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Gilani fears coup conspiracy; hits out at army

I think an overt coup will set us back and will be counter productive, whats needed is to get this government removed through legal process

The Supreme Court could play its role in achieving this.
 
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While writing this column I am overwhelmed with the fear that by the time it is read on Friday morning, developments and the context reported here may sound ridiculously irrelevant. The National Assembly proceedings started in a business-as-usual manner. Most members, who had posted questions on various issues, were not present in the house to grill ministers for providing half-truths. The Prime Minister and opposition leader were also not visible.

Then a vocal PPP member, Nadim Afzal Chann, stood on a point of order and recalled threats that a hyperactive journalist, Hamid Mir, had been receiving nonstop. Apparently, he provoked the threatening calls for doing a talk show related to Sardar Attaullah Mengal’s bitter remarks regarding the mass scale alienation that prevailed in Balochistan these days.

Javed Hashmi took the mic to support him and stressed with a defeatist mind that so far both the government and public failed to name and punish the culprits who had killed journalists or kidnapped them for brute torturing. Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan walked into the house meanwhile. He also stood to express concern and solidarity with frightened members of the journalist community. He concluded by asserting that a parliamentary committee should probe the matter and find out the sources of coercive call making within 72 hours of its formation.

Doing so, he also revealed that he too had been receiving a spate of threatening calls. He requested the Punjab government to locate the source and it could only discover that phone numbers, obnoxiously threatening calls were coming from, had been allotted to ‘agencies’. He didn’t name any ‘agency’, but in passing did suggest that some outfits under the command and control of the interior minister might also have been stalking and threatening vocal media persons and opposition politicians.

An apparently relaxed Prime Minister had walked in while Nisar was speaking. He took the mic, but to express regret over a different matter. Some days ago, the National Assembly was wrongly told that a hefty amount was spent on the treatment of Javed Hashmi, when he fell seriously ill last year. The figures were totally wrong and Gilani tendered an apology over it. The gracious act did not calm the opposition leader. He rather stood again to recall that the government had told the Supreme Court in writing that it remained clueless, when it comes to ‘operational details’ of things done by the army or the ISI. “What kind of a government is this,” he wondered provocatively.

That forced the prime minister to again take the mic and in a very cool and calculated tone confessed before a ‘sovereign house,’ that some institutions of our state were historically addicted to act like ‘a state within a state.’ He is not willing to live with this conduct. Enough is enough. Already, he has completed around 45 months in his office and that make him the ‘longest serving prime minister of Pakistan.’ Even Zulfikar Ali Bhutto could not go beyond 43 months.

Cutting across the party divide, members sitting in the house welcomed his statement with loud desk thumping, but journalists sitting in the gallery were baffled. Everyone preferred to rush out and frenetically dial numbers to find out ‘what next.’ Before writing this column, I also tried my best. So far, I can only report that Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar was hurriedly putting on his jacket, when I entered his chambers at around 1 pm. The president had summoned him.

In these columns, I have been consistently reporting that Asif Ali Zardari was adamant to deliver a tell-all speech, either before a joint parliamentary sitting or while addressing the PPP loyalists, expected to gather in huge numbers at Naudero on Dec 27. A set of loyal but pragmatic ministers apprehended that the speech he planned to deliver could turn into his ‘swan song’ in the end. Zardari may or may not get the chance to deliver the expected speech. Gilani had surely taken the lead in drawing the lines between the civilian government and autonomy-savouring oligarchs through his speech of Thursday.

---------- Post added at 11:00 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:58 AM ----------

Already, he has completed around 45 months in his office and that make him the ‘longest serving prime minister of Pakistan.’ Even Zulfikar Ali Bhutto could not go beyond 43 months.

WoW !!! Gilani has made a record of being longest serving PM of Pakistan!!
 
