Hindustan Times (Noida)

Pakistan finds itself at a defining crossroads

The Imran Khan saga, mired in ‘conspiracy’, has split its domestic front into two camps, with pressure on the current political dispensati­on and army

- Imtiaz Gul is a political and security analyst and author of several books including Pak China Relations: What Lies behind the Iron Brotherhoo­d The views expressed are personal

In six eventful days, Pakistan’s prime minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif and his son earned a unique distinctio­n. Sharif assumed office on April 11, the day he was supposed to be indicted and imprisoned in a multibilli­on rupee money laundering case. And on April 16, his son Hamza Shehbaz — also set to be indicted in the same case — became the chief minister (CM) of Pakistan’s most-populous province, Punjab, amid an unpreceden­ted pandemoniu­m that saw thenspeake­r Pervez Elahi — also a CM candidate — beaten up in a physical brawl among rival Members of Parliament (MPS).

Meanwhile, 1,500 kilometres away in Karachi, former PM Imran Khan upped the ante by staging the biggest ever public rally in the city. This came a week after an equally impressive rally in Peshawar, marking the start of the campaign by the ousted PM’S Pakistan Tehreek-e-insaf (PTI) towards building mass pressure for early elections. Overwhelme­d by the thunderous response of the Karachi crowd around midnight, Khan renewed his claims of a “US (United States)-instigated regime change” conspiracy against his government. “My life may be at risk but your independen­ce is far more important for me than my life,” he said, referring to his relentless attack on Washington and its allies, who he believes disliked his bent towards China and Russia.

During his February 23-24 Moscow visit, Khan elicited an offer of 30% cheaper Russian oil and wheat (Pakistan’s annual oil import bill hovers around $20 billion). It was this Russian offer that perhaps prompted Khan to announce on February 28 that fuel prices will not be raised until June 30. The pressure resulting from PTI’S public mobilisati­on became evident on PM Sharif when he rejected a fuel price hike, saying he wouldn’t like to burden the poor during the month of Ramadan.

Khan’s unceremoni­ous exit through a controvers­ial no-confidence vote on April 9 — his governance shortcomin­gs and disagreeme­nts with the military establishm­ent notwithsta­nding — stemmed from what is now referred to as lettergate, an account of a lunch conversati­on on March 7 between then Pakistani ambassador Asad Majeed Khan in Washington and US assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian Affairs, Donald Lu. Ambassador Khan’s cable back home was based on official notes from the meeting. It reportedly said the Biden administra­tion was upset over PM Khan’s Moscow visit; that Islamabad should also have “considered Washington’s sensitiven­ess”. Another point related to the no-confidence motion tabled on March 8. What intrigued ambassador Khan was that it was March 7, and nobody in Washington was even aware of the Pakistani Opposition’s move the next day.

It is no surprise then that an increasing­ly besieged PM Khan interprete­d the cable as a conspiracy against him. The Opposition — buoyed by the military establishm­ent’s claim that it is “apolitical” — played it down as a “concoction” invented to fend off political pressure building up.

Imran Khan’s conspiracy narrative has clearly split Pakistan into two camps. With appeals to bring Pakistani flags to the rallies and project his campaign as a battle for Pakistan, he has infused a new spirit into his followers. The entire nation, he exhorted, needs to stand up against the “imported government” — a reference to the new Sharif administra­tion. Imported Hakoomat Namanzoor (reject the imported government) is a top trend among Pakistanis across the globe. Overseas Pakistanis in western countries, including the US, are staging almost daily protest rallies against Khan’s removal, chanting “No Imran Khan, No remittance­s”.

Then, there are a dozen political parties and their followers. Now in power, they dismiss Khan’s views as shallow rhetoric by someone who lost his equilibriu­m. Khan, for his part, dubs them as status quoists with deep commercial interests in Pakistan’s political economy. On April 15, the head of the army’s public relations, General Babar Iftikhar, acknowledg­ed the existence of the disputed letter (cable) — as opposed to the Opposition which had called it a “concoction”. But this has done little to stem the wave of anger — at least among PTI workers and its sympathise­rs. Pakistan finds itself, perhaps, at a defining crossroads.

Is history repeating itself with parallels to Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who too had spoken of a threatenin­g American letter in the summer of 1977? Bhutto was eventually overthrown by General Zia ul Haq in July the same year in a military coup, and executed in April 1979. The ensuing brute oppression by the military dictator largely neutralise­d street agitation, his actions quietly endorsed by the US then (because of the impending Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n).

2022 is different. Now, China and Russia — members of the United Nations Security Council — are closely aligned with Pakistan, a key reason for divisions between the PM and the army. Khan stated on numerous occasions that the country’s future was tied to China. During his Beijing visit in 2019, he agreed to a Pakistani rupee-yuan deal, covering semiconduc­tors, transforme­rs, and broadcasti­ng equipment. He and his team also discussed, during the controvers­ial Moscow trip, a rupee-ruble deal.

While Khan resisted western pressure to condemn President Vladimir Putin for invading Ukraine and advocated Pakistan’s neutrality in the conflict, army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, on April 2, slammed the Russian military aggression and called for its immediate cession. It is evident that the military leadership believes in the need for balancing relations between China and the US.

The divergence has triggered a dynamic that sees Khan’s popularity on the rise, pitching him against an all-encompassi­ng Opposition. Will he be allowed a free run in the impending elections? This is the big question looming in Pakistan. Eventful weeks ahead indeed.

 ?? AP ?? The divergence has triggered a dynamic that sees Khan’s popularity on the rise, pitching him against the Opposition. Will he be allowed a free run in the impending elections? This is the big question looming in Pakistan
AP The divergence has triggered a dynamic that sees Khan’s popularity on the rise, pitching him against the Opposition. Will he be allowed a free run in the impending elections? This is the big question looming in Pakistan
 ?? ?? Imtiaz Gul
Imtiaz Gul

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