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3 May 2023

Pakistan’s Looming Crisis Could Come at a Cost

TIM WILLASEY-WILSEY 

Tim Willasey-Wilsey served for over 27 years in the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office and is now Visiting Professor of War Studies at King's College, London. His first overseas posting was in Angola during the Cold War followed by Central America during the instability of the late 1980s. He was also involved in the transition to majority rule in South Africa and in the Israel/Palestine issue. His late career was spent in Asia including a posting to Pakistan in the mid 1990s.

If Pakistan’s army and government continue to block regional and national elections, they will increase the scale of Imran Khan’s eventual victory. Fear of Imran Khan’s brand of careless populism coincides with low public confidence in the army and with renewed threats from Afghan-based terrorist groups. The looming confrontation presents real hazards for a country and people facing economic distress.

OPINION — There is little doubt that former Prime Minister Imran Khan is the overwhelming favourite to win the regional and national elections in Pakistan. That is why the army and the government are together stretching every legal and constitutional sinew to delay the elections and to disqualify him from standing. The Supreme Court has recently ruled that two of the provincial elections must go ahead by 15th May.

The irony is that Imran Khan has been lucky. His dismissal by Parliament in April 2022 could not have come at a better time for his popularity. Since he was removed from office the economy (never exactly robust) has tanked and prices have risen exponentially. In March 2023, food inflation was reported as 47.1% for urban areas leading to an unprecedented cost of living crisis. The government’s bid for an IMF (International Monetary Fund) bailout has still not succeeded. The IMF has asked Pakistan to first secure loans from its traditional funders (China, Saudi Arabia and the UAE) all of which have been slow to come forward with sufficient largesse.

A second irony is that the present government, a coalition between arch-enemies, the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) would have been the answer to many prayers in the 1990s and 2000s. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif who was always the more talented of the Sharif brothers has Benazir Bhutto’s son, Bilawal, as his Foreign Minister and a good understanding with the new Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Asim Munir. This is the sort of unity which Pakistan has needed for decades but it has come far too late. Their political methodology based on the old formula of feudal loyalties and back-room deals seems old-fashioned and tired compared with the new star in the firmament.

And yet there is nothing particularly new about Imran. He is 70 years old and his greatest cricketing triumph, in the 1992 World Cup, was over 30 years ago; long before most Pakistanis were born. (The median age of Pakistan’s 220 million population is 22.8). He founded his political party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) in 1996 but it gained little traction in a two party system where the PML and PPP were dominant. He was always seen as a political lightweight known best for his good looks, high-profile marriages and reputation as a former London socialite. The Pakistani elite in Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi would routinely poke fun at his intellectual limitations.

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Imran Khan’s political fortunes were transformed in 2017 as the army cast around for a political figure to champion in the 2018 elections. As the dominant institution in the country the army has always taken an interest in politics and has often championed a political party. In 1990 they plucked Nawaz Sharif (Shehbaz’s older brother) from relative obscurity to lead the PML. Later the army tolerated the PPP government of Benazir’s widower Asif Zardari (as President) until 2013 when he left office with record low popularity levels. Nawaz Sharif returned until disqualified from holding public office following the Panama Papers leaks.

Having run out of options the army favoured Imran Khan in the 2018 elections and worked with him reasonably well for the first few years. However Khan became increasingly irked by the army’s control over many areas of policy, particularly its stranglehold on foreign policy towards India and Afghanistan. In turn the army was frustrated by Khan’s attempts to influence military appointments. Things came to a head when Imran Khan alleged that a “cipher telegram” describing a meeting with a US official in Washington comprised a foreign conspiracy to overthrow his government. This patently false allegation played well to Imran Khan’s large rallies of supporters.

Imran Khan has a tendency to fall back on anti-Western rhetoric as a reliable means of drumming up popular support; such as describing Osama bin Laden in June 2020 as “a martyr” and welcoming the Taliban as having broken “the shackles of slavery” on the NATO departure from Afghanistan in August 2021. Some of his views (such as his opposition to US drone strikes) are firmly held; others smack of short-term opportunism. His visit to Moscow (against advice) on the day of the Ukraine invasion reinforced his reputation for poor judgement.

Neither Imran Khan nor the current government are responsible for the food price crisis which largely results from the Ukraine war. However Imran must shoulder a share of the blame, with the army, for having facilitated the return of the Afghan Taliban to power in Kabul. The naivety in believing that the Afghan Taliban and its affiliated Haqqani group would arrest and deport Pakistan Taliban (TTP) terrorists to Pakistan was as bizarre as it was catastrophic. Instead the TTP now poses a greater terrorist threat to Pakistan than at any time since the Peshawar school massacre of 2014. Furthermore, since the NATO exit from Afghanistan, Pakistan no longer enjoys any leverage over Western foreign policy. China too has privately expressed irritation to Pakistan about the Afghan outcome as the Afghan Taliban also refuses to hand over Uighur militants. Meanwhile the flagship China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) continues to lose momentum due to Pakistan’s economic crisis.

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At present both the army and Imran Khan are bent on confrontation. Both sides need to reconsider. The army has its lowest popularity ratings since independence in 1947. Whilst there is no serious prospect of mutiny the Corps Commanders need to consider the political loyalties of the jawans (enlisted soldiers). Furthermore the army needs to keep Imran Khan safe. It was only 15 years ago that Benazir Bhutto was assassinated in circumstances the army could probably have prevented. An attempt was made against Imran in November 2022, but a successful assassination of such a popular figure could destabilise the country. At the same time Imran would be wise to avoid direct confrontation with the army. His criticisms have been unprecedented and not always constructive. The former army chief, General Bajwa, acknowledged that the army had to change and Imran Khan, as the next Prime Minister, may have opportunities to assist such changes in a collaborative manner.

For all that Pakistan’s army has become too powerful since 1947 and for all the need for it to reduce its political and economic involvement; the prospect of an adversarial relationship between an occasionally reckless populist leader and an increasingly unpopular army could be disastrous. If Imran were (wittingly or otherwise) to secure support from extremist groups he could destabilise Pakistan’s hard-won territorial integrity and stability.

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