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IK is an army henchman

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niazifighter

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COMMENT: No he Khan’t —Dr Mohammad Taqi

Imran Khan has failed miserably to select and groom a capable and honest team in his 15-year political career and it is unlikely to happen in the 15 months leading up to the elections

So Halloween came to Lahore a day early, especially — but not exclusively — for Mian Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N). Apparently, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) rally has scared the bejeebers out of an already jittery PML-N. The PTI did put up a very impressive show and political players would ignore it only at their peril. In their complacency some have been oblivious to the media and military’s shenanigans over the last several months but it clearly was coming.

Immediately following the PTI’s dharna (sit-in) in Peshawar, I had noted in this column: “The establishment is getting its domestic ducks in a row, in preparation for a showdown with the US over its AfPak endgame. What can serve them better in this than a conglomerate of the martial law’s perennial B team like the Jamaat-e-Islami, pro-jihadists like Sami-ul-Haq and assorted opportunists? The twelfth man has always hoped that the establishment will grant him the political test cap one day. His hypocrisy may actually earn him the captaincy of the junta’s ‘B’ team this time” (‘The establishment’s twelfth man’, Daily Times, April 28, 2011).

Well, here we are six months later and the ‘saviour’ has announced not only his arrival but that the ‘change’, too, has arrived. Some pundits are now retrofitting their positions to gear up for the journey to the land of milk and honey that Imran Khan has pledged to steer everyone to. Change, really, one may ask. Neither can a neo-jihadist be a Pakistani Barack Obama nor his cheerleaders Bruce Springsteen. A doppelganger of change and a faux populist most certainly have appeared on the horizon.

Imran Khan claims that he is not an establishment man, saying: “Woh mujhay kya de saktay hein?” (What can they offer me?). For starters one should not be looking for a pay stub in this day and age and indeed there is no reason to doubt Imran Khan’s personal financial integrity. But the benedictions of the mighty deep state come in many ways and so do the return of favours by the ones who get blessed with these bounties.

The PTI’s Sunday rally at Lahore’s Minar-e-Pakistan did little to dispel the impression that despite his pretence to be the prince charming, Imran Khan still comes across as the deep state’s voice. He remains an unrepentant apologist of the Taliban who wears his born-again religiosity on his sleeve. But more ominously, he has no qualms about subverting a democratic dispensation — by civil disobedience if needed — to achieve his personal and ideological goals. That the PTI manifesto pledges to uphold the 1973 Constitution does not matter to this former cohort of the military dictator, General Pervez Musharraf.

At this rally, Imran Khan — however lame his oratory skills might be — said everything that Pakistan’s security establishment has been saying and wanting the politicians to say. He wants a truce with the good, the bad and the ugly Taliban. So does the establishment — heck they have been signing truce upon truce with every Taliban leader one can think of. Imran Khan does not want army action against the insurgents and wants to withdraw the army from the conflict zones. Well, guess what, so does the Pakistan Army. Not only did the army not want to act against Mullah Fazlullah aka Mullah Radio for years, they are loathe to go after the foreign insurgents a la Siraj Haqqani, Mullah Omar and of course Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Imran Khan wants to ‘help the US get out of Afghanistan fast’ and plans to hand over FATA to the traditional tribal elders (Maliks). This is his magic wand, waving which will make terrorism and terrorist safe havens disappear. One wonders if he has the faintest idea that thousands of tribal Maliks have been slaughtered in cold blood by the very savages he wants to negotiate with. He goes blue in the face lamenting the drone attacks against the foreign insurgents holed up in FATA but God forbid if he ever mentions how the terrorists have ravaged Kurram Agency. In fact, quite the opposite is true and the architect of Kurram’s misery, General Ali Jan Orakzai, remains Imran Khan’s role model for dealing with the terrorist menace in FATA. It would have been too much to expect him to utter a word about the Hazara genocide in Quetta lest it may alienate his party leaders hobnobbing with the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi’s parent outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba or their jihadist cadres attending his rallies.

The PTI leader has been hanging out with Sheikh Rashid of Rawalpindi and early in his speech hit a low that even the foul-mouthed Rashid might envy. Imran Khan’s accusation against Ambassador Husain Haqqani, making wild allegations and that too based on a story by Mansoor Ijaz — a discredited ‘mediator’, neo-con sympathiser and proponent of Bush’s Iraq war — was simply pathetic. One wonders about his motive to quote a person who boasts of ties to both India and global jihadists. While a separate column is needed to address this issue, it just goes to show the shallowness of the PTI leader and that in his desperation for power he can stoop to any level.

There was a lot of fluff about ending corruption, tax evasion and even the highhandedness of the land officers (patwaris) in Imran Khan’s speech but not a word about how this can be actualised. And of course no word about the fortunes amassed by the Generals at home and abroad. In the absence of a cogent programme to flesh up this hollow sloganeering, one has to look at the team that Imran Khan plans to field. The biggest success of this rally touted by the PTI is that ‘match-winning bowlers’, i.e. veteran politicians capable of winning the elections are lining up for party tickets. The PTI website even lists many political turncoats who have joined them.

