corruption (or simply raising voice against it) unlike other political parties who do not consider it an issue.
P.S. im not his party worker or a die hard fan od IK
blah blah blah...blah blah blah...again no point to make - same old stories and allegations we hear every day,and start criticizing..and by the way when di IK mention foreign policy of dramatic isolationism??he made it clear that we wont like to be isolated in the world and will have ties with all the countries in the world inc india and US.. now grow up columnists please.. but yes the task of irradicating corruption in 90 days is a strange one,but be it more than 90,atleast he's willing to do something against corruption (or simply raising voice against it) unlike other political parties who do not consider it an issue.
Nicely put and fair analogy. Jinnah must have had a plan as opposed to his vague politicking occasionally. And lest he had lived a bit more longer he may well have carried it out. That's debatable. It is yet to be seen what IK has for people in the event of sweeping with clean majority that still seems a romantic claim.
I am a PTI supporter but what writer is trying to say makes sense. I don't know what Imran Khan has in mind to tackle issues such as terrorism which is prevailing not only in NWFP but in other parts of pakistan too. He is honest, dedicated to his cause and credible but there s no harm in asking for blue prints of every policy. So before you all start bashing the writer for writing against (not in favor) IK, i believe we all should raise our voice collectively so that PTI can come up with blue prints as soon as possible. I still believe in Imran khan and his agenda of change. having said that i still want the writer to tell us, what other options we have if not Imran Khan. I am sure he s as confused on this one as any other pakistani.
Crap - Wasted 3 minutes of my life!!
Even in his failure he will be way ahead of PPP and PML(N) performance.
IKnomics. Lolz. The term sums it up all. Brilliant Analysis. IK is the biggest fraud!!
In short, if Imran Khan really means business he needs to fold back his unrealistic promises and seize the moment.. I must disagree. There are clearly a lot of young gullible people in Pakistan who are disenchanted with the existing political setup as well as the country's multiple rounds of military rule. The (grating) refrain of their song has always been that he is better than any other choice, simply because the others haven't measured up during their chances and IK hasn't had his - and we all know that faith requires no proof and brooks no opposition. The intersection between idealistic youth hankering for change, rampant anti-Americanism across the population, and unshakeable belief in the power of (even more) Islam to cure all ills that ail Pakistan currently is Imran Khan - and all of these segments are only increasing in size. Sounds like a good political strategy to me.
Ps: I have decided to vote for PTI in next elections only because he hasn’t been tried earlier