Pakistan Army and Government split; possible coup incoming, page
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Topic started on 12-1-2012 @ 12:54 AM by RizeorDie

Pakistan Army and Government split; possible coup incoming


www.businessweek.com
Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan’s government fired its defense secretary as the army warned of “grievous consequences” from the sharpest civilian-military power struggle since army rule ended in 2008
(visit the link for the full news article)


reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 01:34 AM by My.mind.is.mine
reply to post by RizeorDie



I'm sorry, and don't want to seem disrespectful, however this is how fear mongering, sensationalist "news rumors" begin.

First of all, Pakistan is very disconnected from the Middle East. They live in a world of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, India, and occasionally Iran. You don't see the government in Pakistan speaking out against Israel. And when the "Arab Spring" began, nobody even mentioned Pakistan because it is so far removed from the Middle East and its situation. And why would the US and India seize any moment? The US isn't REALLY fighting "terrorism", and they aren't REALLY using troops in a humanitarian effort - the only way they'd go in is if Pakistan was oil rich. Libya was just a large scale assassination. And what makes you think "many countries" WOULD (would, because you're speaking hypothetical) take the opportunity to move troops?

I feel like you're reaching all out into the atmosphere looking for WW3. Be patient, it will come, but not because of a dispute between Pakistani officials and the army.
edit on 12-1-2012 by My.mind.is.mine because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 02:45 AM by BLKMJK
Originally posted by My.mind.is.mine
reply to
post by RizeorDie



I'm sorry, and don't want to seem disrespectful, however this is how fear mongering, sensationalist "news rumors" begin.

First of all, Pakistan is very disconnected from the Middle East. They live in a world of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, India, and occasionally Iran. You don't see the government in Pakistan and what no speaking out against Israel. And when the "Arab Spring" began, nobody even mentioned Pakistan because it is so far removed from the Middle East situation. And why would the US and India seize any moment? The US isn't REALLY fighting terrorism, and they aren't REALLY using troops in a humanitarian effort. Libya was just a large scale assassination. And what makes you think "many countries" WOULD (would, because you're speaking hypothetical) take the opportunity to move troops?

I feel like you're reaching all out into the atmosphere looking for WW3. Be patient, it will come, but not because of a dispute between Pakistani officials and the army.


I failed to see where the OP was looking for WW3? He just posted a story from the web and most likely is looking for opinions regarding this matter.


reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 02:59 AM by My.mind.is.mine
reply to post by BLKMJK





If it takes a turn to the worse and a coup does take place, adding that to the current situation in the Middle east, we can surely see military alertness from Russia, China, USA, Iran, Afghanistan, India and the west. Pakistan does have nuclear mounted missiles ready to go. The US and India may try to seize the moment to interfere, this can back fire. Many countries will use this event to place troops and military assets where needed.



You mean to tell me you missed that ENTIRE paragraph??


reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 05:07 AM by this_is_who_we_are
Pakistan President Goes To Dubai As Split With Military Widens
in.reuters.com...
By Chris Allbritton and Amena Bakr
ISLAMABAD/DUBAI | Thu Jan 12, 2012 4:00pm IST

(Reuters) - Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari flew to Dubai on a scheduled one-day trip on Thursday, a member of the ruling party and sources said, while tensions grew over a memo seeking U.S. help in preventing a coup by Pakistan's powerful military.

The crisis has raised fears for the stability of Pakistan, a vital but uneasy ally for the United States in its attempt to fight militancy and bring peace to neighbouring Afghanistan.

Relations between Pakistan's civilian government and the military have reached their lowest point since a coup in 1999, reducing the chances that the leadership can take on the country's enormous social and economic challenges.

Military sources say that while they would like Zardari to go, it should be through constitutional means, not another of the coups that have marked Pakistan's almost 65 years of independence.

"There is no talk in the military of a takeover," a mid-level army officer, who requested anonymity because he was not authorised to speak on the matter, told Reuters.

"I don't foresee a military coup."