Alexis de Tocqueville had once written: “It is a lesser question for the partisans of democracy to find means of governing the people, than to get the people to choose the men most capable of governing.” Imran Khan has failed miserably to select and groom a capable and honest team in his 15-year political career and it is unlikely to happen in the 15 months leading up to the elections. With old political hacks and the security establishment by his side, he can give the incumbents a run for their money but bring change, he Khan’t.

The writer can be reached at mazdaki@me.com. He tweets at Mohammad Taqi (@mazdaki) on Twitter
 
i have been saying from 6 months that IK is army stooge..why??

nawaj sharif is against army interference and they need some one who can cut sharif votes and work as their stooge too..
and army has been performing wisely here.IK goes after drone attacks,and criticize the sharif,zardari,even bash kashmir too..just for public consumption,utilizing the public anger against others.
 
Imran has good and honest team , if they got chance world will they how quickly Pakistan progresses. Its good to have critics if they are positive (this one does not seems to be positive).
 
Imran has good and honest team , if they got chance world will they how quickly Pakistan progresses. Its good to have critics if they are positive (this one does not seems to be positive).

Imran khan is a kinda of a leader who can rule regions, I have no doubt in mind if Indian political system collapses today, India can find an alternative leadership in the form of Imran khan, who indians would willingly accept and oblige to.
 
jab b koi acha kam karta hai tu koi kehta hai army ka banda hai r koi kahay ka america ka banda hai ...... Imran ki jaan tu chor du yar :hitwall:
 
jab b koi acha kam karta hai tu koi kehta hai army ka banda hai r koi kahay ka america ka banda hai ...... Imran ki jaan tu chor du yar :hitwall:

I'm sure you have not voted in any of previous elections??
 
I'm sure you have not voted in any of previous elections??
why you asking so ?
i did in AJK because i am from Ajk .... i missed PTI there
i hope PTI will be functional in AJK too so that i can vote for pTI...............
 
COMMENT: No he Khan’t —Dr Mohammad Taqi

Imran Khan has failed miserably to select and groom a capable and honest team in his 15-year political career and it is unlikely to happen in the 15 months leading up to the elections

So Halloween came to Lahore a day early, especially — but not exclusively — for Mian Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N). Apparently, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) rally has scared the bejeebers out of an already jittery PML-N. The PTI did put up a very impressive show and political players would ignore it only at their peril. In their complacency some have been oblivious to the media and military’s shenanigans over the last several months but it clearly was coming.

Immediately following the PTI’s dharna (sit-in) in Peshawar, I had noted in this column: “The establishment is getting its domestic ducks in a row, in preparation for a showdown with the US over its AfPak endgame. What can serve them better in this than a conglomerate of the martial law’s perennial B team like the Jamaat-e-Islami, pro-jihadists like Sami-ul-Haq and assorted opportunists? The twelfth man has always hoped that the establishment will grant him the political test cap one day. His hypocrisy may actually earn him the captaincy of the junta’s ‘B’ team this time” (‘The establishment’s twelfth man’, Daily Times, April 28, 2011).

Well, here we are six months later and the ‘saviour’ has announced not only his arrival but that the ‘change’, too, has arrived. Some pundits are now retrofitting their positions to gear up for the journey to the land of milk and honey that Imran Khan has pledged to steer everyone to. Change, really, one may ask. Neither can a neo-jihadist be a Pakistani Barack Obama nor his cheerleaders Bruce Springsteen. A doppelganger of change and a faux populist most certainly have appeared on the horizon.

Imran Khan claims that he is not an establishment man, saying: “Woh mujhay kya de saktay hein?” (What can they offer me?). For starters one should not be looking for a pay stub in this day and age and indeed there is no reason to doubt Imran Khan’s personal financial integrity. But the benedictions of the mighty deep state come in many ways and so do the return of favours by the ones who get blessed with these bounties.

The PTI’s Sunday rally at Lahore’s Minar-e-Pakistan did little to dispel the impression that despite his pretence to be the prince charming, Imran Khan still comes across as the deep state’s voice. He remains an unrepentant apologist of the Taliban who wears his born-again religiosity on his sleeve. But more ominously, he has no qualms about subverting a democratic dispensation — by civil disobedience if needed — to achieve his personal and ideological goals. That the PTI manifesto pledges to uphold the 1973 Constitution does not matter to this former cohort of the military dictator, General Pervez Musharraf.