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PML-N’s help sought to down government
By Irfan Ghauri
Published: December 23, 2011

PML-N approached by establishment to dislodge the government.
ISLAMABAD:
While its leader has gone out of his way to openly reject any military intervention, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has been approached by elements within the security establishment, which is seeking help in dislodging the government, The Express Tribune has learnt.
The PML-N remains non-committal, however.
According to well-placed sources, the PML-N leadership is willing to get onboard only after concrete guarantees and on certain terms of conditions.
In the aftermath of the Memogate issue, officials of the country’s premier intelligence agency have been shuttling back and forth to take the PML-N on board, sources say.
A brigadier of the intelligence agency held detailed sessions with three key leaders of the PML-N’s second-tier leadership, days before hearing on Memogate scandal started in the Supreme Court on December 1st. Later meetings were held with the party’s top leadership, sources add.
These meetings took place on the nights between November 27 and 28, and November 28 and 29; the first one in Islamabad, the second one in Murree.
Sources say the opposition party was given blueprints of a possible scenario sans President Zardari – a 2007-like, ‘emergency plus’ situation, with a pledge of holding fresh polls within three months.
The same official, according to some sources – other sources say it was a different official of the same rank – held a meeting with a top judicial officer during the same period.
No guarantees, no decision
Of the limited choices available to oust an adamant president, a ‘quasi-judicial-military coup’ appeared to be the top option.
For the PML-N though, making unconditional, solemn commitments was not viable, especially when there were no guarantees that the promise of new polls within the given time frame will be met.
The indecisiveness was later evident from the mixed signals coming through different quarters in the party.
A party MNA from Potohar, on National Assembly floor, termed the alleged memo a ‘mere piece of paper’. A senator, and a relative of Sharifs, who had been one of the three interlocutors at the late November meetings, rebutted the MNA’s claim, and called it his ‘personal point of view’.
Denial by spokesperson
The reports of his party leadership’s secret contacts with the security establishment were denied by the PML-N spokesperson Mushahidullah Khan. He said the reports are wrong, and based on misconception.
“At the moment, the so-called security establishment is weak and not able to maneuver in politics as they used to in the past,” he said.“The establishment has been ‘pampering’ our party’s rivals,” he said, referring to the alleged backing of the establishment to the Imran Khan. “The position has changed now,” he asserted. “If [Nawaz Sharif] sends a signal, the establishment would run towards him. It is they who might need us, not the other way round.”
Military ‘fed up’
Later on Thursday, Reuters, quoting military sources, reported that Pakistan’s army is ‘fed up with unpopular President Zardari and wants him out of office, but through ‘legal’ means and without a coup.
“Who isn’t fed up with Zardari? It’s not just the opposition and the man on the street but people within the government too,” the agency quoted an anonymous military source.
“But there has to be a proper way. No action is being planned by the army. Even if we tried, it would be very unpopular.”
The military spokesperson declined comment.
One of the military sources was quoted as suggesting that no direct action would be needed since the government had already made so many mistakes. The agents of change, military sources hint, would not be them – it would be the Supreme Court. “If the army moves to do anything it would have national as well as international repercussions,” said another military source.
This was echoed by a senior PPP leader. “I am not bothered about the army. I think they are acting very sensibly at the moment,” the PPP leader told Reuters. “The worry probably would be what the Supreme Court does.” (With additional input from Reuters)
Published in The Express Tribune, December 23rd, 2011.
 
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Interesting time for PML-N.

They are not willing to help establishment.

But yet, they have to give resignation because of their promises of giving resignation within 2 months
 
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YESSSSS lets let the corrupt generals take over and not give true democracy a chance. If the army stopped poking its nose out of the Gov's business for 1 term all will be well. Always Remember the Armed forces are civil servants not civil leader.
 
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For whom the bell tolls

Cyril Almeida | Opinion | From the Newspaper (6 hours ago) Today

AS the gloves come off and pretences are dropped, it’s become terribly obvious: the army wants Zardari out.

Why, why now? Nobody is sure. The notoriously tight-lipped duo of Kayani and Pasha isn’t leaking anything and the politicians are groping for answers.

Reasons may not even matter anymore. From here, it seems inevitable that someone will have to go. But who? Zardari and/or Gilani and his cabinet? Kayani and/or Pasha?

History suggests that when this game is played, only one side emerges the winner. Sharif wrestled a draw in ’93 but that seems unlikely in the present circumstances. Still, amidst the growing uncertainty and alarm, the odds of survival of the main players are hard to gauge at the moment.

Zardari, the man with the big circle on his back, is constitutionally impregnable. But the onslaught against him and his government threatens to paralyse the system until Zardari has no option but to go.