I wouldn't take that statement for granted of course. I don't really think they would announce a coup before a coup, do you?


reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 01:02 PM by RizeorDie
reply to post by My.mind.is.mine



I didn't say that Pakistan will eventually trigger ww3, although it is possible. What I said was that the US and Israel need to destabilise and disarm every muslim country that may pose a threat to Israel. If it goes down in Pakistan then I would think that everyone will race to the nukes. I said that all surrounding countries will be on ALERT one way or another.

its just another big move on the chess board



reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 04:56 PM by My.mind.is.mine
Originally posted by RizeorDie
reply to
post by My.mind.is.mine



I didn't say that Pakistan will eventually trigger ww3, although it is possible. What I said was that the US and Israel need to destabilise and disarm every muslim country that may pose a threat to Israel. If it goes down in Pakistan then I would think that everyone will race to the nukes. I said that all surrounding countries will be on ALERT one way or another.

its just another big move on the chess board


.....# Israel...

Israel and the US are a threat to peace on earth. who's gonna disarm them??? come on now..
edit on 12-1-2012 by My.mind.is.mine because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 07:02 PM by NightShift
Pakistan in a nutshell:

Zardari is president because his wife, and former Pakistani President, Benazir Bhutto was assassinated during Musharraf's reign. Her party, the PPP, has been in power ever since.

The PPP and the Bhutto clan are traditionally the civil counterweight to the military. There is either a military government, or the Bhuttos. There is therefore little room for an Arab Spring type popular movement.

The position of president has been SEVERELY restricted by a constitutional amendment during Zardari's presidency. Zardari is also facing a Supreme Court that wants to remove presidential immunity and try him for crimes he was already jailed for, twice, for many years without conviction. Is he guilty of corruption charges? Probably. But why wasnt he convicted the last two times he was in prison?

The military is just pissed because there was a memo leaked to the US by the civilian government basically stating that the military was dominating politics and ready to take over again, officially.

Newsflash: the Pakistani civilian government is always allowed on the whim of the military, and this puppet show will continue to cycle until war erupts between India and Pakistan (unlikely, considering they trade with Most Favored Nation status reciprocally and are in nuclear stalemate) or Pashtun radical nationalism drives the country into civil war.

Alternatively, the semi-autonomous Pashtun radical states bordering Afghanistan, the traditional homestead of global international islamic terrorism, will push the West too far and will cause a war or crippling sanctions, resulting in the biggest sheet show the world has seen in fifty years.


reply posted on 13-1-2012 @ 04:05 AM by Observor
Originally posted by NightShift
Zardari is president because his wife, and former Pakistani President, Benazir Bhutto was assassinated during Musharraf's reign. Her party, the PPP, has been in power ever since.

Benazir was a Prime Minister, not President. The President of Pakistan, when not under military rule, is a figurehead like the monarch in the UK.
The PPP and the Bhutto clan are traditionally the civil counterweight to the military. There is either a military government, or the Bhuttos.

Not quite true. Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League is a strong contender for democratic power. Nawaz Sharif served as the Prime Minister more than once. The last military coup led by Gen. Musharraf was against the Nawaz Sharif government. Benazir's PPP was in the opposition that time.
The position of president has been SEVERELY restricted by a constitutional amendment during Zardari's presidency.

It is always the case in Pakistan during civilian rule. When military takes over, they pretend they are working under the same constitution, pass amendments to the constitution giving the nominal executive head, the President, actual executive power. When the civilian rule is restored, all those amendment are either annulled or declared void by the Supreme Court.
Zardari is also facing a Supreme Court that wants to remove presidential immunity and try him for crimes he was already jailed for, twice, for many years without conviction. Is he guilty of corruption charges? Probably. But why wasnt he convicted the last two times he was in prison?

The problem is most Pakistan politicians, be it the PML or the PPP, are corrupt, except that Zardari was a magnitude higher than the rest. No Pakistani politican wants another convicted for corruption, because they can face similar fate. So inevitably corrupt politicians, but only those in the opposition, are merely incarcerated mostly as political vendetta rather than anything else and let go. Once the corrupt are out of power, people too lose the enthusiam to see them punished.

However, the attitude of the people to political corruption may be changing these days.
The military is just pissed because there was a memo leaked to the US by the civilian government basically stating that the military was dominating politics and ready to take over again, officially.