At this rally, Imran Khan — however lame his oratory skills might be — said everything that Pakistan’s security establishment has been saying and wanting the politicians to say. He wants a truce with the good, the bad and the ugly Taliban. So does the establishment — heck they have been signing truce upon truce with every Taliban leader one can think of. Imran Khan does not want army action against the insurgents and wants to withdraw the army from the conflict zones. Well, guess what, so does the Pakistan Army. Not only did the army not want to act against Mullah Fazlullah aka Mullah Radio for years, they are loathe to go after the foreign insurgents a la Siraj Haqqani, Mullah Omar and of course Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Imran Khan wants to ‘help the US get out of Afghanistan fast’ and plans to hand over FATA to the traditional tribal elders (Maliks). This is his magic wand, waving which will make terrorism and terrorist safe havens disappear. One wonders if he has the faintest idea that thousands of tribal Maliks have been slaughtered in cold blood by the very savages he wants to negotiate with. He goes blue in the face lamenting the drone attacks against the foreign insurgents holed up in FATA but God forbid if he ever mentions how the terrorists have ravaged Kurram Agency. In fact, quite the opposite is true and the architect of Kurram’s misery, General Ali Jan Orakzai, remains Imran Khan’s role model for dealing with the terrorist menace in FATA. It would have been too much to expect him to utter a word about the Hazara genocide in Quetta lest it may alienate his party leaders hobnobbing with the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi’s parent outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba or their jihadist cadres attending his rallies.

The PTI leader has been hanging out with Sheikh Rashid of Rawalpindi and early in his speech hit a low that even the foul-mouthed Rashid might envy. Imran Khan’s accusation against Ambassador Husain Haqqani, making wild allegations and that too based on a story by Mansoor Ijaz — a discredited ‘mediator’, neo-con sympathiser and proponent of Bush’s Iraq war — was simply pathetic. One wonders about his motive to quote a person who boasts of ties to both India and global jihadists. While a separate column is needed to address this issue, it just goes to show the shallowness of the PTI leader and that in his desperation for power he can stoop to any level.

There was a lot of fluff about ending corruption, tax evasion and even the highhandedness of the land officers (patwaris) in Imran Khan’s speech but not a word about how this can be actualised. And of course no word about the fortunes amassed by the Generals at home and abroad. In the absence of a cogent programme to flesh up this hollow sloganeering, one has to look at the team that Imran Khan plans to field. The biggest success of this rally touted by the PTI is that ‘match-winning bowlers’, i.e. veteran politicians capable of winning the elections are lining up for party tickets. The PTI website even lists many political turncoats who have joined them.

Alexis de Tocqueville had once written: “It is a lesser question for the partisans of democracy to find means of governing the people, than to get the people to choose the men most capable of governing.” Imran Khan has failed miserably to select and groom a capable and honest team in his 15-year political career and it is unlikely to happen in the 15 months leading up to the elections. With old political hacks and the security establishment by his side, he can give the incumbents a run for their money but bring change, he Khan’t.

The writer can be reached at mazdaki@me.com. He tweets at Mohammad Taqi (@mazdaki) on Twitter

Whatever the writer has written above, I take it as an offence. It is like an insult to the collective wisdom of us Pakistani youth who have been supporting Imran Khan for the last few years and find him only capable leader in the country and here is someone who is telling us that he is an army stooge.

Further the author fails to provide any argument as to why he thinks Khan is an establishment's man. All he rants about is how he finds Imran Khan and establishment on the same page on war on terror and security related issues. Maybe these authors should do their research before writing such one sided and biased articles so that these can atleast 'appeal' to those who want to believe it.
 
why you asking so ?
i did in AJK because i am from Ajk .... i missed PTI there
i hope PTI will be functional in AJK too so that i can vote for pTI...............

Nevermind...Majority of IK/PTI supporters are with the same background like you and that shows in thier comments always!!
 
Whatever the writer has written above, I take it as an offence. It is like an insult to the collective wisdom of us Pakistani youth who have been supporting Imran Khan for the last few years and find him only capable leader in the country and here is someone who is telling us that he is an army stooge.

Further the author fails to provide any argument as to why he thinks Khan is an establishment's man. All he rants about is how he finds Imran Khan and establishment on the same page on war on terror and security related issues. Maybe these authors should do their research before writing such one sided and biased articles so that these can atleast 'appeal' to those who want to believe it.
kisi nay tu meray dil ki baat ki janab :cheers:
 
whats up on this forum ever since the success of lahore jalsa i have been observing a smear campaign against imran on net.
 
Imran Khan said it very clearly, ''Establishment needs me, I don't need the establishment.'' This Dr Taqi is pissed at his popularity and specially his Jalsa at Lahore. Also, I can post course of articles from different other Doctors who foresee Imran as the next premier of Pakistan, but as IK said it in his speech in China the other day;

Tundeye Bade Mukhalif say Na Garba Aye Oqab,
Ye tho Chalti Hay Tujhe Oncha Urhanay ke Liye...


IK has stood up for a good cause and many Pakistanis too, and this Dr Taqi should get his fat arse out of his clinic and support IK's noble cause too instead of writing garbage articles.
 
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