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To an outside observer, Pakistan prime minister Yusuf Gilani has been doing splendidly well in the recent months — which is saying a lot, considering the political minefield he needed to traverse any single day. To my mind, his stature was rising, but then all of sudden on Thursday, he lost the touch, which is how his ‘defiant’ statements on Thursday appear.
In a democracy, of course, civilian supremacy must prevail. However, the catch is Gilani is riding the high horse over the so-called ‘Memogate’, where the military did the right thing cooperating with the supreme court, which is looking into the affair that indeed has grave national security implications.
No matter Gilani’s protestations about democracy, the real issue is whether the government had any role at all in the ‘Memogate’. That is also how the Pakistani opinion will be inclined to see the state of play. Most political parties have refused to applaud Gilani’s ‘defiance’. The supreme court chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry is plainly dismissive of the suggestion of a possible army coup. The army chief Ashfaq Kayani bluntly says he has no intentions of overthrowing the government. So, who’s afraid of the dark?
If, perchance, anyone in the government did in fact approach the United States for help to reorder the Pakistani body polity, that was a dastardly thing to have been done. And he (or she) must face the retribution. It is what we in India would call an ‘anti-national activity’. The tragedy of Pakistan all along has been that its elites have been indulging in ‘anti-national activities’ — bending over backward to serve as the United States’ doormat. The ‘Memogate’ is symptomatic of that syndrome.
A great window of opportunity is available today to purge that syndrome, when the US’s capacity to intervene in Pakistan’s internal affairs stands severely impaired. Imagine, American ambassador in Islamabad would have been shuttling today between Islamabad and Rawalpindi. But he isn’t. And Pakistan hasn’t gone to dogs.
Gilani chose wrong issue for right cause - Indian Punchline
In a democracy, of course, civilian supremacy must prevail. However, the catch is Gilani is riding the high horse over the so-called ‘Memogate’, where the military did the right thing cooperating with the supreme court, which is looking into the affair that indeed has grave national security implications.
No matter Gilani’s protestations about democracy, the real issue is whether the government had any role at all in the ‘Memogate’. That is also how the Pakistani opinion will be inclined to see the state of play. Most political parties have refused to applaud Gilani’s ‘defiance’. The supreme court chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry is plainly dismissive of the suggestion of a possible army coup. The army chief Ashfaq Kayani bluntly says he has no intentions of overthrowing the government. So, who’s afraid of the dark?
If, perchance, anyone in the government did in fact approach the United States for help to reorder the Pakistani body polity, that was a dastardly thing to have been done. And he (or she) must face the retribution. It is what we in India would call an ‘anti-national activity’. The tragedy of Pakistan all along has been that its elites have been indulging in ‘anti-national activities’ — bending over backward to serve as the United States’ doormat. The ‘Memogate’ is symptomatic of that syndrome.
A great window of opportunity is available today to purge that syndrome, when the US’s capacity to intervene in Pakistan’s internal affairs stands severely impaired. Imagine, American ambassador in Islamabad would have been shuttling today between Islamabad and Rawalpindi. But he isn’t. And Pakistan hasn’t gone to dogs.
Gilani chose wrong issue for right cause - Indian Punchline