Pakistan - Civil Military Relations in Pakistan
The three A’s that dominate the destiny of Pakistan are the Army, Allah and America - not necessarily in that order. Today the power play in Pakistan is between the declining Super Power of the USA and the rising power of China. In looking too closely at the tactical level details of who said what within the Supreme Court of Pakistan and outside its walls, we are losing our focus on the larger geo-strategic scenario. This will be shaped by the new cold war in Asia between the USA and China. That may well shape the outcome in Pakistan. The logical question that follows is where is India in this equation?
This article is published with the kind permission of "Defence and Security Alert (DSA) Magazine" New Delhi-India
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Even as we evaluate the state of
Civil-Military and Inter Services synergies in
India, recent events have made it imperative
that we take a close look at Civil-Military Relations
in Pakistan. It is crucial for us to evaluate where
these are headed and calibrate our responses
accordingly.
Pakistan has been singularly unfortunate
that it lost its towering political leader
Mohd Ali Jinnah so soon after Independence. It
was ill served by its squabbling bunch of politicians
that followed, as also by the vaulting ambitions of
its military men and bureaucrats. This resulted in
over 30 years of direct military rule in Pakistan.
Over militarised states tend to overreach and
overspend on weapons. This imperial overstretch
causes the state to collapse. Pakistan has been close
to economic collapse twice in the last 10 years. It has
been kept afloat by some US$ 30 billion worth of
doles by the USA and its allies.
Musharraf left only after the Americans had
scripted an alternative arrangement wherein
the NRO was used to strike a bargain with
Benazir Bhutto’s PPP. She was a charismatic
and popular leader. The Military-ISI complex
saw that and killed her brutally. Her husband
Zardari simply lacked credibility and had a
severe image problem. His Prime Minister
Gilani strove to work out a compromise
by kowtowing to the Army and making
himself acceptable to the Chief and the
Chinese
The Pakistani Army now has a pivotal position
in Pakistani politics. In a very perceptive piece -
Hasan Askari Rizvi writes that while the Army does
not rule directly it controls key aspects of state like
national security, foreign policy and key domestic
issues. Direct rule is simply replaced by a covert
behind the scene Role that usually reduces the
civilian governments to a democratic facade.
The civilian governments have an acute identity
crisis. They wish to appear autonomous and yet
bank heavily on the support of the Army Chief to
survive. None of them have been able to complete
their terms. Gen Musharraf’s decade long rule
had floundered badly once he caved in to Chinese
pressure and attacked the Lal Masjid. It was his
Blue Star. The ISI itself possibly had a covert hand
in stoking this dispute with the Supreme Court that
led to his exit and exile. Musharraf left only after the
Americans had scripted an alternative arrangement
wherein the NRO was used to strike a bargain
with Benazir Bhutto’s PPP. She was a charismatic
and popular leader. The Military-ISI complex saw
that and killed her brutally. Her husband Zardari
simply lacked credibility and had a severe image
problem. His Prime Minister Gilani strove to work
out a compromise by kowtowing to the Army and
making himself acceptable to the Chief and the
Chinese.
The entire edifice of Civil-Military relations in
Pakistan however unravelled abruptly with the US
Seals raid in Abbottabad that killed Osama bin Laden.
This raid created a severe crisis that highlighted the
limits of Pakistan Army’s highly duplicitous policy
of running with the hares and hunting with the
hounds. In 2001 Gen Pervez Musharraf had been
coerced into joining the Global War on Terror on pain
of being bombed back to the Stone Age. However by
2005, the American attention had shifted entirely
to Iraq and Pervez and the ISI used this period to
revive the Taliban and do all in their power to
ensure that Mullah Omar and Haqqani would rule
in Kabul once the Americans left. This strategic
overreach has backfired. The imperatives of a state
sponsored Jihad have so thoroughly radicalised the
Pak military and society that the facade of
being US allies in the War on Terror is no longer
even remotely credible. There is a seething
cauldron of Islamist rage against America
in the Pak Army and populace in general.
Gen Kayani who was constantly being lionised by the
Americans as their man in Islamabad realised that
his position was becoming dangerously untenable.
There was seething rage in the military cantonments
and he nervously went about placating his command.
Gen Kayani is relatively junior and his distance from
his Corps Commanders is far less than that of Ayub
and Musharraf. As such he is far more susceptible
to the peer group pressure. The Collegium of Corps
Commanders has thus emerged as a key institution
in Pakistan and by extension shapes the national
policies. Post Abbottabad the image of the Pak Army
has reached a new low after the 1971 War. This post
Laden image of ineptitude was made worse by the
Mehran raid which clearly indicated the level of Jihadi
penetration in the armed forces. The Pak military
now tried to align itself in tune with the popular
anti-American mood in its rank and file. They came
out in the open with increasingly hostile stances
towards America that bordered on brinkmanship.
They sensed the relative weakness of America and
banked rather heavily on the rise of China. The key
battle in Pakistan is now a new cold war between
an America in decline and a China, which the
Pakistan Army is desperately hoping, is in the
ascendant. The nervous civilian leadership
meanwhile was now terrified of a military coup
and approached the US to save it. In a strange series
of developments and leaks thereafter, this led to
“memogate”.
In any normal state, it is the military that would
have been on the back foot. Not in Pakistan.
