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Clear Signs of De Facto Martial Law in Pakistan

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https://thewire.in/185673/clear-signs-de-facto-martial-law-pakistan/

Recent remarks by the director general of Inter-Services Public Relations make evident that the Pakistani civilian leadership has no control over the country’s domestic and foreign policies, and that the army is, in fact, in charge.
Asif-Ghafoor_reuters.jpg

As a country where military dictators have ruled overtly for 36 of the 70 years of independence, while virtually none of the 17 prime ministers have completed a full term, Pakistan is no stranger to military spokespersons holding press conferences. The October 5 presser by Major General Asif Ghafoor, the director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), however, was exceptionally brazen not just for its tone and tenor but also because of the scope of issues discussed.

If there was any doubt before about the army being the actual ruler of the country, the army spokesperson took even that fig leaf off himself.

A bunch of docile reporters lobbed one softball question after another, as if on cue, and the director general of the ISPR fielded it with an unabashed disregard for what is or isn’t the military’s domain. Curiously, the media persons had their questions neatly and conveniently pooled under four broad categories: Pakistan’s political, economic, diplomatic and security state of affairs. It might have been a coincidence but the way General Ghafoor had to say that a particular bunch of questions are political or economic, smacked of some backroom or spur-of-the-moment collating. The whole talk came across as a colonial governor general setting the agenda for his dominion or more recently the late chief martial law administrator General Zia-ul-Haq’s information secretary Lt. General Mujeeb-ur-Rehman listing the dos and don’ts for the media.

Clearly, the director general of ISPR was telling the domestic audience that the army is in charge. But he also appeared to be sending a message abroad that, notwithstanding his lip service to the military being constitutionally under the command and control of the civilian government, they are the ones calling the shots on both domestic and foreign policy fronts. For all practical purposes, it was an announcement that a de facto martial law is in place and the Pakistani civilian leadership has no control over the country’s domestic and foreign policies. What started with tripping the post-2008 democratic setup every step of the way, tacitly egging on judiciary to dismiss two duly elected prime ministers, coercing parliament to allow a parallel judicial system in the form of military courts, has culminated in the praetorian guards’ complete chokehold on all issues, whether they are security-related or not.

Condoning of religious vigilantism

It was disconcerting to see General Ghafoor comment on Pakistan’s economy that “if it isn’t terrible, it isn’t good either” or him not interrupting the reporters who insisted on derogating the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif by calling him a “na-ahel wazir-e-azam (disqualified or incompetent PM)”. The most shocking part of the whole charade, however, was when the director general of ISPR took it upon himself to delve into complex religious doctrinal issues.

When asked about a recent change and repeal in an electoral law pertaining to affirmation of the finality of the Prophet Muhammad, instead of deferring the matter to the parliament where it was being discussed, he said: “Neither the armed forces have compromised on Namoos-e-Risalat (dignity of the Prophethood) (SAW), nor would they compromise on it in future [sic]”.

He added that the military and the Muslim Pakistanis are ready to die for the sake of Namoos-e-Risalat. In a country where blasphemy allegations have led to murder of even a sitting governor of the country’s most populous province Punjab, General Ghafoor’s comment was nothing short of legitimising the weaponised anti-blasphemy laws and a tacit condoning of religious vigilantism.

It also indicates that a supposedly professional army is willing to deploy religious dogma as a lethal weapon against its political opponents. The comment had come a day after some politicians considered close to the military smeared the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN) for trying to remove the said clause from the election laws.

Support for jihadist outfits

Earlier this year the military is said to have abducted five bloggers running websites critical of the army and charged them with blasphemy. These bloggers were critical not just of the military but also the jihadist outfits it has sired. Ominously, he acknowledged on the record that a process is underway in Pakistan through which the jihadist outfits Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD) et al are being formally inducted into the political process. Though he claimed that the (political) government was overseeing that process, the fact the JuD’s political front the Milli Muslim League was launched against the ruling party’s candidate and the former first lady, Begum Kulsoom Nawaz Sharif, in a recent by-election, strongly indicates that it is not the current government’s project and the so-called mainstreaming of militants was pushed by the army.

What General Ghafoor’s remarks show clearly is that military is jihadised at the highest level, it has consistently used the street agitation by its religio-political quisling to pressurise successive elected governments over matters ranging from alliance with the US or peace overtures to India and is willing to use the blasphemy smear to stifle dissent.

Days earlier, the army’s paramilitary wing, the Pakistan Rangers, had stopped sitting government ministers from entering a court where Nawaz was to appear. The Rangers, de jure, are the interior ministry’s troops but ended up stopping the federal interior minister professor Ahsan Iqbal as well. When the melee resolved, it appeared the interior ministry or local commissioner had not requisitioned the Rangers’s presence for that particular day.

The interior minister went on to decry that the brigadier in-charge of the troops had gone into hiding and was not taking his calls and he would rather resign his ministry than tolerate a state within the state. Undercutting the interior minister, General Ghafoor complimented the soldiers who stopped him and came up with a bogus excuse that the troops could move without being specifically ordered to do so in every instance. Ironically, he stated that the Rangers, constitutionally, are the interior ministry’s troops but still did not refer the question to the said ministry. He took it upon himself to rationalise the unauthorised action of the paramilitary against their duly elected and appointed civilian boss. A day prior to the presser, the Rangers posted to guard the Pakistani parliament were mysteriously withdrawn from their picket as if to rub it in that army can and will get away with any excesses.

General Bajwa’s visit to Kabul

General Ghafoor dwelled quite a bit on the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa’s recent visit to Kabul where he met with the Afghan President Ashraf Ghani ostensibly to break the stalemate in the bilateral relations. General Ghafoor mentioned a host of topics that the COAS discussed with the Afghan leadership.

Interestingly, the army chief had neither consulted with the National Security Committee of the Cabinet, headed by Prime Minister Khaqan Abbasi, nor bothered to take along an elected civilian official – including the minister of defence – on his dash to Kabul in which he promised, as per General Ghafoor, the sun and moon of defence cooperation to the Afghans. The Director General of the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate Lt. General Naveed Mukhtar and career diplomats flanked the army chief in Kabul. An utter disregard for the norms of statecraft and diplomacy is not new for the Pakistan army and is its way of declaring to the neighbouring countries that they are the powers that be and no diplomatic breakthrough can be achieved over their heads. More importantly, it signals to the elected government that the Afghan and India policy remain an absolute no-go area for them.
bajwa_reuters.jpg

In the aftermath of the COAS Bajwa’s Kabul visit and the Rangers fiasco, the Pakistan army’s corps commanders had convened a conference but curiously did not issue an official press release immediately afterwards. When asked about it, the director general of ISPR, like a B-grade novelist, pronounced that “(their) silence is also an expression”. He went on to proclaim that “saying that there is going be a martial law should not even be talked about. We are busy in doing our duty as stated in the constitution.” The irony was perhaps lost on General Ghafoor that usurping the foreign policy, trampling upon the domestic policy by flouting the federal interior minister, bypassing the prime minister, using highly-charged religious matters to settle scores with dissenters and politicians, passing adverse remarks about the country’s economy, harassing and abducting the dissenters and running a clandestine dirty war in Balochistan is anything but constitutional. If it is run a like a martial law, spoken for like a martial law and is as pervasive as a martial law, it is a martial law, whether or not a takeover at gunpoint has taken place.

And frankly, when the army can have its cake and eat it too, it would be foolish to impose an overt military dictatorship. It has successfully dislodged the country’s foremost politician in a bloodless judicial coup, has muzzled the media and manufactured consent and co-opted opposition politicians, so why would it need to go the whole hog. The answer would depend upon the extent to which the ousted Nawaz is willing to go to undo his disqualification and make a comeback.

History of military rule

The army’s current quest is to regain the space it lost after General Pervez Musharraf was eased out of presidency which he has usurped. Generally, clear-cut political victories or convincing military defeats cut the adventurist armies and their ambitions to size. In Pakistan’s case, the first military ruler General Ayub Khan had massive protests against him but was not exactly toppled. When he handed the baton to General Yahya Khan, The Economist, London, cheekily titled its March 29, 1969 editorial ‘Tweedle Khan takes over’. The 1971 defeat of the army and the independence of Bangladesh buoyed the civilian fortunes in Pakistan and Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto consolidated his position vis-à-vis the army and removed the army chief. However, Bhutto revived the military’s fortunes through his own unbridled jingoism and deployment of the army to crush the secular Baloch movement for autonomy. And when Bhutto ended up in a deadlock with the opposition, the COAS Zia wasted no time in toppling and then hanging Bhutto on cooked-up murder charges.

While there was a consistent and rather robust pro-democracy movement against Zia’s dictatorship, it never did succeed in forcing him to relinquish power. An act of god or man took Zia in the clear blue skies, and eventually elections were held three months after his death. What followed was a quasi-democratic dispensation in which, to paraphrase the late PM Bhutto, the civilians were given the government but never the power to rule.

The army maintained an unconstitutional tutelary role and the civilians fell afoul whenever they attempted to question or challenge it. In the 11 years that ensued Zia’s death, military kept encroaching on the civilian space and eventually General Musharraf and his coterie launched an overt coup d’état in 1999. As Samuel Finer has discussed in The Man on Horseback: The Role of the Military in Politics, a military putsch is generally function of and an interplay between an army’s disposition to intervene vis-à-vis the opportunity existing on the ground for such intervention. Pakistan’s history has shown that its army has always maintained a relentless disposition and readiness to intervene. It has capitalised on opportunity when one popped up or manufactured one if there was none on the ground.

All militaries are, however, uniquely ill-trained professionally and psychologically to rule the complex civilian societies, multi-ethnic states and modern governments and invariably fall back on collaborating and coopted civilians. We saw that in Pakistan in every single dictators’ case. After an initial rule purely by the junta, Ayub, Yahya, Zia and Musharraf all eventually brought in a coterie of pliant civilians to run the government. Discussing this design flaw in the militaries world over, Finer points out that “politically the armed forces suffer from two crippling weaknesses, which preclude them, save in exceptional cases and for brief periods of time, from running without civilian collaboration and openly in their own name … once weakness is the armed forces’ technical inability to administer any but the most primitive community. The second is their lack of legitimacy: that is to say their lack of moral title to rule”. Again, every single Pakistani dictator resorted to coercing and coopting superior judiciary and some mutation of a parliament to condone his rule.

The showdown between Nawaz and the army, with the latter attempting to clip the former’s political wings permanently, has come to a head. Whether the undeclared martial law will morph into a manifest military rule seems less likely at this stage. Army’s preference would be to keep Nawaz out of the parliament and, possibly politics, with the courts and several opposition politicians closing rank with the brass. If they are able to contain Nawaz and possibly even carve a chunk out of his PMLN party, the army would prefer to maintain the status quo where it rules through informal diktat.

On the other hand, if the army perceives that the former prime minister may be able to harness his mass support into an electoral victory in the 2018 elections, they could change tack and induce some form of an interim political setup approved by the judiciary to create a façade of legitimacy. As for Nawaz, he seems to know that without a formal political confrontation with the army, the civilians would never be able to gain the space that is constitutionally and rightfully theirs. Indications are that he still has enough fight left him for that but whether sections of his own party are ready for it is not that clear.

Mohammad Taqi is a Pakistani-American columnist. He tweets @mazdaki.
 
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I totally support Martial Law, at least then when people talk to the government they know they can make decisions. Pakistan is made to be a democracy and they should simply let the Army run the government. Right now the government in Pakistan takes all decisions made by them or even the Army.
 
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While I am not supportive of an overt role for the military in the running of government, I think the issue is that a significant gap has been left open by the PML-N government. Why was an FM not designated for a very long time and why did NS wear dual-hats? These kinds of things mean that an institution that is much more focused on areas of concerns given its responsibility on matters of national security will simply fill up the vacuum. This is what is going on.

Secondly, the article has a clearly anti-Army spin. I was listening to the entire press-conference. The media asked pointed questions and the DG ISPR responded accordingly. One thing that should be avoided is being held up by some conventional constructs around how the military should behave in a democratic dispensation. We are clearly seeing that even in uber-domcratic countries, when push comes to shove, the norms are being flouted. A case in point is the ongoings in the US with Trump challenging all other pillars of the state in that country. There are things being said and done which run quite contrary to democratic norms. We have the most significant military influence *ever* in the history of the US with 4 generals (one in service), advising at the highest level.

Point being that national security is driving a lot of national agendas and while I may not like it, it is a reality. For Pakistan, the disqualification of the PM has happened at a time when Pakistan's security challenges have compounded. What are the alternates? Either we let a government without a lot of focus handle this element, or the military has to step in and do what it does from behind the scenes (this by the way happens in many major first world countries now post 9/11.)
 
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Martial Law or Military Coup which will be the first of its kind will Inshaallah come & cleanse Pakistan.
 
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I totally support Martial Law
then go and impose it in your country. Don't poke your nose into our affairs.
We very well know why there is an excruciating pain in your rear and this article has been printed directly from that aching ahole and that's why it stinks but we cannot stop process of justice and accountability regardless of what you believe
 
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then go and impose it in your country. Don't poke your nose into our affairs.
We very well know why there is an excruciating pain in your rear and this article has been printed directly from that aching ahole and that's why it stinks but we cannot stop process of justice and accountability regardless of what you believe
My country is fine with democracy and I am not supporting it for Pakistani, I am supporting from our point of view. I do not care what you want to do or want. There is no power with civilians and nothing can be solved with Pakistan with civilians since Army will sabotage it. You can take Musharraf's term as example.
 
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US knows it is easy to deal with military leadership than democratically elected one.
Probably that could also be a reason for unfolding events.
 
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While I am not supportive of an overt role for the military in the running of government, I think the issue is that a significant gap has been left open by the PML-N government. Why was an FM not designated for a very long time and why did NS wear dual-hats? These kinds of things mean that an institution that is much more focused on areas of concerns given its responsibility on matters of national security will simply fill up the vacuum. This is what is going on.

Secondly, the article has a clearly anti-Army spin. I was listening to the entire press-conference. The media asked pointed questions and the DG ISPR responded accordingly. One thing that should be avoided is being held up by some conventional constructs around how the military should behave in a democratic dispensation. We are clearly seeing that even in uber-domcratic countries, when push comes to shove, the norms are being flouted. A case in point is the ongoings in the US with Trump challenging all other pillars of the state in that country. There are things being said and done which run quite contrary to democratic norms. We have the most significant military influence *ever* in the history of the US with 4 generals (one in service), advising at the highest level.

Point being that national security is driving a lot of national agendas and while I may not like it, it is a reality. For Pakistan, the disqualification of the PM has happened at a time when Pakistan's security challenges have compounded. What are the alternates? Either we let a government without a lot of focus handle this element, or the military has to step in and do what it does from behind the scenes (this by the way happens in many major first world countries now post 9/11.)

I believe that you are being pessimistic, and secondly that you are skirting the issue of accountability.

You are being pessimistic because only a few simple steps will cool things down all around. Your hand is seen in continuing Afghan unrest, and the success of the Taliban is seen as due to the active support from your intelligence agency. Your hand is seen in the continued violent role of four terrorist organisations in the unrest in Indian administered J&K, and it is also clear that there is no serious desire to control or even curtail their activities. Your need to get involved in two of your neighbouring countries is not a huge reassurance for countries dominating the world landscape; such countries tend to be status quo and don't like violence, for good purposes or bad.

The second point is much of the blame for these things is exactly and precisely at the doorsteps of those inching their way back into control. If the country does not control them, if they consider themselves the ultimate authority, there will be damage, or there may be serious collateral damage.
 
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I won't believe anything until i hear this " Mere Aziz Humwatanoo "
 
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Why was an FM not designated for a very long time and why did NS wear dual-hats?
You know why or just want to admit it? Pindi had the problems with the same policy making department wrt three time PM
Secondly, the article has a clearly anti-Army spin. I was listening to the entire press-conference. The media asked pointed questions and the DG ISPR responded accordingly. One thing that should be avoided is being held up by some conventional constructs around how the military should behave in a democratic dispensation. We are clearly seeing that even in uber-domcratic countries, when push comes to shove, the norms are being flouted. A case in point is the ongoings in the US with Trump challenging all other pillars of the state in that country. There are things being said and done which run quite contrary to democratic norms. We have the most significant military influence *ever* in the history of the US with 4 generals (one in service), advising at the highest level.
These anti-army are floundering after the ISI-Terrorist links confirmation. Also, paramilitary is deserting positions.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-unit-fuels-political-confusion-idUSKBN1CA16G
 
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