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Change of Guard

fatman17

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Change of Guard




September 22, 2013

Dear All;

I was trying my best to stay away from the discussion about selection of Pakistan army chief but many naughty boys dragged me into the discussion by a wide array of questions and surely many in Pakistan will now get upset about my bipolar ramblings. Anyway enjoy.

Hamid

Change of Guard
Hamid Hussain


Pakistan army is a major player on national scene therefore change of command generates unusual interest both in the country as well as the outside world. Two top positions are Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJCSC) and Chief of Army Staff (COAS). Theoretically, CJCSC is senior but practically this position is ceremonial and real power holder is COAS. Main reason is that COAS controls the army with promotions and postings. CJCSC can be selected from any of the three services but this post has been used to placate or reward some senior army officers, therefore for the last seventeen years this post is held by a senior army officer. Last time when an air force or naval officer held the position of CJCSC was in 1997. Current CJCSC General Khalid Shamim Wayen will be retiring on October 06, 2013 and COAS General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani on November 28, 2013.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif will be deciding about next appointment of COAS. His two close civilian advisors are his younger brother and chief minister of Punjab Shahbaz Sharif and interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan. He consults with these two about all important issues. On military matters, he gets limited input from few retired officers. These include retired Lieutenant General Khwaja Ziauddin, retired Lieutenant General Abdul Qadir Baloch, retired Lieutenant General Abdul Qayyum and Brigadier Javed Malik (for brief profile of these officers see Appendix: I below). The role of these officers is very limited regarding advice about selection of new COAS. Their relationship is that of an acquaintance and not close confidant. In my view, advice from his close civilian associates will carry more weight than any army officer. In general, there is no culture of reading serious material or informed debate. Civilian leadership including Nawaz Sharif is not known for reading or soliciting advice from informed individuals about critical issues. I don’t think that country’s top ten decision makers have read a complete book in the last one year. A small group around Nawaz Sharif tries to whisper in King’s ears and general style is more close to a sixteenth century princely state with sycophancy and intrigues of Byzantine proportions.

In normal process, COAS is usually selected from top four or five senior officers. Most of these officers are average, equal in qualifications and rotated through normal command, staff and instructional appointments at senior ranks. My own assessment is that seventy percent are average officers and not very different from officers found in other armies. Twenty percent are below average and able to pass through the promotion labyrinth due to special circumstances. Ten percent are first rate and any army could be proud to have them among its ranks. Opinions of their colleagues, superiors, juniors, friends and family members are highly subjective in nature.

Selection of army chief is essentially a political decision and in addition to qualifications, ability of the individual to work with government on important issues is considered. COAS tenure is three years and in case of Pakistan many army chiefs got extensions to the detriment of the institution. I’ll review the tenure of General Kayani and his decision making process, challenges of the next three years for new chief and brief overview of career and my opinion about each potential candidate.

General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani was appointed by outgoing COAS General Pervez Mussharraf when he was forced to give up his post after nine years. Mussharraf’s choice was between Kayani and Lieutenant General (later General) Tariq Majeed. Majeed was more assertive compared to Kayani who played more safely keeping his thoughts to himself. Mussharraf may have felt Kayani will work with him better as Mussharraf was to remain President after shedding his uniform. Kayani became close to Mussharraf when he was given the charge of investigating assassination attempts on Mussharraf’s life. Kayani was then commanding Rawalpindi based X Corps and his diligent work brought him close to Mussharraf and paved the way for his future rise. He was appointed Director General of Inter Services Intelligence (DGISI) where he served for three years. In November 2007, he was appointed COAS.

Kayani had the most difficult task for the first few months facing challenges on many fronts. First and foremost, he gradually got control of the army easing out Mussharraf’s appointees and bringing his own team of confidants. His second task was to move army away from civilian affairs and hands off policy for 2008 elections. He managed a delicate balance of avoiding direct confrontation with Mussharraf while at the same time following his own independent course. He didn’t bail out Mussharraf when later got into serious troubles and threatened with impeachment. However, Kayani worked behind the scene to make sure that Mussharraf was not humiliated. A back ground deal managed a safe exit for Mussharraf in 2008 for a comfortable exile in London and Dubai (he recently came back despite repeated advice from army’s brass to stay put abroad and now facing court cases).