The civilian regime seemed guilt ridden and
red faced that it was trying to save itself from a
military coup! Pakistan’s Military-ISI complex
now decided on a soft coup to get rid of the
Zardari-Gilani duo. The twin pincers of this bloodless
coup were to be the highly egoistic Chief Justice
of the Pakistani Supreme Court and a move to get
Parliament to call for early elections. The ISI was
now busy building-up its newest democratic poster
boy in Imran Khan. He would be the new democratic facade far more in tune with their Jihadi agenda. Besides, Imran is also a Pathan and to that extent can help the
Punjabi-Pashtun biradari of the Army to keep its flock together. A Net Assessment would indicate four
Alternative futures for Pakistan:
Gen Kayani who was constantly being lionised by the Americans as their man in Islamabad
realised that his position was becoming dangerously untenable. There was seething rage in the
Military cantonments and he nervously went about placating his command. Gen Kayani is
relatively junior and his distance from his Corps Commanders is far less than that of Ayub and
Musharraf. As such he is far more susceptible to the peer group pressure. The Collegium of
Corps Commanders has thus emerged as a key institution in Pakistan and by extension shapes the
national policies
- A hard military coup: This is unlikely as the Army was fairly discredited during Musharraf’s long rule. Besides the economy is in shambles and the international situation quite unfavourable for military intervention. The military needs a civilian buffer to stave off direct foreign pressure.
- A soft coup: This is what the Pak Army is attempting via the Supreme Court.
- A street revolution: If the Supreme Court fails to get this government’s scalp, ISI’s latest poster boy Imran Khan could be used to whip up an Arab Spring in Islamabad.
- The present government survives: This is a wild card scenario. This is the first civilian government that is fighting back. It could sacrifice Gilani and possibly survive but only for a while. Early elections are now very likely.
Meanwhile the exiled General Musharraf announced grandly that he was coming back but then had
second thoughts about the timings. The Eagle could land shortly on the shores of Pakistan. Is there an
underlying grand American design? Who is scripting a new scenario? The US was extremely unhappy with
the Pak Army and its brinkmanship of choking their logistics supply line to Afghanistan. Could we be
seeing a new script being enacted wherein the Supreme Court would pressurise an early exit of the Zardari
government? Early elections could see the installation of Imran Khan - the poster boy of the ISI. Musharraf
may well be hoping to be the new President in this dispensation. The Pakistan Army meanwhile is pulling
back from its brinkmanship with America and has restored logistical conduits to Afghanistan. It has pushed
the Americans far enough. The Americans have in turn split the Pakistani civil-military dispensation wide
apart and made that state dysfunctional. The situation however is highly fluid and touch and go. What
is quite certain however is that the days of the present dispensation are most definitely numbered. The
Zardari-Gilani duo knows this and has mustered the courage for grandstanding against the Army to gain
popular sympathy before the inevitable vote. In the end, the three As that dominate the destiny of Pakistan
are the Army, Allah and America - not necessarily in that order. Today the power play in Pakistan is between
the declining Super Power of the USA and the rising power of China. In looking too closely at the tactical
level details of who said what within the Supreme Court of Pakistan and outside its walls, we are losing our
focus on the larger geo-strategic scenario. This will be shaped by the new cold war in Asia between the USA
and China. That may well shape the outcome in Pakistan. The logical question that follows is where is India
in this equation?
India’s stance
In retrospect therefore India’s most recent initiative to push for peace with Pakistan was singularly
ill timed. We were told Gilani was a man of peace and the Pakistani Army was fully on board. It now
transpires that civil-military relations had never been so bad in Pakistan’s entire history. How then did
we fail to see it? The Pakistan Army wants a quiet Eastern Front so that it can focus unhindered and
undisturbed upon hanging Karzai. That is why perhaps it had given its nod to the peace parleys. It is
common knowledge that these peace talks were held under American pressure. Bruce Reidel has gone
on record to state that India must be pressurised to negotiate with Pakistan. Our subservience to these
pressures was fully on display in Maldives. There is a school of thought that as a democracy, we must
support the democratic forces in Pakistan. We may have to be more circumspect in that case. Our open
support to Gilani could be the kiss of death for the PPP in its democratic battles with Imran Khan and
Nawaz Sharif. Outwardly at least India must be seen as being completely hands off in the internal
struggles in Pakistan and must be prepared to deal with whosoever comes to power. Covertly can we do
more to shape the outcome in Pakistan? In theory we should. In practice do we have the capabilities? Mr Gujral, in his quest for peace at any cost (mostly at our cost) we believe had wrecked these capabilities of the R&AW.
About the Author
Maj Gen (Dr) G D Bakshi
SM, VSM (retd) -
The writer is a combat
veteran of many skirmishes
on the Line of Control and
counter-terrorist operations
in Jammu and Kashmir and
Punjab. He subsequently
commanded the reputed
Romeo Force during intensive
counter-terrorist operations in
the Rajouri-Poonch districts.
He has served two tenures
at the highly prestigious
Directorate General of Military
Operations. He is a prolific
writer on matters military
and non-military and has
published 24 books and
over 100 papers in many
prestigious research journals.
He is also Executive Editor of
Defence and Security Alert
(DSA) magazine.
Note by the Author:
The Pakistani Army now has
a pivotal position in Pakistani
politics. In a very perceptive
piece - Hasan Rizvi writes that
while the Army does not rule
directly it controls key aspects
of state like National Security,
foreign policy and key domestic
issues. Direct rule is simply
replaced by a covert behind the
scene Role that usually reduces
the civilian governments to a
democratic facade. The civilian
governments have an acute
identity crisis. They wish to
appear autonomous and yet
bank heavily on the support
of the Army Chief to survive.
None of them have been able to
complete their terms
Defence and Security Alert (DSA
Defence and Security Alert (DSA) magazine is the only ISO 9001:2008 certified, premier world class, new wave monthly magazine which features paradigm changing in-depth analyses on defence, security, safety and surveillance, focusing on developing and strategic future scenarios in India and around the world.
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