The relationship between Pakistan's military and civilian goevrnements has always been an uncomfortable one. In the past the civilian governments had to tread carefully because there was always a looming threat of a coup. However, with the US playing a significant role in the restoration of democracy in Pakistan and also having a sizable military presence in neighbouring Afghanistan, some idiot in the govenrment seems to have threatened the military leaders that they can be checked by appealing to the US. Now, that is a very bad move. Pakistanis are a proud people and they won't tolerate anyone who asks foreigners to interfere in their internal affairs, notwithstanding their governments' habit of meddling in neighours' affairs. They would prefer a military rule to a democracy propped up by foreign military. In fact, the last military rule they had under Gen, Musharaff was hardly unpopular and it was only the embarassment the US had to face for actively allying with a military dictator that saw an end to that regime.

This issue, of the Pakistani government requesting US help to thwart a possible coup, becoming public is a great embarassment to the Gilani govenrment and could even see them lose the next election, if one is called in the near future.


reply posted on 19-1-2012 @ 03:56 AM by Observor
Originally posted by NightShift
What is the line between the ISI and the general military? Should we assume that the foreign policy of the ISI is tacitly approved by the military leadership?

The ISI, as suggested by the name Inter-Services Intelligence, is drawn from the military and is headed by a Lt. Gen. However, the head of the ISI reports directly to the executive head (President/Prime Minister). So that sort of bypasses the military heirarchy.

During the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan when the West decided to fund Afghan Mujahiddeen, they chose to deal directly with the ISI rather than the government of Pakistan, which meant the ISI slowly became independent, in day-to-day operations, from the Pakistan government. Since then it has grown very powerful and is sometimes referred to as the state-within-the-state.

As for foreign policy, there are little strategic differences across the Pakistan spectrum, military, civilian or ISI. However there are significant differences over shortterm tactics in achieving these strategic objectives. In these tactics usually the military and civilian leadership are in agreement while the ISI differs. The problem when the ISI differs is that they just go ahead and execute their plans leaving the military and the civilian leadership in an extremely embarassing position.
What is the relationship between the military and the supreme court?

Pakistan's courts are fairly independent and don't hold any special relationship to the military. However since they never had a stable political system, the independence of the judiciary is corroded with judges being impeached during both civilian and militray rule.

The recent move by the Supreme Court to ask the government to continue investigation into the corruption of Zardari and the military demanding the same has little to do with any cooperation between them and more to do with matching their eastern neighbour, India, in their fight against corruption in high places. Psychologically, competing with India is a huge factor for the Pakistani elite and the last thing they want to be seen as is being more tolerant of political corruption than their neighbour.
Has the jihadist element in the Western provinces spiralled out of the ISI's control? What level of control was there prior to 9/11? The rise of the Taliban? Prior to the Soviet invasion?

No one controls the Balochs of Balochistan or the Pashtuns of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly the North-West Frontier Province). They are fiercely independent people, much like the tribes of Afghanistan. They yield no space to outsiders in either legal or cultural spheres. The only thing any outside power (for them the government of Pakistan is an outside power) is allowed to control is commerce. They are more like Afghans in their attitudes than the Sindhis and Punjabis of Pakistan.

However their independent nature was not a problem for Pakistan, since the government of the Pakistan or that of the states never tried to interfere with the customs and traditions of the tribes and were quite content to restrict their control to the urban areas. However all that changed when Pakistan decided to support the Afghan Mujahiddeen against the Soviets. They needed the cooperation of the locals in Balochistan and NWFP to set up the training camps for the Mujahiddeen. That is where the interaction of ISI with the tribal elders began. Considering that the Mujahiddeen were quite respectful of the traditions of the locals, it wasn't a big problem either. The money flowing didn't hurt either. So the ISI developed excellent working relations with the locals and even earned their trust. But that is a far cry from them controlling these areas. They can certainly get the cooperation of these people provided they are in agreement, something that would be difficult for the Pakistani government or the military in the best of scenarios, but simply cannot make them do things like betraying their allies.

While the press likes to portray them as Jihadists, they are actually traditionalists who are fiercely opposed to outside interference in their affairs. As long as the rest of the world leaves them alone, they don't care what the rest of the world's beliefs are. Jihadists and Taliban are popular only because they are the only ones willing to recognise their right to live their lives as they see fit in their lands.

The best hope for Pakistan is that the US reaches an agreement with the Afghan Taliban to concede them autonomy in the non-urban regions of Afghanistan akin to what the tribes of Pakistan in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa enjoyed until recently. Once that happens peace will be restored on both sides of the border.
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