Pakistan:
A Leadership Vacuum
By B. Raman
In a recent article
(June 25, 2008), the “Dawn” of Karachi
described Pakistan as a bus full of drivers
“with no one really at the steering and the
bus lurching from one side to the other.”
2. No driver has the
courage and the confidence to take the
steering in an attempt to bring the bus
under control and no driver is prepared to
let any other driver do so. It is a bus full
of drivers, but with none driving.
3. On paper, Pervez
Musharraf is still a powerful ruler. He is
the President of the country, with
unimpaired powers to dismiss the elected
Prime Minister and the National Assembly. He
is the Chairman of the National Security
Council (NSC), which has the power to take
decisions in all matters relating to
national security. He is the Supreme
Commander of the Armed forces, who has to
approve all senior promotions and postings
in the Armed Forces and whose orders on
national security matters, including in
matters relating to Pakistan’s nuclear
arsenal, have to be carried out by the Armed
Forces.
4. Despite all these
powers on paper, he has been reduced to
being a figurehead, who manages to survive
in office not because the people and the
National Assembly want him to continue, but
because the US wants him to continue---- out
of gratitude for what he had done for the US
in the past and out of fear as to what could
happen in the future if he is replaced by an
unknown quantity not amenable to US
pressure.
5. The political
leadership would like him to go, but does
not have the required numbers in the two
Houses of the Parliament to make him go. The
people had wanted him to go in the euphoria
after the embarrassment inflicted on him in
the elections of February 18, 2008, but the
euphoria has since evaporated and the
much-heralded Pakistan spring has proved to
be short-lived. It hardly matters to them
now as to who is the President and who is
the Prime Minister. It will hardly make any
difference to the nation and the people. So,
they think.
6. Degraded, but not
discarded, Musharraf has withdrawn into a
shell. Only visiting US leaders and
officials continue to take cognizance of his
presence and keep meeting him for
discussions. His own countrymen---except the
leaders of the Pakistan Muslim League (Qaide
Azam) created by him and the Muttahida Qaumi
Movement (MQM) of Altaf Hussain---- avoid
meeting him. Yousef Raza Gilani, the Prime
Minister, rarely meets him and briefs him on
the proceedings of the Cabinet and on the
State of the nation. Musharraf has not
convened a single meeting of the NSC to
discuss the fight against terrorism because
he is not confident that the civilian
members of the NSC would attend it.
7. Only the Army
continues to show him the respect that is
his due in his capacity as the Supreme
Commander of the Armed Forces and the former
Chief of the Army Staff (COAS). Gen. Ashfaq
Pervez Kayani, the COAS, is still loyal to
him and keeps him briefed regularly, but he
has turned out to be a weak and vacillating
chief. Not as decisive as Musharraf was.
8. How strong a
Pakistani COAS is depends on the respect
commanded by him and the backing enjoyed by
him from the US and his own soldiers. The US
has been increasingly disenchanted by the
performance of Kayani. He has proved himself
to be lack-lustre and risk-averse. He has
shown hardly any leadership or initiative in
the fight against terrorism. He is not
leading the fight from the front. Instead,
he is merely doing what he is asked to do by
the Cabinet after getting it endorsed by
Musharraf. The perception of Kayani as a
weak COAS has not endeared him to his
subordinates.
9. Prime Minister
Gilani is worse than a figurehead. Policy
decisions are hardly ever taken in Cabinet
meetings chaired by him in the Secretariat.
They are taken in informal meetings of
Ministers and officials chaired by Asif Ali
Zardari, the co-Chairperson of the PPP, in
his house if he is in the country or in his
hotel suite if he is traveling abroad.
Government is where Zardari is. He returned
to Pakistan last week after an absence of a
month traveling abroad. Sometimes, papers
and officials were flown to him to seek his
decision. Sometimes, decisions were just
kept pending till he returned.