A public battle will not help. The Gilani salvos and the MoD statement only reinforce the perception that the government is weak. It looks more desperate than defiant.

Zardari will have to negotiate but it isn’t clear if he has anything left to offer. The latest sacrifice — Husain Haqqani — didn’t appease the gods in Pindi and if the target is Zardari himself it’s difficult to see how he will bargain himself out of the corner he’s been pushed into.

There’s some hope in the possibility that while there is a confluence of interest between the army, the court and the PML-N, they still don’t appear to be acting in concert. If they turn on each other, Zardari could yet survive. But turning on each other is more likely to happen later, after Zardari is already out.

The smartest gamble: declare a fiscal and economic emergency and have Hafiz Sheikh announce a raft of policies that will help stabilise the economy. Not over the course of the next year or six months, but in a matter of days and weeks.

The reason: the army brain trust appears to have concluded that catastrophic mismanagement of the economy and public finances has put the country on the verge of catastrophe. And as relations with the US plummet, aid and dollar inflows could vanish, necessitating emergency triage of the economy and the public sector.

It may be the only thing that can save Zardari. Relying on constitutional niceties in a bare-knuckle fight isn’t a very smart idea.

For much the same reason, Gilani, the cabinet and the government itself are also vulnerable. If the problem is economic, then getting rid of Zardari alone will not fix the problem.

Those who have taken a hard look at the government have figured out that Zardari’s indifference to matters of governance and policy is only part of the problem: even were he to evince interest in policy matters, he doesn’t really have a team that can salvage the situation at this stage.

Sensing his vulnerability, Gilani is trying to use his megaphone to save himself and his government. First, he tried to pooh-pooh the possibility of a clash between the army and the government. When the army quickly shot down that effort, Gilani turned the dial to defiant mode and has been busy raising the alarm.

But Gilani’s fate is tied to Zardari’s. If the president has to go, it looks like his prime minister will have to follow him out.

On the army side, the more vulnerable principal is Pasha. His second extension runs out in March and government circles have been whispering darkly about how his boss, Kayani, may want him to stick around another year.

But with Pasha leading the charge on the memo issue, it’s hard to see how the government — assuming it’s around until March to decide the matter — will agree to another extension.

If the bitterness had not spilled into the open, the government could have tried to appease the growling beast and offered yet another lifeline to a favourite son. Now, after the ferociousness of Pasha on all things memo related, a third extension would amount to the government signing its own death warrant.

If Pasha were to go before March, his boss, Kayani, would have to go too. It is possible: chiefs who have overreached have been forced out in the past.

But this feels less like a Sharif-Karamat moment and more a Sharif-Musharraf moment. Having surrendered so much to the military and allowed disdain for him to grow and grow, Zardari doesn’t have the political capital to sack his army chief.

The mere mention of Zardari as the constitutional supreme commander of the armed forces attracts howls of derision and outright contempt. And all the things that have hurt Kayani’s standing in the army — a second term, May 2, the PNS Mehran attack, being perceived as soft on the Americans, etc — don’t really redound to Zardari’s advantage.

After all, it was Zardari who gave Kayani a second term and it was Zardari who made no effort to take advantage of Kayani’s vulnerability immediately after May 2. Besides, the memo saga has now switched the narrative and it’s Zardari who’s on the defensive.

Could this all be a Mexican stand-off, where everyone in the circle has a gun to the next person’s head, too afraid to pull the trigger but too scared to lower their weapon? If that’s the case, a negotiated settlement could be reached and the country could limp towards the Senate elections.

But as the threats and shouts intensify, as fear and anxiety grow and panic begins to take hold, someone could prematurely pull the trigger. Who survives that bloodbath will only be known after the dust settles.

Suffice to say, it’s not looking good for the civilians.

The writer is a member of staff.

For whom the bell tolls | Opinion | DAWN.COM
 
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Real issue: regime change


Ayaz Amir

Friday, December 23, 2011


There should be no room for confusion. Nor should we put blinders on our eyes. The Memo (with a capital M) has not endangered our nukes or lowered army morale. This last is really absurd. If army morale is to be lowered by a forgotten piece of paper, no matter what was inscribed on it, we are in more danger than we think.