Kayani’s second task was to reorient army to new challenges. When Kayani took charge of the army, things were in disarray and morale was quite low as militants had taken the fight to the military and army suffered many reverses. Gradually, counterinsurgency methods were introduced in all training institutions and things improved. Two decisions of keeping military away from direct interference and reorientation of army are credit to Kayani. His major weakness is very slow decision making process. Many of the decisions which he finally took were forced from pressure at various levels. Pressure from junior officers deployed in forward areas forced Kayani to finally decide about some military operations against militants. In addition, push from inner circle of Corps Commanders forced some other decisions.

Some promotions and appointments to key positions were disastrous and resulted in lot of murmuring in the army. Lieutenant General Ahmad Shuja Pasha is an infantry officer with very good reputation. He is a straight forward chap who could be very good commander of an infantry division but completely unsuited for the job of top spy. His personality and temperament was not for the job of DGISI and the fall out was quite negative. Kayani had a very favorable opinion about Pasha but never vigorously challenged his advice or actions. Kayani and army got entangled in some controversies due to actions of Pasha. Army had no love lost for Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington Mr. Hussain Haqqani. Pasha jumped on what was later known as Memo Gate scandal. Pakistan army accused that Mr. Hussain Haqqani asked for U.S. help to thwart army’s attempt to subvert civilian leadership at the behest of then Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari in the aftermath of U.S. raid that killed Osama Bin Ladin in Pakistan. In another case, during visit to Washington, Kayani handed a report to White House titled Pakistani Perspective with lot of half baked theories currently in vogue at ISI that severely damaged Kayani’s own standing. Kayani never challenged kidnap, torture, kill and dump policy of army’s intelligence operatives in Baluchistan. Thanks to this policy, all segments of Baluch society are now thoroughly alienated. The problem that started as disagreement on monetary benefits to few Baluch tribal leaders is now transformed into a nationalist movement. ISI officers whose own offices were bombed by militants were promoted and in one case a two star under whose charge dozens of soldiers deserted was awarded with a third star. In peacetime, these things may not count much but during the time of war such decisions eat the organization from inside and should be avoided at all costs.

Kayani’s attempts to create circumstances for his own extension of service severely undermined his credibility inside the army. He gave extensions to some senior officers creating an impression that somehow extension is a norm rather than exception. When his unprecedented three year extension was announced, it caused lot of resentment. In the aftermath of the U.S. raid that killed Osama Bin Ladin, Kayani’s stock hit the lowest point. Pasha and Kayani duo successfully diverted the attention when Pasha cursed Americans in a briefing to parliament with thunderous applaud from the audience. They also turned their guns on President Zardari and Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington Hussain Haqqani and vetted their anger by hanging poor Dr. Shakil Afridi (it was alleged that he tried to get blood samples from the residents of Bin Ladin compound for CIA) by his thumbs. Government’s own credibility was so low due to utter incompetence and corruption that in comparison to civilian leaders, Kayani looked like an angel and he recovered quite quickly from these set backs.

There are already rumors that Kayani may be given a one year extension or sent as an ambassador. Both options are bad and should be avoided. Previous three year extension had much more negative impact on all areas and I can not see anything positive and fruit of another extension will also be bitter. Senior army and police officers involved in operations against militants have been targeted and many have been killed. In some cases, army sent officers involved in operations as ambassadors and some privately departed for Dubai after retirement. This has severely undermined army’s reputation on the street. Police officers now make fun of their army colleagues privately. Sending Kayani as ambassador immediately after retirement will strengthen this impression as every one will rightly conclude that this is being done due to threat to his life. Army should be able to provide security to its own former chief in his own country. Many mid-level officers are concerned about their security and the least Kayani can do is to stay put for at least a year or two in the country. Once things settled down and people forget then if he wants, he can go into the safety of a comfortable diplomatic sojourn.

COAS is just one player on the scene and country is facing challenges on many fronts. The challenges for new army chief for the next three years include;

- Coordination with civilian leadership on three crucial issues of containing militancy, reorienting policy towards Afghanistan and continue to keep eastern border with India quite.
- Leading armed forces in a state of war providing clear mindset, strategic roadmap and operational guidance. He will be responsible for promoting next line of officers and this is the most important task.
- Taking lead, immediately halting kill and dump policy in Baluchistan and start reconciliation with Baluch nationalists.
- Serious and urgent review of a very dangerous policy of development and deployment of tactical nuclear weapons.


Five senior most lieutenant generals in order of seniority are Haroon Aslam, Rashad Mahmud, Raheel Sharif, Tariq Khan and Zaheerul Islam.