10. When Zardari is
absent from the country, the real power is
exercised by Rehman Malik, who is designated
as the Adviser on Internal Security with the
status of a Cabinet Minister. He is a former
police officer, who was in the Federal
Investigation Agency (FIA) during Benazir
Bhutto’s second tenure as the Prime Minister
(1993 to 1996). He emerged as the closest
confidante of Zardari and the alleged
handler of all his foreign bank accounts. He
continues to enjoy Zardari’s trust despite
his alleged failure to make effective
security arrangements for Benazir.
11. Malik is accused by
many in the PPP of playing havoc with the
administration and with internal security
management. He has been allegedly indulging
in back channel talks with the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) without keeping either the
COAS or the Government of the North-West
Frontier Province (NWFP) informed. A major
share of the responsibility for the
deterioration in the situation in the tribal
belt is attributed to him.
12. Zardari is a man
increasingly worried about his security. He
apprehends a threat to him not only from Al
Qaeda and the TTP, but also from the
remnants of Al Zulfiquar, formed by the late
Murtaza Ali Bhutto, the younger brother of
Benazir, to avenge the overthrow and the
execution of their father Zulfiquar Ali
Bhutto by Gen.Zia-ul-Haq. The remnants, who
blame Zardari for the death of Murtaza at
the hands of the Karachi Police in September
1996, have revived their sleeper cells to
avenge the death of their leader. The recent
explosions by unidentified elements in
Karachi and the murder of a private security
officer of Zardari at Karachi on July 22,
2008, are viewed by Police sources as
warning signals to Zardari, who is seen as
an usurper not only by the Bhutto clan, but
also by many founding members of the PPP
such as Mumtaz Ali Bhutto, the uncle of
Murtaza, and Maqdoom Amin Fahim. Zardari,
who is not confident of the loyalty of the
intelligence and security agencies, has been
spending more time in Dubai than in
Pakistan. He is seeking to rule Pakistan
from Dubai.
13. The political and
public support for him is declining because
of his image as devious. The PML of Nawaz
Sharif, which is still a member of the
ruling coalition though not of the Cabinet,
is increasingly disenchanted with his
evasiveness in matters relating to the
reinstatement of the former Chief Justice
Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhury and other judges
sacked by Musharraf in November last year
and by his reluctance to break with
Musharraf or the US. Zardari feels indebted
to Musharraf and the US for the closure of
the cases filed against him on various
charges relating to corruption and the
murder of Murtaza. It is only a question of
time before the PML (N) breaks from the
coalition. If that happens, fresh elections
might become unavoidable in which the PPP is
expected to do badly.
14. The jihadi virus is
threatening to spread from the tribal belt
to Karachi. There has been an increasing
movement of internally displaced Pashtun
tribals from the Federally-Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) to Karachi. Whenever
there is instability and violence in
Afghanistan, the displaced Afghan Pashtuns
tend to go to the FATA and the NWFP.
Whenever there is instability and violence
in the FATA and the NWFP, the displaced
Pakistani Pashtuns tend to go to Karachi.
Altaf Hussain, from his political exile in
the UK, has already rung the alarm bells
about the dangers of the Talibanisation of
Karachi by this internal displacement.
15. The publicly
expressed US concerns over the increasing
flow of foreign jihadis to Pakistan’s tribal
belt and over the increase in infiltrations
into Afghanistan from the FATA have stepped
up the pressure on the Government either to
act to stop this or face the risk of
unilateral US action to stop this.
Stepped-up action in the tribal belt either
by the Pakistan Army or unilaterally by the
US would lead to a fresh increase in
terrorism in the non-tribal areas, which has
come down since the Gilani Government came
to office. A solution to this problem cannot
be found without a consensus involving
Musharraf, Gilani, Kayani, Zardari and Nawaz.
Such a consensus does not seem likely in
view of Nawaz’s anathema for Musharraf and
the US.
16. Pakistan is not yet
a failed State, but it is a State with a
failed leadership. The only possible way out
is for the US to exercise pressure on
Musharraf to leave in grace. He is the main
stumbling block in the way of a national
consensus. Nawaz’s dislike for Musharraf is
more than his dislike for the US. Once
Musharraf is out of the way and Nawaz’s urge
to avenge his humiliation by Musharraf in
1999 is satisfied, he may be amenable for a
more co-operative policy with the US in the
fight against terrorism.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com )