The Asian Age

‘Leadership behind civil-military gulf ’

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The [civilian] component gives importance to the military and the relationsh­ip between the two is a triangle of love, hate and expediency. If we have a score against India, everyone loves the Army. But if there is interventi­on, everyone hates the Army.

Islamabad, March 5: A retired Pakistani general has said he does not attach any credence to former Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa’s pledge that the powerful Army would remain out of the nations’ politics and blamed the political leadership for contributi­ng to the civil-military imbalance.

Former Lt Gen Haroon Aslam’s remarks came while addressing a session on ‘Civil Military Relations: Co-existence or Confron-ta-tion’ at the Future of Pakistan Conference in London. “Why did (Imran Khan) give an extension to Gen Bajwa? Why did Asif Ali Zardari give an extension to (Gen Ashfaq Parvez) Kiyani? I believe that the military should stay neutral and not meddle in politics, but remember that you cannot switch it off,” Dawn newspaper quoted Aslam as saying.

He also blamed Pakistan’s political leadership for allowing the military to meddle in politics, saying that while the military was not proactivel­y trying to interfere, it was the “civilian component” that gave importance to the military. When asked about the long-term applicabil­ity of retired Gen Bajwa’s farewell pledge of neutrality from the Army, Gen Aslam did not mince his words.

“I don’t attach any credence to that. He played his innings, then at the end said this. There is no importance of what an outgoing chief says,” he said. Gen Aslam was the senior-most at the time of former army chief Kayani’s retirement. Before that, he remained DG military operations and Bahawalpur Corps commander.

At the outset of the session, he raised eyebrows by professing that he had voted for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan in the last election, and would do so again. But in the same breath, he also criticised Khan, as well as other civilian leaders for contributi­ng to the civil-military imbalance.

“If you encourage good civilian leadership, then the military will recoil,” he said, adding that “we have to go by the will of the people”.

“The [civilian] component gives importance to the military and the relationsh­ip between the two is a triangle of love, hate and expediency. If we have a score against India, everyone loves the Army. But if there is interventi­on, everyone hates the Army. It is not the military that is proactive in trying (to interfere), it is a collective thing.”

Woodrow Wilson Centre scholar Michael Kugelman, however, came to the defence of the civilian leadership. “All roads to Islamabad lead through Pindi.” —

— HAROON ASLAM Former Lt Gen

 ?? — AFP ?? Supporters of Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan chant slogans outside his house in Lahore on Sunday.
— AFP Supporters of Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan chant slogans outside his house in Lahore on Sunday.

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