Of all the sacred altars at which the Islamic Republic has allowed itself to be ravaged since 1947, none has been more hallowed than that of national security. The adventures undertaken, the follies perpetrated, in its name. So can we please keep this bogey out of the way?

The Memo is just a handy means to a passionately-desired end: regime change. Getting rid of Asif Zardari and installing a compliant interim setup, leading, at some point in the future, to elections which guarantee “positive results.” Students of Pakistani history would remember that it was Gen Zia who gave currency to the term “positive results.” There is no shortage of retired and serving military men who, in today’s circumstances, translate positive results to mean Imran Khan.

Imran Khan may not be the child of the establishment, as his detractors say, but he is definitely the favourite of the semi-fascist tendencies interwoven into the fabric of our national-security state. Look at the faces he is attracting. What is their recipe for national salvation? Nothing more detailed than discipline and blind faith in the abilities of the leader.

The sages of Raiwind are caught on the horns of a dilemma. It is their petition before the Supreme Court which is keeping the Memo issue alive, army and ISI exploiting this improvised explosive device that they have unwittingly laid (at whose behest, it would be fun to know). The dilemma comes from the circumstance that they can’t be sure how this manoeuvre will play out. Will it lead to early elections, which is what the sages earnestly want, or the sabotaging of democracy?

Hence, the mixed signals from that quarter: even as they push their petition – a position which puts them on the same page as Gen Ashfaq Kayani and Lt Gen Shuja Pasha – they are issuing warnings about the dangers of Bonapartism. Uncharitable critics would say that this amounts to running with the hare and hunting with the hounds, always a tough act to perform.

But it is not only the sages who are confounded. Other actors in this drama are equally confused. They know what they want. They just don’t know, at least at this stage, how to get there. If only Zardari had chosen to stay in Dubai...it would have been so convenient. But by choosing to come back he has cast a spanner in the works. The conspirators thus have their work cut out.

Zardari can only be nailed if Husain Haqqani chooses to become a Masood Mehmood, the approver in Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s murder case. But of that happening there are precious few signs. Haqqani is no Masood Mehmood and Gen Kayani, for all his well-concealed ambition, is no Gen Zia. And, if the analogy can be stretched further, on the judicial firmament there is no Justice Anwarul Haq or Maulvi Mushtaq. The times, alas, are different.

So the central problem remains. How do you take the footprints of the Memo affair to the Presidency? And if this doesn’t happen, the mushroom cloud rising in Islamabad is an exercise in futility. To put it in legalese, of what use a First Information Report if it leads to no conviction?

Caesar’s conspirators had the strength of their convictions. Bhutto’s conspirators were animated by fear and hatred. Nawaz Sharif’s own conspirators were driven by feelings of survival. Sharif tried to get rid of Musharraf; he ended up deposing himself. Zardari’s conspirators, and there is a claque of them, have strong feelings but weak impulses: desire unmatched by capacity.

So what we are seeing is a war of attrition instead of a decisive engagement: dark hints, all sorts of rumours (some quite improbable), a regular whispering campaign, but not much clarity about where all this is likely to end.

Maoists used to speak of disorder as a corrective, “There is great disorder under the heavens and the situation is excellent.” Pakistani disorder is a thing of its own, signifying nothing.

People with the kind of reputation the president enjoys are supposed to perform according to a standard script. When you show them their face in the mirror they are supposed to fall at your feet or, like our celebrated Dr Khan, confess to their real or imagined sins on television: hara-kiri, so to speak, in full public view.

Suppose Dr Khan had shown Gen Musharraf some of the courage he displays in his newspaper columns. What would have happened? Whatever Dr Khan did, no one in Pakistan would have dared to hand him over to the Americans.

My Lord the Chief Justice might take a leaf from his own book to gain some insight into the present situation. When he went before Musharraf on March 9, 2007, and was asked in so many words to step down, the standard script required of him either to grovel or sign on the dotted line. But he stood his ground and the rest is history. (It is also a bit of a headache, but let that pass.)

Imagine the warts on Zardari’s face as he is shown the mirror. But he is neither grovelling nor flying out of the country as our ideological warriors would have him do. No article of the Constitution or clause of the penal code covers this frustrating situation. If the president doesn’t wilt or bite the dust, what on earth do you do?

Wait for the election timetable is what, ideally, you should do. But across the political spectrum there is decreasing patience for this option. Nor does it suit everyone. But short of a coup sanctioned by the highest judicial authority, how is regime change to be brought about? Pundits, representing one of the largest growth industries in Islamabad, are left biting their nails as they mull over this conundrum.

To further complicate matters, the PPP is in a bellicose mood and has decided to fight back, which is again not part of the desired script. Their lordships have taken umbrage over a Babar Awan press conference. There is no indication that Dr Awan (his skills honed in that mythical seat of learning, Monticello University) is seeing the light.

No doubt, given the country’s parlous condition, a rejuvenated democracy delivered by fresh elections (as Nawaz Sharif proposes) would be a good thing. But only if there is a willing consensus behind the move, instead of a pistol being put to the PPP’s head.

This makes Shahbaz Sharif’s battle cry that there can be no free elections under Zardari singularly out of focus. As the establishment’s favourite child once-upon-a-time, who would know better than the PML-N that the great instruments of election manipulation in Pakistan are the ideological academies of the ISI and Military Intelligence? ISI and MI are not in Zardari’s control. So what is the PML-N afraid of?

The political class has to be clear about the alternatives on offer. Either we have regime change, courtesy Pakistan’s highest court of constitutional authority, 111 Brigade, in which case politicians can take a rest and a hike for some years. Or, sad to say, we have elections under the present dispensation. Elections, in other words, under Gen Pasha (his name here used as a metaphor) or President Zardari. If there is a third option, the nation may kindly be informed.

The obvious is escaping the PML-N. Its enemy is not Zardari, not in the present circumstances. The PML-N and PPP have separate territories to hold on to. Their interests do not clash. If both have a contradiction it is with the rearing head of Imran Khan’s pseudo-reformism.

If the establishment has made its choice in the form of Imran Khan, there is little sense in playing the establishment’s game by getting so worked up about the Memo affair...and beating the drums of national security to justify one’s short-sightedness.

The great organ-meister is Gen Pasha. The political class should have imagination enough to think of something else instead of dancing to his tune.



Real issue: regime change - Ayaz Amir
 
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Too much bullshit - I won't be surprised if President and Haqqani justify memo in the name of democracy.The fact is that Armed Forces want Supreme Court to punish the perpetrators of MEMO but PPP is trying to hide their guilt by showing that the case is against democracy.I am 100% sure there won''t be any role of Army on the front line - It will be the Supreme Court (Chief Justice) who will take decision.
 
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A country that is, was and actually wants to get ruled by hired SECURITY GAURDS is doomed to be thrown into the dust bin of history.

Actually, the original Pakistan which had an Eastern and a Western arm, ceased to exist in 1971.
 
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ISLAMABAD, Dec 23, 2011 (AFP) - Pakistan's army chief General Ashfaq Kayani has ruled out a military takeover in the country, describing rumours about a coup as misleading, the military said on Friday.

"He (Kayani) strongly dispelled the speculations of any military takeover and said that these are misleading and are being used as a bogey to divert the focus from the real issues," the military said in a statement.


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Here is the ISPR release on this..

http://www.ispr.gov.pk/front/main.asp?o=t-press_release&id=1937#pr_link1937
 
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General Kayani rules out military takeover
By AFP / Express
Published: December 23, 2011
RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has ruled out a military takeover in the country, describing rumours about a coup as misleading, the military said on Friday.
“He (Kayani) strongly dispelled the speculations of any military takeover and said that these are misleading and are being used as a bogey to divert the focus from the real issues,” the military said in a press release.
Kayani made the statement while answering a question during a visit to forward posts in Mohmand and Kurram Agencies on Thursday. He said that Pakistan Army had and will continue to support the democratic process in the country.
The army chief said that the military was fully aware of its constitutional obligations and responsibilities.
Kayani’s statement comes after Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani had earlier let loose a barrage of accusations and reservations against the country’s all-powerful military establishment.
First at an exhibition, and later on the floor of the National Assembly, Gilani had voiced concerns over ‘conspiracies being hatched against the incumbent government,’ and questioned the credibility of the armed forces over the Osama bin Laden (OBL) debacle.
The premier, in a direct reference, hit out at the military establishment, and said that a “state within [a] state will not be acceptable,” referring to the military’s dominance in the country’s affairs.
 
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At the same time, President Asif Ali Zardar’s office said Zardari had no intention of leaving the country over the scandal, which has raised tensions and undermined the already deeply unpopular president.

An army statement quoted military chief General Ashfaq Kayani as telling troops the military will continue to support democracy in Pakistan and that any talk the army was planning to take over was “speculation”.

Many Pakistanis wonder whether Zardari can survive the crisis, and speculation has been growing the powerful generals will try to oust him somehow.

The tension is a worrying sign for the region and for Pakistan’s uneasy relationship with its key ally, the United States.

The United States wants political stability in Pakistan so that Islamabad can help fight militancy and aid Western efforts to stabilise Afghanistan.

Zardari, known for his resilience in the face of pressure, has no intention of leaving, a senior member of his ruling party said.

“The current information is there is no such plan. He is very much here,” the official, Shazia Marri, told Reuters.

“It’s all speculation, and such speculation has proven baseless in the past as well,” Marri said.

Pakistan’s top judge earlier moved to allay fears of a possible military coup as tensions rose.

“There is no question of a takeover. Gone are the days when people used to get validation for unconstitutional steps from the courts,” Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry said.

The Supreme Court is looking into a petition demanding an inquiry into what has become known as “memogate”. Kayani, arguably the most powerful man in the country, has called for an investigation into who may have been behind the memo.

“Spectre Haunts Pakistan”

Newspaper editorials on Friday highlighted unease in the nuclear-armed South Asian nation, predicting a showdown between Zardari and his allies and the military, which is so influential it has been described as a state within a state.

“A spectre is haunting Pakistan – the spectre of a clash between the army and the government that threatens to turn fatal,” said an editorial in the News.

Businessman Mansoor Ijaz, writing in a column in the Financial Times on Oct. 10, said a senior Pakistani diplomat had asked that a memo be delivered to the Pentagon with a plea for US help to stave off a military coup in the days after the raid that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in May.

Ijaz later identified the diplomat as Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani, a Zardari ally who denied involvement but resigned over the controversy.

The military faced unprecedented public criticism over the bin Laden affair, widely seen as a violation of sovereignty.

But many Pakistanis rallied around the army after a Nov. 26 air attack by US forces in Afghanistan mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on the border. The memo has also helped boost the army’s image at the expense of the government.

Zardari’s government has become increasingly unpopular since he took office in 2008. It has failed to tackle myriad problems, from crippling power cuts to suicide bombings and a struggling economy.

The army is fed up with Zardari and wants him out of office, although through legal means and without a repeat of the coups that are a hallmark of the country’s 64 years of independence, military sources told Reuters on Thursday.

Tempers Flare

Another military source said tensions must be defused.

“Tempers are flaring; there is no doubt about that. However, there are efforts to pacify the situation as well. And I hope they work, as under the current scenario, it is fast becoming a recipe for a head-on collision,” he told Reuters on Friday.

Dawn, one of the country’s most respected newspapers, said it would be premature to assert that an “extra-constitutional” removal of the government was in the works, but it noted the army has seized power before.

Friction between Pakistan’s civilian government and military have bedevilled the nation for almost its entire existence, with the military ruling for more than half its 64-year history.

The army remains the arbiter of power and analysts say it has plenty of ways to pressure Zardari to step down, especially if a link is established between him and the memo, which sought the Pentagon’s help in averting a feared coup.

In the past the army has asked Pakistani civilian leaders to resign and influenced judicial proceedings against them.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told parliament that any institution acting as a “state within a state” was unacceptable, a clear reference to the military.

Zardari returned to Pakistan this week from medical treatment in Dubai that raised speculation he would resign under pressure from the military.

Although his position is largely ceremonial, he wields considerable influence as leader of the ruling party and his forced departure would be a humiliation for the civilian leadership and could throw the country into turmoil.

Zardari is the widower of former premier Benazir Bhutto, who spent years opposing military rule before she was assassinated in 2007.

Pakistan’s next parliamentary elections are not due until 2013, although some opposition parties have been calling for early polls. Presidents are elected by legislators
 
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I'd say best solution is to over throw current government.. let some one be appointed temporarily by Military, and have elections again in 1-2 months.

We had enough of Zardari.

You mean 1-2 months like this:


 
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