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The madness is here
By Cyril Almeida
REVENGE can be sweet, but not if it is someone else’s. Asif is learning that lesson the hard way. He thought inheriting the country’s largest political party made him one of the big boys. His perma-grin suggested he had a plan to save the day. Turns out he didn’t.
In fact Asif is nothing more than a pawn in an epic, vicious, protracted political break-up. First Musharraf tied him down; now Nawaz has bullied him into switching sides. Never mind what the gloating media, the crowing Musharraf-haters and Asif himself are saying; impeachment has exposed Asif’s political non-strategy.
How can it not? First Asif was against impeachment; now he’s for it. What justifies the flip-flop? Nothing. Unless being checkmated by a junior coalition partner counts as a justification. Nawaz might as well have dragged Asif by his collar and flogged him in front of the cameras until he whimpered his consent to impeachment.
Impeachment or no impeachment, by forcing the issue Nawaz has made the People’s Party hostage to the party of the people — the N-league. No 2 is calling the shots. Junior is the new senior. A pathetic Asif was reduced to publicly pleading with Nawaz to let his men rejoin the cabinet. Nawaz has baulked at full reinstatement, offering Asif the crumbs of a railways minister, amongst others. The finance minister will stay out. So look beyond the PPP co-chair’s bravado and nothing less than the surrender of his party to outside interests becomes obvious.
Asif’s political ineptness has been devastatingly exposed by his amateurish mistakes. To great media acclaim he put his signature to the Murree Declaration, which he never intended to fulfil. Then, in the run-up to the latest summit, he inflicted a grievous wound on his party’s image by trying to slip the ISI into Rehman Malik’s hands. If impeachment was coming it made no sense to annoy the ISI chief, Musharraf’s buddy, Nadeem Taj. Finally, exposing Asif’s catastrophic lack of control over events, news of some judges being reinstated was leaked in the middle of talks. The PPP’s credibility was zero.
The talks themselves were a public relations trap that Asif walked right into. By holding the summit in the glare of the cameras, Asif didn’t realise failure wasn’t an option. The N-league had played its cards perfectly: it was the principled, wounded interlocutor coming with clean hands. The frenzied, breathless media played their part, salivating at the thought of Musharraf being thrown to the wolves.
Once Asif had been battered into submission, Nawaz, mission accomplished, sat smugly while Asif read out the communiqué. Much has been made about the way Asif snarled out “General Musharraf”. Few have realised it could have been the frustration and humiliation at being forced to read another’s words.
For Asif could not have wanted this. Astute PPP watchers will not have missed that Nawaz ‘I will not take dictation’ Sharif is dictating to the PPP co-chair. Only a few months ago, the party was Asif’s new, reluctant bride, worried about what her master would do to her. Few would have dreamt he would so quickly make her a mistress of others.
So what if Asif was bludgeoned into submission, some may argue. History will look kindly upon him, an accidental hero who ended up slaying a dictator. History will salute him. Perhaps. But what if you are more concerned — rightly — about Gen Kayani and his band of generals continuing to salute the prime minister?
What will the military do, the media asked innocently after goading the politicians into this confrontation. Yes, indeed what will the born-again democrat Gen Kayani do? Even as they line up to throw stones at the ISI, the politicians have fallen over themselves to praise Kayani. For the record, Kayani’s last job was the ISI chieftainship. But since everyone knows this, they must be assuming that Kayani was just doing his job, being a good soldier and following orders. In which case you must necessarily wonder about career ambition: corps commander, ISI chief, COAS, full stop — or next stop?
Nobody mentions this because, well, it doesn’t fit into the narrative of a democrat in uniform. But remember the last great hope of a democrat in uniform? He’s over in the presidential camp office fighting off the pols.
So what do our politicians do with our born-again democrat Kayani? They poke him in the eye just to make sure he’s asleep while they paralyse the country politically. Impeachment will not lead to martial law. But it won’t be a surprise if some months later it is referred to in another special address to the nation.
What purpose does impeaching Musharraf serve? For one, it will satisfy Nawaz whose bitterness is palpable. But beyond that? Nothing. A good precedent? Musharraf is Dictator No 4. One was blown out of the sky; the other two were chased out of office. We have had powerful presidents before who have been chucked out, their careers ending in tears. We have had army chiefs turfed out and Supreme Court chief justices sent packing.
The belief that this time it will be different, that this particular ouster will be a game-changer is pabulum — nonsense that appeals to the romance rather than the reality of grimy politics. To say this invites opprobrium. But those trying to punish Musharraf for confusing the individual with the office are themselves guilty of obsessing over the individual at the system’s expense. Whether Nawaz gets his man or not will not make the coalition’s decision right. Knowing what we know — and especially what we do not know — it is dangerous and irresponsible to try to unseat the president right now.
Does the country need Musharraf? No. We didn’t in 1999 and we certainly don’t today. Can this country afford a political crisis in order to push out Musharraf today? No. That is the gap between hope and reality. Zardari was right when he originally chose to coexist with the president. Now it’s clear that he was not doing so out of any strategic understanding — he just did it because Musharraf leaned on him enough. When Nawaz leaned on him more, he swung the other way. But Asif must at least be relieved that no one has noticed his mistakes. Indeed the more he unleashes against Musharraf, the more the people cheer. But that’s what we do when politicians lead us up the garden path — we cheer.
As the country hurtles towards the climactic confrontation between Nawaz and Musharraf, the politicians may well win. The country, however, may learn that a politician’s victory can be the people’s defeat.
DAWN - Opinion; August 13, 2008
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Ganja's stubbornness fits in with his ideological leanings - the steadfast stupidity and single minded pursuit of his own petty goals, regardless of the havoc it wreaks, in the mold of the Taliban.
A pity the masses are smitten with these b ufoons, but perhaps that is the cost of going through a democratic transition - we will have to suffer these fools, till some with more tolerable faults arise.