Lieutenant General Haroon Aslam is from 52nd PMA course and commissioned in October 1975. He is currently Chief of Logistics Staff (CLS) after commanding XXXI Corps based in Bahawalpur. He spent good part of his career in Baluchistan where he first served as Chief of Staff (COS) of Southern command and later commanded an infantry division based in Quetta. He commanded operations against militants in Swat when he was General Officer commanding (GOC) of Special Services Group (SSG). He is an average officer with some experience of fight against militancy. However, in my view, if selected he will not be better than Kayani. It is possible that being senior most, he is appointed CJCSC as Nawaz Sharif in his manifesto stated that he will adhere to the principle of seniority.

Lieutenant General Rashad Mahmud is also from 52nd PMA course and commissioned in October 1975. He is currently serving as Chief of Staff (CGS) after a stint as Corps Commander of IV Corps based in Lahore. He is Kayani’s preference as his successor. He is also an average officer. He was DAPS to army chief General Mirza Aslam Beg at the rank of Major under then Brigadier Khwaja Ziauddin who was Personal Secretary to Chief – PS (C). Later, at the rank of Brigadier, he served as Military Secretary (MS) to President Rafiq Tarar. His general career pattern and service in staff positions suggests that if selected he will be more formal with no inclination for any new ideas. In my view, if selected, he will be no better than Kayani. Only positive thing is that he had served as Counter Terrorism (CT) Director at ISI. Some see this as an asset while for others this is a liability in view of relationship of ISI with some militant groups. In my view, he would have been good enough for a peacetime army but not a wartime army. He is a better candidate for CJCSC position rather than COAS.

Lieutenant General Raheel Sharif is from 54th PMA course and commissioned in October 1976. He is currently serving as Inspector General of Training & Evaluation (IGT&E) after commanding XXX Corps based in Gujranwala. He is from a military family and his father, two brothers and a brother-in-law served in the army. His brother Major Shabbir Sharif is one of the most decorated soldiers of Pakistan army who was killed in action in 1971 war. Life of sons or brothers of heroes is a difficult one as expectations are very high. Shabbir was General Pervez Mussharraf’s course mate. Shabbir was everything that Mussharraf wanted to be. When Mussharraf became COAS, he was instrumental in grooming Raheel for higher ranks. In fact, Raheel was selected as personal secretary to army chief but Mussharraf later changed his mind and instead sent him to prestigious Royal College of Defence Studies (RCDS) course in London. Raheel was COS of XXX Gujranwala Corps under Lieutenant General Abdul Qadir Baloch. In major reshuffle in the aftermath of September 11, 2001, Qadir was sent to Quetta based XII Corps and he took Raheel with him as COS. Mussharraf promoted him to major general rank and gave him prized postings as GOC of Lahore based 11th Infantry Division and Commandant of Military Academy at Kakul. Raheel is a gentleman but almost all agree that for a peacetime army, it would make no difference but probably he is not suited to lead army engaged in a war. I think Raheel himself knows it but Lieutenant General ® Abdul Qadir may whisper some good words about him in Sharif’s ears.

Lieutenant General Tariq Khan is from 55th PMA course and commissioned in April 1977. He was best cadet winning coveted Sword of Honor. He is currently commanding Mangla based I strike corps. He is a Pushtun cavalry officer and his father was also a cavalry officer. Tariq is from an aristocratic family and from the breed that didn’t join army for a secure job. After a brief stint of commanding an armored division, he first commanded infantry division in Waziristan and later as Inspector General Frontier Corps (IGFC) transformed a shattered FC. In my view, he is the only officer among the contenders who has the qualifications for leading the army in the coming turbulent three years. He is head and shoulders above his peers. His straight forward and professional approach is sometimes construed as ‘hard headed’. He has earned the nick name of ‘bulldozer’ for nothing. I don’t know any other officer who has so much red ink in his file and that he made it so far is only due to his professional competence which even his detractors admit. He was one of only two major generals highly regarded by Kayani for their professional competence (the other being Ahmad Shuja Pasha).

