Chak Bamu
RETIRED MOD
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2013
- Messages
- 5,361
- Reaction score
- 69
- Country
- Location
No my friend: no speculations are there at all. It is on the basis of quite some study and "neighbor watching" over some decades.
You have thrown in some names etc. But they are all irrelevant. Irrelevant since there is a "systemic juggernaut" at work. As it has been for so long.
Gen.Shareef may not be in the 'coup business'. But that does not mean that every (present) General is not, just as every General in the past was not in the 'coup business'. That 'Institution' run on the basis of "consensus". Ironically; it has close to Democratic norms of functioning when it comes to political stances. Save in the instances where an overarching and overbearing Gernail was at the helm. There is a reason for that adherence to (a seemingly) Democratic norm. The basic reason is : the primary instinct of the "survival of the Institution". That over-rides every other consideration on earth. Which is what I've said before.
Now going back to the "script": it required that NS must be defanged or emasculated. Rather than eliminated. Elimination was not an option. The 'Institution' is not as strong as it was in the past; either within the Estt or in the public eye. Even international (mainly Amreekan) opinion is not favorable. What has been achieved instead is a far "smarter" achievement!
Mind you; I am no admirer of NS, he is simply a perfect idiot. Just as PTI and TUQ are perfect pawns.
Then; what are the Awaam?
Over the last few days, the course of events belie the view that a 'soft coup' was the end-goal. The goal was a regular coup like the last one in Bangladesh. But a number of things went wrong, it seems.
NS is no idiot. PML-N got carried away and their ministers made idiotic mistakes. There was no need to keep harping on Musharraf. There was no need to talk much at all about Army. It was best to stay silent like NS.
In any case, this is my last post on the subject. I've already said enough.
Not speculating, nor trolling, but it's pretty clear when the Chief himself isn't confident of the backing of his corps commanders. What does that mean? Probably dissension within the ranks? According to the Reuters article in the OP.........
So what about the rest of the generals and the chief? Why were they all not on the same page where this serious situation was concerned? They are supposed to follow the orders of the chief come what may, not pull in different directions.
Of course that article may be outright exaggeration by some journalists and politicians bent upon sensationalism and scoring brownie points. I just commented on what was written as I don't have first hand knowledge myself.
Article writer got info from Ch. Nisar and couple of interviews and then wrote this article. Its not like word from heavens. This article gives incomplete info and with a bit of bias that comes from her sources. One needs to see that for sure. Do not treat is like infallible stuff etc...
Last edited: