The succession of events comes in the wake of four major developments. Three are domestic and the fourth is regional. First, tensions between Pakistan’s powerful military and the prime minister have been building up. While the structure of Pakistan’s power relations is tilted towards the civil-military bureaucracy, the immediate cause for the recent tensions happens to the continued incarceration of former President Musharraf. Dozens of conspiracy theories are flying around but this was bound to happen. Sharif and his cabinet are doing what the law tells them to. After all, General Musharraf violated the Constitution for the second time in November 2007. The first violation — the 1999 coup — gained some measure of legal cover through the Supreme Court decision but the second one was not ratified by a judiciary which shifted its policy of siding with the military executive in early 2007.
The second relates to a reported divergence between the civilians and the military in tackling the anti-state extremist groups working under the banner of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). For months, the civilian government, for a variety of reasons, tried to negotiate with the TTP. It is said that the incumbent army chief and his colleagues have a clearer view on the issue. After years of policy inaction, the military has decided to clean up and even abandon some of its earlier allies in the northwest of the country. It is difficult to ascertain the exact nature of this divergence but surely the civilian attempt to take charge of the security policy has not gone too far. On the night of attack at Karachi airport which killed dozens, the civilian ministers of defence and interior were conspicuous by their absence and the military was leading the operations. Nothing extraordinary as in times of emergency, militaries fulfil this role. However, the fact that the minister of defence is not seen at high profile civil-military meetings does indicate that there is a problem of an unknown magnitude.
The third development has been the rollback of some of the media freedoms. In the recent media controversy, the civilian government was running with the hare and hunting with the hound. One minister was supporting media freedoms while the other was petitioning the regulator to ban the channel. That round predictably was won by the military. Now the recent suspension of ARY News is the civilian response and let’s see where this will take us. The net result of these unfortunate developments has been that the hard earned and much celebrated media freedoms have received a hard blow. In part it is the fault of corporate media as it overestimated its power in dealing with the military and in part it is the reassertion of who actually wields power in Pakistan. Some commentators have alluded that the current situation reflects the growing civilian space and the retreat of the military. Such a verdict is premature and needs further examination. In effect the military has also demonstrated its ability to divide the media and take charge of the public narrative.
Fast changing regional dynamics have had their impact in Pakistan, too. India’s swing to the right and the election of Narenadra Modi has scared many and has paradoxically opened up possibilities. The BJP historically has done business with Pakistan and based on this view, Prime Minister (PM) Sharif visited India. Upon his return he was greeted with the usual scepticism, which was extraordinarily whetted by the ongoing civil-military tension. Concurrently, the Nato drawdown from Afghanistan is about to happen and Pakistan’s military is keen to secure its borders before the US troops leave. Hence the ongoing operation. On India and Afghanistan, despite the rhetoric there is a bigger cleavage between the civilians and the military. PM Sharif wants to open up trade, grant NDMA status — the rechristened MFN — to India and strictly follow the policy of non-interference in Afghanistan. Others differ given how India is a real and constructed enemy and has to be contained on the eastern and western borders. This is where the foreign policy agenda of the civilians faces a huge challenge of what Pakistan’s bureaucrats term the ‘ground reality’.
In the past, it took Nawaz Sharif a couple of years to reach this quagmire. He governs — or at least tries to — in a difficult country with lopsided power structures. But he has not helped matters in the past one year. Decision-making remains a handiwork of a small kitchen cabinet with little parliamentary input. The standing committees in the Parliament were created after much delay. It is telling that not a single noteworthy law has been passed by the current Parliament during the one year of its existence.
On the economic front, things are somewhat brighter not due to a comprehensive reform effort but through Saudi largesse, continued assistance from the West and increasing workers’ remittances (close to $15 billion per annum). Mega projects are popular with the urban electorate and the loans for youth have generated interest. But Pakistan needs more investment and political instability and terrorism will only deter the investors.
The ugly incident in Lahore does not bode well for the incumbent government. The Punjab administration has tried to rectify the situation by taking some bold decisions but there is now a ‘cause’ for Dr Tahirul Qadri to launch agitation. PML-N’s electoral foe, Imran Khan, continues protesting against the so-called rigging of May 2013 election. Use of force will only make matters worse. After a year in office, PM Sharif needs to clean up his cabinet, change under-performing ministers, use Parliament to his advantage and mend fences with the military. The latter is even more important as Pakistan is in the midst of an undeclared civil war. In Karachi and North Waziristan, the state is trying to regain its lost writ. Sharif has the constitutional mandate to govern for the next four years but that may just not be enough.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 23rd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (17)
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Nice article. But the small proxies in the shape of TUQ (schizophrenic mullah from Canada), Sh Rasheed (frequently changed his loyalty) & Chaudhries of Gujrat (against whom mega corruption cases are pending in Courts) will still try to seduce the Military to take unconstitutional action. If so, No wonder that in future they will come out condemning such an action of Military.
@Raza: I felt really bad for your case and still feel bad for your driver & his family but ever since Doctor Sahab became your President, Express Media Group has lost all Sympathy from the educated and informed Pakistanis. Your group has proven that it's no better then any other in the country and all are corrupt to the core. @ET: Please convey this message to Raza Rumi even if you don't have the guts to publish it because it comes from the bottom of our hearts.
raza rumi, please retire
@Gp65: All of that one can gather from reading the news papers........Raza Rumi is capable of much better.......I got the impression he was holding back and if so, I don't blame him.
Dr Amer Liaquat joining Express Group as a Presdient is like as if Mubashar Luqman joining GEO as CEO.
did he really get mandate or was it rigged election
@Raza Rumi: I think after Dr Aamir Liaquat is the President of your tv group, you must be rolling with joy! Aren't you? What an achievement Raza!!??
@salman:bout
No one knows more than the writer persoaly about the circus show the Sharifs and the military have been putting up in front of the People, after his recent miraculous escape from the killer commandos, but it is prudence which he and all journalists must use to avoid antagnising aliens in khaki..
Rex Minor
The budget's inclinations towards the rich didn't get any mention in this piece. The PMLN wants to tax Kiryana store holders but those in possession of thousands of acrs of land will not be taxed. They are the green-gods, whose fortunes swell at the expense of the poor consumers and under-paid workers.
@Author: A very good overview of the situation at the one year mark of the government.
@Parvez: Really? I felt that rather concentrating exclusively on the events driving the current media cycle, he has given a broad overview of the issues driving a wedge between civilians and military which may bring about the boots in power once more. Besides that, it covered the economic and foreign policy issues and finally the emerging political environment.
Rumi after describing the ground realities and elaborating on their implications, has concluded his brief with an enigmatic and a bit ticklish line, " Sharif has the constitutional mandate to govern for next four years but may just not be enough". This provides enough food for thought and has questionable implications.
We stand with PML-N or anybody else we don't care who take office but we want the entity who can enrail the country on the track of development when they will do good; stand with them and turn opposite when they will keep doing vicious governence.
I was expecting something more substantial.
With slaughter of innocent civilians incl mothers, this government has lost any credibility or mandate it may have had. I cannot see them surviving too long.
appalling that the writer has not condemned the chief minister after the massacre in Lahore. Is he on SS payroll?
Good article. Sir, you are one of few journalists that I respect. Please tell us how you could write for a group which has Aamir Liaquat as a president.