Some label him as ‘rash’ and ‘pro-American’. I can understand why some label him as ‘rash’. Tariq is frank to the point of bluntness and not hesitant to speak his mind which invariably results in some friction. He is a hard task master and in operations, he took decisions and many times clashed with his seniors while as Corps Commander he is training his formation hard. In time of war, I’ll pick a so-called ‘rash’ officer anytime compared to someone who was busy opening restaurants and bakeries in cantonment or planning for expansion of defense housing schemes. Some consider Tariq as ‘pro-American’ and I think this is due to his views about militancy. He was one of the few senior officers who comprehended right from the beginning that menace of militancy is an existential threat to Pakistan. It took several years for General Head Quarters (GHQ) to get this point. He was at the forefront of many operations against militants. He commanded an infantry division in South Waziristan and later as IGFC, he transformed a demoralized and broken formation into a credible fighting force. U.S. provided funds for FC modernization and a handful of U.S. Special Forces soldiers provided limited training in some special skills. This very limited interaction is exaggerated due to lack of information. In the last ten years, in addition to FC, Washington also supported intelligence agencies in technical matters as well as Pakistan’s Special Forces. In view of deteriorating relations in the last two years, most of these relations have been terminated.

In the last ten years, there has been increased military to military interaction between United States and Pakistan and a number of officers at different ranks visit U.S. for training and attend various seminars and conferences designed for senior officers. Tariq has not done any course in United States nor attended any conference or seminar designed for senior officers. His only American connection is stint as liaison officer at CENTCOM headquarters in Tampa at the rank of Brigadier (since 2001, a small team of Pakistani officers commanded by a Brigadier rank officer serve as liaison with CENTCOM). In fact, in 2008, Americans had serious misgivings about his approach in Bajuar. American military had embraced the counterinsurgency by that time and with the zeal of a new convert, they viewed Tariq’s approach as faulty and viewed it as scorched earth policy. In Bajuar, years of neglect had resulted in hardened militant positions especially tunnels that needed heavy fire power. Later, some Americans were content that at lest some Pakistani officers were doing that was needed to clear the badlands. It was confluence of interests and not any special affinity of Tariq for Americans or vice versa. In fact a professional and proud officer will work on common interests but will assert himself when needed. When Tariq was IGFC, cross border fire resulted in death of two FC soldiers. He put his foot down and pushed GHQ for a tough line. Washington was forced to agree to a joint inquiry at Bagram and admit mistake. General David Petraeus was forced to publicly apologize to Pakistan. I can not recall when the last time Washington agreed to a joint inquiry during war and offered a public apology
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Tariq is the kind of officer to lead army in war time. If selected, he will be a significant improvement from Kayani. However, one needs to be realistic that even selected, he does not have the key to success. He can be an important lever to contain and push back militancy but a true national effort will be needed to bring country back on tracks. Taking territory from militants is a vital first step but in such kind of war you can not shoot your way to victory. At some point, de-radicalization and re-integration especially of foot soldiers will be an important part of the strategy and there is concern that an officer who has spent so much time in fighting may ignore this important aspect.

Lieutenant General Zaheer ul Islam is also from 55th PMA course and commissioned in April 1977. He is currently Director General (DG) of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI). He had an earlier stint as Director at ISI prior to his elevation to lieutenant general rank and posting as Corps Commander of Karachi based V Corps. He is from a military family and belongs to the traditional military recruiting area of Salt Ranges near Rawalpindi. He is an average officer who has done usual command and staff stints but nothing exceptional in his professional career. He is not likely in the race and even if selected, he will be about same as Kayani as far decision making is concerned.

No army including Pakistan army has any Rommel or Guderian among its ranks. There is no ‘knight on white horse’ that will be the savior. It is a hard road ahead for Pakistan and collective effort will be needed to steer the ship to calmer waters. There will be difference of opinion but civil and military leaders should remember the basic fact that they are on the same team. Criteria of selection of a senior officer for a peacetime army and an army at war should be different. Simple fact is that Pakistan is at war and therefore officers with sound judgment, initiative, innovative ideas and very high professional standards should be considered for senior positions rather than docile and presumably ‘loyal’ who will not likely stir any discussion or debate at the decision making table.

‘We cannot afford to confine Army appointments to persons who have excited no hostile comment in their careers …. This is a time to try men of force and vision and not to be exclusively confined to those who are judged thoroughly safe by conventional standards’. Prime Minister Winston Churchill to Sir John Dill, Chief of Imperial General Staff, 1940







Appendix: I

Lieutenant General ® Khwaja Ziauddin: A mild mannered gentleman and average officer. There was no history of any problem between Mussharraf and Ziauddin. Ziauddin was from Engineers Corps and their paths have not crossed during their professional career. In September 1998, when Mussharraf was appointed COAS, he immediately settled down in Armor Mess (General Jahangir Karamat was still in Army House) and started shuffling the senior brass. Ziauddin then serving as Adjutant General (AG) was with him. Two days later, Sharif announced appointment of Ziauddin as Director General Inter Services Intelligence (DGISI) without consulting Mussharraf. He was now viewed by Mussharraf as Nawaz Sharif’s man and thus kept out of the loop. Some of Ziauddin’s subordinates directly reported to army chief. After Kargil conflict, the gulf between Sharif and Mussharraf widened over a very short period of time. In October 1999, Sharif appointed Ziauddin as army chief when Mussharraf was out of country setting the chain of events that ended in fourth army take over. (For details of 1999 coup see Hamid Hussain. Count Down). Ziauddin was arrested and sacked from the army.

Lieutenant General ® Abdul Qadir Baloch: He is an ethnic Baloch and one of the first Baloch to become lieutenant general. He is an average officer not known for any professional excellence. Once he reached Major General rank, it was probably thought appropriate to promote him one step further for public relations efforts to announce that a Baloch had reached such a high rank. He is a gentleman but has some rough edges and can be a bit difficult in personal relations. He had the confidence of General Mussharraf who sent him as Director General (DG) Rangers of Sindh. After promotion to Lieutenant General rank, he was given the command of Gujranwala based XXX Corps. In the aftermath of September 11, 2001, with angry U.S. bull breathing down their necks forced military leadership to hastily change course. There was some disagreement in the inner circle consisting of Corps Commanders and Principle Staff Officers (PSOs). There was some concern on Mussharraf’s mind in view of a number of senior officers expressing doubts. In October 2001, several senior officers were removed from key positions (Rawalpindi, Lahore, Quetta and Bahawalpur Corps commanders, DGISI and CGS were removed) and in this shuffle Qadir was moved from Gujranwala Corps to Quetta based XII Corps bordering Afghanistan. The manner in which things were moved suggests that all was not well at the top. Qadir was flown in an ISI plane to Quetta to immediately take charge. After retirement, Qadir was appointed governor of Baluchistan province. He developed differences with Mussharraf and resigned. In an interview, Mussharraf passed some derogatory remarks about Qadir and this ticked him off. He had no inclination for politics but after this incident, he contested 2008 elections as independent candidate and despite many hurdles finally entered the parliament. He won his seat in 2013 elections, joined Nawaz Sharif’s faction of Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) and appointed Minister of State for Tribal and State Affairs.

Lieutenant General ® Abdul Qayyum: He is a gunner officer who served as military secretary to Benazir Bhutto when she was prime Minister. He had an extended tenure with Benazir and served both at Brigadier and Major General rank which is unusual. He was on personal friendly terms with General Pervez Mussharraf who promoted him to lieutenant general rank and appointed him Chairman of Pakistan Ordnance factory (POF). After retirement, he was appointed Chairman of Pakistan Steel Mill. He developed some differences with government on privatization matters and removed from his post. In view of his past association with Benazir, he was probably hoping that if she returned to power, he may get the coveted governorship of Punjab. After Benazir’s assassination, he drifted towards Nawaz Sharif. He is a gentleman but an average officer not known for any professional excellence.

Brigadier ® Javed Iqbal Malik: He was military secretary to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at the time of 1999 coup. He sided with newly appointed army Chief Khwaja Ziauddin and he was the only officer who took some action. In fact, Sharif had taken a pip from his shoulders and pinned on Ziauddin’s shoulders making him a four star general. Javed quipped to Ziauddin that ‘Sir; you have been promoted General but I have been demoted to Colonel’. When coup was set in motion by generals loyal to Mussharraf, a small team of soldiers under the command of Major Nisar went to television station and stopped the broadcast of appointment of new army chief. Javed took an armed escort of elite police to television station to check what was going on. Javed had a heated conversation with Major Nisar at television station control room and finally, Javed drew his handgun on Nisar, forcing him to order his men to disarm. The army soldiers were locked in a room and the news of Mussharraf’s removal was re-broadcasted. Later, a larger contingent of soldiers arrived at television station and pulled the plug. After the coup, he was sacked from the army and went in exile to Saudi Arabia with Nawaz Sharif.




Acknowledgements: Author thanks many for their valuable inputs but all errors, omissions and opinions are author’s sole responsibility.

