The Asian Age

In Pak, the more things change, the more they stay the same

- Neena Gopal

■ Does he tell us what most Pakistan watchers already knew? Does he tell us of his own role in the long running battle between the military and the civilian for primacy? Does it go far enough? In Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani’s tellall book Pakistan Adrft: Navigating Troubled Waters, the master spy holds up a mirror to Pakistan’s fractured polity, and the pulls and pressures that the military exerts on elected government­s in this strategica­lly placed state that sits astride the crossroads of Asia.

When a former intelligen­ce chief and a military man of the likes of the legendary top spook Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani writes his memoirs, the world sits up and takes notice. Particular­ly when it comes on the back of The Spy Chronicles, a highly unusual book, where he is in conversati­on with Amar Singh Dulat, who headed India’s spy agency R& AW, and journalist Aditya Sinha, where the one throwaway line “we are taking care of Nawaz Sharif, and we’ll take care of Imran Khan”, a good two years before WikiLeaks is exploited to the fullest to unseat the elected Prime Minister of Pakistan Mian Nawaz Sharif. Gen Durrani’s Pakistan Adrift: Navigating Troubled Waters goes much further than his conversati­onal foray. This is an insider’s account of Pakistan’s most turbulent years that few, both inside or outside the shadowy world he inhabited, will be able to rival.

Gen. Durrani comes with the huge advantage of having served as the head of both his nation’s military intelligen­ce as well as the dreaded inter-services intelligen­ce, and as them an who not only put Pakistan’s “strategic depth” policy in play as the Soviets withdrew and the Taliban took power in Afghanista­n, but equally as a military man who “dabbled” — if it can be called that — in politics.

He cobbled together government­s in the post- Zia- ul Haq era, “managed” the democratic­ally- elected government of Benazir Bhutto, which he subsequent­ly pulled down in scant disregard for electoral ethics, and through it all, there is his less than concealed contempt for Nawaz Sharif, the man the Pakistan Army had brought in as the civilian face to counter Benazir.

The chapter, “In the Supreme Court”, is barely three pages. But it is here that Gen. Durrani lays out in chilling detail the military’s standard operating procedure on dealing with civilians who refused to dance to their tune. Under the direction of then Chief of Army Staff Gen. Mirza Aslam Beg, the general writes of how he was tasked to receive ` 140 million from banker Younus Habib, which was later distribute­d to individual­s that Gen. Beg handpicked, with the rest of the money forming part of a “special fund in the ISI”.

It is in the retelling of these events in a chapter that doesn’t run beyond three pages — the shortest chapter in the book — that the dilemma that Gen. Durrani faced, throughout Pakistan’s chequered history of confrontat­ion between its civilian and military institutio­ns, is best told. His “confession”, if it can be called that — the sealed affidavit he submitted at the behest of Benazir’s interior minister Gen. Naseerulla­h Babur, and which Babur would blithely use in Parliament to prove that Nawaz Sharif ’ s government had “unfairly benefited” in the 1990 elections — is now sub- judice in a Pakistan court. But in describing his decision to write the affidavit in 1994 as “the most imprudent move of my career”, Gen. Durrani arrives at the heart of the existentia­l dilemma that faces Pakistan as a nation state, and so many of its serving officers. And where time after time, as the perceptive general writes, “nothing demonstrat­es the ineptness of the military in politics better than the spontaneou­s collapse of the entities it sponsored as soon as the khaki umbrella was remove d . . . and if the idea was to keep the Army’ s nemeses at bay, they all bounced back with a vengeance... The ISI also suffered when used as the military’s political instrument”.

On the assassinat­ion of Benazir Bhutto in 2007, questions linger on what role the military actually played. Maybe the general didn’t want to tangle with the murky machinatio­ns that led to her death.

On Afghanista­n and the creation of the Taliban as Pakistan’s cat’s paw, the general gives us a rare insight into the exigencies that drove his country to back the Talibs, while all along keeping up the fiction that Pakistan had little to do with their rise, when history has proven otherwise.

Despite skirting around these events, he is, in fact, far more candid about his falling out with Nawaz Sharif, and how Kargil actually cost Nawaz Sharif his job, even though he was not its chief architect.

Counter to N aw az’ s brother Shehbaz and his then close confidante Ch audh ry Nisar’s advice not to “fiddle too much with the Army”, the general writes how, post- Kargil, Nawaz provided the perfect “casus belli”. He tried to kick Gen. Pervez Musharraf upstairs by offering him the powerless Joints Chief of Staff post, and when that failed, set in motion a “coup” to get rid of the sitting Army chief, only to be faced with the Army’s “counter- coup” even as Gen. Musharraf ’ s plane was still up in the air.

Did Gen. Musharraf have just such a plan in place — is of course the key question. Gen. Durrani implies he may have.

Curiously, there’s not much love lost between the two generals. On Gen. Musharraf ’ s “hubris”, he is surprising­ly forthright. Musharraf, who toppled Nawaz Sharif in a coup, until he himself was forced from office “was so full of himself that he actually believed he could get away with murder”, the general says, adding: “When he was in trouble with the country’s highest judiciary he ( reportedly) said: ‘ I will get away with it, like I did with Nawab Bugti’s murder’. ( Bugti was a powerful Baloch leader, who fell out with Musharraf and died during a military operation.)”

If there’s one point the book drives home, it is that little ever changes in Pakistan. The book’s release, just as Nawaz Sharif finds himself once more boxed into a corner, facing the wrath of the Army, even as the hugely popular cricket icon- turnedpoli­tician Imram Khan is elected as Prime Minister, couldn’t have come at an eerily prescient moment in Pakistan's history. This is déja vu. Only the names and the faces are different.

 ?? — AP ?? Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan visits the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, Saudi Arabia
— AP Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan visits the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, Saudi Arabia
 ??  ?? PAKISTAN ADRIFT: NAVIGATING TROUBLED WATERS By ASAD DURRANI Context ( Westland) pp 304; ` 699
PAKISTAN ADRIFT: NAVIGATING TROUBLED WATERS By ASAD DURRANI Context ( Westland) pp 304; ` 699

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