Deccan Chronicle

Sharif-Army face-off was long overdue

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Blame Panama. A delayed verdict disrupted our crisis cycle. Instead of a regular dose of crisis, we got a lengthy wait. Nothing, nothing, nothing and then — kaboom. It’s been quite a week. Multiple crises, many players, but one man at the centre of it all: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. He’s learning that victory can be sour and the rest of us are learning that a political winner can be a policy loser.

First, the politics. All three of them were in campaign mode this week: Asif Ali Zardari, Imran Khan and Mr Sharif, the three who hold the keys to the next Parliament. (Demand as Mr Zardari and Mr Khan did for Mr Sharif to exit, it was obvious neither of them really believes an early election is on the cards. Yesterday, Mr Sharif confirmed that.)

Mr Zardari’s strategy is the easiest to discern — and the weakest. Batter Mr Sharif in speeches and cut deals to assemble blocs of votes via the constituen­cy-type candidate. It won’t get him very far. The PPP will try to regain some seats in old stamping grounds in south Punjab and parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a, but the party has an obvious, twin problem: Mr Zardari and KP.

Five years can be a lifetime in politics, but it’s too short to make folks forget the horrors of government by Mr Zardari. And even if folks were willing to forget, they can’t because of Sindh. Sindh, sinned, never again. And even if folks were willing to give the PPP another shot, there’s the permanent Karachi operation to scuttle the party’s national ambitions. A few well-timed arrests and some middle-of-the-night messengers to favourably inclined candidates would stop any PPP momentum. On to Mr Khan. Master of drawing attention to himself and his message, he was at it again this week. In a week in which the N-League could have further limited the damage from the Panama verdict, Mr Khan produced another sensationa­l claim that sucked all the political oxygen towards the PTI. But the Friday speech revealed a problem: Mr Khan is still one-dimensiona­l.

Mr Khan is launching an election campaign by demanding Mr Sharif resign. Mr Sharif isn’t going to resign. For the PTI core, that’s an admirable sign of principles and consistenc­y. For everyone outside, it’s a sign of a politician who doesn’t know how to get what he wants. Elections are forward-looking; Mr Khan is turning everyone’s gaze backwards. It’s not a good start for the PTI. And then there’s Mr Sharif. The shots aimed at Mr Khan will delight the base, but the electoral strategy is convention­al and time-tested: a combinatio­n of delivering reasonably on promises and patronage politics. Electricit­y is critical, but the week also illuminate­d a political reality: the voter’s desire to get more electricit­y is greater than his desire to punish government . See how as the N-League franticall­y pumped more megawatts into the system, the political unrest disappeare­d. Patronage too has a different rhythm. But for all the favourable political winds, the N-League is strangely engulfed in crisis.

Two mistakes captured the p roblem: the secret Indian meeting and trying to rid itself of an eight-month-old headache quietly over the weekend. Both provoked an instant and fierce response and exposed a critical, though familiar, mistake by Mr Sharif and the N-League: they thought their job was done with the appointmen­t. Having navigated a tricky Raheel exit and installed a chief very different in style, the N-League seems to have switched off. Instead of opening a dialogue with a chief yet to figure out what he wanted to do and what the institutio­n he leads will let him do, the N-League let the new guys work on their own with their own — an intra-institutio­nal learning curve guaranteed to produce suspicion of civilians. Five months later, Mr Sharif is not just locked out of policy, but is again being reminded where his place is.

It ain’t pretty. Then again, it never is. By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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