Hamid Hussain
September 20, 2013
coeusconsultant@optonline.net
 
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Opinion


The way to go

Islamabad diary


Ayaz Amir

Tuesday, October 08, 2013



Just the right words in General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani’s retirement announcement. And it came not a moment too soon, for if the speculation around his going or staying had been allowed to linger, chattering class cynicism – a commodity never in short supply with us – would have taken care of his reputation.

We say we are Muslims. To look at our behaviour we are worshippers of the sun, but the rising not the setting sun. Incoming tin-gods we extol to the skies, discovering in them qualities even their mothers would not have known. But with outgoing champions we have a way all our own…loath even to acknowledge the good that there may be in them.

Pakistan commanders-in-chief, all of them, have been of three kinds. (1) Coup-making generals, the heroic group of our four disasters: Ayub, Yahya, Zia and Musharraf. (2) Outstanding war failures: Ayub in the ’65 war; Yahya in the events and debacle of ’71; and Musharraf in Kargil. (3) Peacetime generals with no coup or failed war to their credit: Asif Janjua, Waheed Kakar and Jahangir Karamat.

But in 66 years only one c-in-c to have presided over successful military operations, Ashfaq Kayani. Whether we like to admit it or not, we are in a state of war, engaged with an enemy more threatening to our survival than ever India was. And the army has suffered huge casualties and the nation is not united behind it. This has made the army’s task more difficult but Kayani, in difficult times, came up to high standards of leadership.

After Kargil, an unmitigated disaster, and during the rest of Musharraf’s tenure, the army seemed to have lost not just the will but the ability to fight. A chocolate and real estate army is what it became. The habit of fighting came back because of two factors: the Taliban, they forced us to fight back, no matter how fitfully or unevenly; and Gen Kayani. The army’s first ventures into Fata when Musharraf was country leader and army chief were a complete shambles, the Taliban making monkeys of the unprepared battalions sent against them. The rehabilitation of lost army morale began under Kayani.

It was this spirit, painstakingly revived, that enabled the army to go successfully into Swat and later into South Waziristan. And Kayani was a very visible commander, regularly visiting frontline troops in Swat and Fata and reminding the nation of the sacrifices rendered by our fighting soldiers.

Swat was lost to Pakistan – let’s never forget this. True, if army and ISI had their wits about them from the beginning, Swat’s FM radio holy warrior, Maulana Fazlullah, would never have attained the power and prominence he did. Why do we blame India, Mossad and the heavens? They couldn’t have conspired more against us as we have conspired against ourselves. Take the Lal Masjid episode. If tackled in the beginning, the police officer in-charge Aabpara could have dealt with it. Musharraf and the ISI allowed it to fester for so long that it became a ****** battleground, its echoes reverberating to this day.

But whatever the origins of Swat, it was the army under Kayani which restored it to the map and the jurisdiction of Pakistan. And the army which went into South Waziristan, and the army which is stretched out in Fata and fighting sporadic battles in different tribal agencies.

The Taliban of course have not been defeated. If anything, they stand taller than before. But fighting the Taliban is not just about sending troops against them but changing Pakistan’s extremist mindset….denying the Taliban not just space on the ground but, more importantly, space in the Pakistani mind.

This is a political task and the leadership in place to perform this task looks and sounds, on any given day, more like Taliban sympathisers than anything to the contrary. If Pakistan is to be rescued from its extremist predicament, army and civilian leadership have to be of the same mind. This unity of vision we have yet to see.

We have a strange relationship with the US. It is our ally; but with its gift for unnecessary pushing, it is also a headache. It fell mostly to Kayani to manage this relationship, living with the US and – after Raymond Davis, Abbottabad and Salala (when American helicopter fire killed our soldiers) – attempting to reduce the American footprint in Pakistan.

This only underscores the high-wire act he had to perform: apart from dealing with the Americans and their suspicions, suffer Zardari, fight some Taliban and keep lines open to others (such as the Haqqanis), keep one eye on Afghanistan and another on India, and worry about Balochistan at the same time. In not all these endeavours did the army come out on top. In not all was its approach correct. But even holding the line and not letting things slip further was not an easy task. The civilian leadership should of course have come to the fore. But it was busy doing other things, having almost outsourced security issues to Kayani and the army.

There were political things to do as well. The sacked judges’ restoration was brought about less by any long march than Kayani’s subtle intervention from the sidelines. That’s what clinched the issue. If the army had been supportive of Zardari, which it is was not, Nawaz Sharif wouldn’t have found it easy to pull off the stunt of breaking out of his house arrest and leading a march on the GT Road.

But even the best men can slip, as Gen Pasha and Nawaz Sharif did over the banana peel of Memogate. Hussain Haqqani, our then man in Washington, and Mansoor Ejaz, the major Memogate player, were of a kind, over-clever and great self-promoters. Gen Pasha and Nawaz Sharif came out looking foolish from that escapade, although Nawaz Sharif had sense enough to get out of it first.

Gen Kayani’s extension did him no good. His stock would have stood higher had he resisted the temptation. At the time it looked a clever move on Zardari’s part to ensure his survival. In retrospect even for him it looks a disaster, for by ensuring his short-term survival it ensured the PPP’s long-term destruction. Five years in power is what undid the PPP. A shorter term, even going down in smoke at Gen Pasha’s hands, would have saved it from the ruin which is now its portion.

More damaging for Kayani, however, were the business dealings, and army contracts, of his brothers. Whether he was personally involved or not, or turned just a blind eye to their activities, some of their reputation rubbed off on him.

But the central achievement remains: restoring the army’s morale and fighting spirit, and taking the army’s banner successfully into Swat and South Waziristan. And recognising for the first time that the threat Pakistan faced was more internal than external. This new thinking came not as a brainwave but under the pressure of circumstances. But Kayani did not shy away from articulating it. As time goes by, the blemishes will look smaller and the achievement will stand out more clearly.

Some of us are still missing the larger picture. How we got here is now beside the point. Pakistan is in the throes of a struggle between a primitive conception of religion and the Iqbal and Jinnah vision of a modern Islamic state. Primitivism is clear about its philosophy and aims. The same cannot be said of the Pakistani state, its votaries and luminaries confused and ducking behind feel-safe expedients.

This is a dangerous condition and what is holding Pakistan together is not Islam or ideology but – and I hate saying this – the army. Take the army out of the equation and all becomes dark and directionless. Kayani played his part well, even with some panache, and goes out with dignity. It’s a solid legacy he leaves behind. We have to see what his successors do with it.

Email: winlust@**********
 
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Hate him or love him, you can't deny that he was the driving force behind the overhaul of the PA's warfighting tactics, strategies and equipment especially relating to WoT...now whether that was forced or not is a different discussion.
 
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Opinion


The next man

Brian Cloughley

Thursday, October 10, 2013



The rumours, assertions, denials and general gupshup regarding the appointment of the new chief of army staff – a most important decision to be made by the prime minister – are of course not without precedent. It’s all happened before, in much the same form, and it’s interesting to look back a few years to, for example, summer 1991, when, as recorded in my book A History of the Pakistan Army, “the Islamabad rumour mill was working hard. General Beg, it was said, did not wish to retire in August. He wanted to stay as army chief, to take over as executive Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, to reintroduce martial law, to take over the country.

“Wild interpretations were placed on the fact that the US ambassador said he was remaining in Pakistan until August rather than returning to Washington on the date his tenure ended. In Delhi, government-controlled All India Radio claimed that Beg wanted to invade and capture Kashmir before he retired. Nothing, it seemed, was too far-fetched to be retailed and, by some, at least, believed. Then it all stopped. It was announced on 12 June that Lieutenant General Asif Nawaz was to be appointed COAS on 17 August. General Beg would retire on time...”

And as to events eight years later I wrote that “The announcement on 12 October 1999 that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had for the second time dismissed an army chief led to a coup that confused most foreigners as much as it was approved by most citizens of Pakistan. It was essential, by tacit international convention, that the government’s dismissal be criticised by foreign countries and institutions, in spite of the fact that they were all well aware that ‘democratic’ Pakistan was thundering downhill morally, socially and economically. The United States imposed more sanctions, the European Union expressed ‘deep concern’, the United Nations declared that Pakistan must ‘restore civilian rule and the constitutional process’, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund muttered about stopping new development aid, and the Commonwealth suspended Pakistan’s membership. The future looked bleak.

“One intriguing thing about the dismissal of Musharraf was that only two weeks before Sharif took action to get rid of him he had appointed him Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJCSC), while continuing to hold his army position. He had been made Acting CJCSC on 8 April 1999, when it was announced he would serve in the position for a year, but in a surprising move Sharif confirmed and extended him in the appointment.

“The only other officer to have held both posts was his predecessor, General Karamat [who Sharif had also dismissed], and, according to former government figures in office at the time [in conversation with the author], the reason that Sharif wanted to have one person holding the two appointments was that he thought it essential for his own security to have both in the hands of one pliable individual who would do precisely what he wished. Apparently he considered himself more threatened by existence of two senior figures than by one who held two appointments.

“The notion that a Chairman on his own could pose a threat to the government was and is doubtful. He commands no troops, and although undoubtedly a man of stature and personality – otherwise he wouldn’t be in the post – it is troops that matter if any physical move is to be made against those holding political power. And, of more importance, the notion that someone like Musharraf, as either COAS or in both posts, would stand aside limply if an increasingly paranoid prime minister was taking the country through constitutional hoops was also questionable. ZA Bhutto had thought Zia would be a supine yes-man, and Nawaz Sharif made the same mistake about Musharraf.

“(It is interesting to speculate on what might have – or might not have – taken place had Ali Kuli Khan been appointed COAS, as he deserved. There is no doubt Musharraf was a well above average officer, even a brilliant one, but Ali Kuli had star quality and a great deal of influence outside the military, which is probably why Sharif was frightened to appoint him. One thing is certain: had Ali Kuli been COAS there would have been no Kargil operation. He told the author on 29 May 2005 that the Kargil affair was an appalling mistake by the army.)

“It had been thought that Musharraf would serve only a token period as Acting Chairman, thus allowing the Chief of Naval Staff, Admiral Fasih Bokhari, to be appointed at some stage, but when the PM extended Musharraf as Chairman until 6 October 2001 he was making it clear that this would not occur. His action resulted in the understandable resignation of Bokhari, who had had only five months left to serve as navy chief, at the end of which time he would be required to retire were he not made Chairman.”

*****

Well, now, what’s going to happen, this time? My own preference would be for Kayani to indeed take over as head of the joint chiefs, provided Pakistan, as I have recommended for many years, adopts a tri-service organisation, amalgamating the navy, army and air force under one command headquarters headed by a chief of defence force. That way lies professional success for the armed forces.

Then, as to the next army chief: all the possibilities are attractive. They are really good, professionally, and engaging and decent as individuals. They all have the right ideas about serving a democratic government and about the proper place of the military in governance and society. General Kayani had considerable success in distancing himself and the army from interference in civilian affairs, in spite of much effort being made by politicians of all persuasions to get him to come down on one side or the other of the political fence. And none of his likely successors will for a moment deviate from the Kayani path.

So here goes: top boy by seniority is Lt-Gen Haroon Aslam who is what I call, in my old-fashioned way, ‘a good chap’. He won’t set the world on fire, but he’s thoroughly competent and a really good planner. He would be excellent as chairman of the joint chiefs in the present form of that appointment, but I’m not sure he would be entirely comfortable as army chief. He would do perfectly well, of course, but Pakistan needs just that little bit more. It’s a bit like the Musharraf versus Ali Kuli choice, without the ego of the former.

My tip, from the point of view of being next senior and all the other conventional things is undoubtedly Lt-Gen Rashad Mahmud, the present chief of general staff. I remember him when he was on Aslam Beg’s staff as a major, way back, and I noticed him, then, as a most competent officer. If the chairman of the joint chiefs is to remain a ceremonial and advisory appointment, he would of course be good, but I’m not sure he would like it.

Then there’s Lt-Gen Raheel Sharif, another competent and well-above-average officer – but a close associate of Musharraf. I think, perhaps, forget him, because Nawaz is an unforgiving man.

There are some other possibilities, but the first of the last must be the controversial Lt-Gen Tariq Khan, the soldiers’ soldier, who is comparatively junior and whose personal file in the military secretary’s office in Rawalpindi is, as a correspondent wrote to me last week, “not just underlined in red but covered in red ink.” He’s a tough guy, a Pakhtun, and clever with it.

And his subordinates really like him. Not that he goes out of his way to seek their approval: far from it; but he’s fair and hard-hitting when he knows the course he has chosen is the right one, as when he got stuck in to the militants in South Waziristan. He’s got the measure of the Taliban and he’s totally apolitical and hard-nosed with Washington, which might appeal to Sharif.

So let’s see. But let’s hope that this time round Nawaz Sharif will make the right choice. After all, he doesn’t want to have another enforced sojourn in Saudi Arabia.

The fourth edition of the writer’s book, A History of the Pakistan Army, is to be published next month by OUP Karachi.

The writer is a South Asian affairs analyst.
 
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