Hold on brother. Calm down. You just wrote an essay about IK without addressing a single point that I raised. IK himself is responsible this political blunder.
When the first no confidence motion took place, he cooked up a fake American cypher story to avoid the motion. He later admitted on air that he was mislead by some party members regarding the cypher and that the cypher never existed.
Now that was his first mistake. Instead of learning from his mistake he made another by resigning from national assembly. If he would have remained in NA as opposition party he would have forced the PDM to appoint neutral army chief, neutral chief election commissioner and neutral NAB chairman.
PDM capitalised on IK's mistake and appointed their favourite persons.
Even with this he was still in game as he had provincial govt in 3 provinces Punjab, KPK, Azad Kashmir. Nobody would have been able to even touch him. He literally controlled the machinery and resources of three provinces. He even successfully survived the no confidence motion in Punjab. He was completely safe and PDM popularity was at all time low. But then he decided to shot his own foot by dissolving two assemblies. You never ever give up your trump cards in power politics. All he had to do was wait 3 months as the assemblies would have dissolved by themselves for next general elections. As soon as he dissolved the assemblies all hell broke loose and the PDM annihilated his party. They used all the government machinery and resources at their disposal to destroy his party and politics. Some of his party members told him not to dissolve the assemblies but he never listened and did it anyways. Now he is paying for his own political blunders.
When you put entire families of your political opponents in jails you better be prepared for the consequences. He was cautioned multiple times by army chief not to do this but he ignored.
Another one of his mistake was to prosecute Jahangir tareen and Aleem khan on corruption charges while fully ignoring the massive corruption of Usman Buzdar, Farah Gogi, zulfi Bukhari and Bushra bibi which was happening right under his nose. That's what the then ISI chief Asim Muneer tried to tell him. He showed him unprecedented proof of the corruption of his wife and her associates but he ignored and removed Asim Muneer as spy chief instead.
This is the ugly truth.
You’re right that he doesn’t know how to play the political game, as the PM or how to manage the ebbs and flows of parliamentary democracy. What he is good at was exposing the decade of rot across the board in our system, which is part of why many of the elite are pushing back.
Although he did go overboard in some areas, and get distracted from his core responsibilities, which led to a witch hunt against hard working honest people, I will say many innocent people were swept up in that as well.
The first part of solving a problem (such as IK supposedly pausing not stop some CPEC projects, to read the fine print, if I remember correctly) was stopping the bleeding; the unsustainable projects, especially in the wake of COVID.
It’s not just that he is a novice, but his team around him seemed to be winging it. I got to meet and watch Zulfi Bukhari at Columbia University in 2019 when Wajahat Khan was co-moderating a panel with Indian media and I watched Wajahat’s face sink in disappointment when Zulfi started making emotional arguments.
I think IK wanted to govern the country similar to how it is done in a presidential system. According to Ayesha Siddiqa, IK only came to parliament 3 times.
When he ordered the dissolving of the provincial assemblies it was to trigger elections, but the system didn’t follow its own rules either. They way “they” have handled this was also overly harsh. It makes it seem no one knows how to handle this situation.
That is also the ugly truth, and “they” have decades of experience, you would have thought they could have done it with more
decorum, not smash through a window and grab a former PM like a thug off the street.
Frankly, if we had a real bottom up meritocratic democracy, not based on who you know, we could have produced better candidates for our elected leaders, but we are only given a few choices from amongst the elite. They made IK into what he is today. Once by letting him build up his corruption fighting and charity raising platform, through the 2010s, and then by allowing horse trading to not let him complete his term. Pakistanis know they have a parliamentary democracy but want to see their elected prime minister complete their 5 year term, so perhaps most people want a presidential system.
So now we are at an impasse. A large portion of the population trust only him, and if not him only the PTI. Crushing IK and the PTI will create many disaffected people amongst the spectrum, particularly amongst people with the skills and financing, that if willing to re-invest in the country, including but not limited to remittances, would raise foreign invested confidence and boost FDI. ~$28 Billion invest from the GCC will only support the economy over the next 3-5 years, in the same way $30 billion so far from CPEC over the last 10 years only grew the economy so much. The amount lost in remittances from overseas Pakistanis is more than what foreigners are willing to
loan. I have personal acquaintances that live on 5th ave or park ave (I don’t remember at the moment which), here in New York, that fled after Bhuttos nationalization, then their companies were confiscated (he might be a member of one of the “22 families”). Even under IK they didn’t go back in a big way, as far as I know. They want real reforms and know Pakistan can be a faster growing market then the US. But if real reforms are not done, by 2028, We will be back to where we are today if not worse off.
Most countries have risen on the basis of cheap loans from local investors and FDI on the most favorable terms. Local and overseas Pakistani investors need to be attracted to productive industries.
That is why IMHO, IK as the next President would work, if coupled with a coalition government (perhaps with the self proclaim left wing PPP) focused on the economy but also improving social services, and carry out serious reforms. Perhaps even with Bilawal as the PM and SMQ can return as FM. Under this kind of government, Bilawal can make a name for himself and he and his party will have an incentive to improve governance in Sindh, Karachi, and Southern Punjab.
Having a left wing government will also help Pakistan pivot to a more “liberal” mindset if “they” hold them accountable to it, which could help pivot Pakistan’s international image.
This is not about loyalty to one party, but
realpolitik and the stability of the nation within the confines of having something like a real democracy. (I tried to support PML-N when they were in power between 2013-2018 in hopes they would focus on water management, but when they showed no real interest and the PTI did, I began to support the PTI).
IMHO, this maybe the best way to move past this impasse, considering the various interest groups. PML-N can sit out the next 5 years in opposition and get a chance to come back in 2028 without facing much of the backlash for the needed reforms for come. In this way, most people could regain some level of trust in the national institutions … if and only if major reforms and tax changes are carried out.
It really comes down to carrying out those reforms but also improving social services and growing the economy so we can grow out of our mess (the population is expected to grow 60% over the next 30 years, our demographic dividend). We also need to stop saying everything is a part of CPEC (as was done with the Japanese funded Fort Munro Steel Bridge) and diversify our infrastructure projects with other countries particularly in the west where many of the diaspora live and can be of best use. More transparent western investments (funded by overseas Pakistanis and foreign investors) could have a built in export market access. Also, with improvements in rule of law, you will attract the best and brightest to come teach at Pakistani universities or help raise crop yields 2-3x fold as caretaker IT minister Umar Saif hopes to do.
So reconcile with the majority of the population’s aspirations and make the reforms (taxing the rich and cutting subsidies to unproductive industries) and attract investment into productive industries and not the real estate circus of plot trading on paper.
P.s. I never really watched cricket, so I didn’t care much that IK won the World Cup, only that it’s was a merit based win. Second, Pakistan is where india was 30 years ago, but if we learn the lessons from their experience, we could grow just as fast if not faster and catch up to them. No keeping up to regional health and education standards has us losing over 100,000 children to an early death unnecessarily and having our workers become uncompetitive, even when they go abroad.
2nd P.S. IK’s team failed in a lot of the execution and/or just maintaining what had already been built up.
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