Dear Readers,
DJ regrets to announce the sad demise
of our PATRON Lt Gen IMTIAZ WARAICH. A soldier and
a gentleman, Gen WARAICH was a role model for me personally
from the very first day I met our Platoon Commander
on May 14, 1964 as a Gentleman Cadet (GC) of Qasim
Platoon 34th PMA Long Course. All those who have had
the privilege of knowing him are united in being as
proud of him in death as we were when he was alive.
Gen WARAICH was a good man, an outstanding officer
of this Army, a soldier who did his professional duties
with great honesty and dedication. We are devoting
a number of pages to Gen WARAICH in this month's issue
of DJ. As we go into August, the 90-day countdown
to October's change in the Pakistan military's hierarchy
has already begun. As his replacement as DJ's PATRON
it has been unanimously decided to nominate Col (Retd)
Nasrat Ullah, Chairman PATHFINDER GROUP and Editorial
consultant DJ. I cannot think of someone more appropriate
taking the place of one of the more honourable men
one has been privileged to know. As someone who has
supported Gen MUSHARRAF over the years, I believe
that his moves in the political spectrum are not as
sure-footed as his statesmanship as a national leader
over the past few years. At this critical time Pakistan
needs Pervez Musharraf to remain at the helm of affairs
for many reasons, but like the ill-advised referendum
in 2002, his recent political moves may retard his
popularity, this would be most unfortunate. Even though
he may have taken “One risk too many”
in the political spectrum, the President is known
to ride his luck successfully, chances are that destiny
may continue to favour him. I am taking the liberty
of publishing the re-print of the article in DJ.
Pervez Musharraf is used to taking
risks, risks are what has got him this far in the
first place. Nothing risked, nothing gained! No doubt
about Musharraf's courage, there is irrefutable evidence
about his flirting with danger constantly, during
training. Some take risks instinctively, I like to
think that the President (and Army Chief) takes calculated
risks, set-piece gambles measured to succeed. Pakistan's
circumstances and his own interests have tended to
dovetail in risk-taking e.g. the 180 degree turn after
9/11 saw us safely to the right side of the “war
against terrorism”, it established Musharraf
in the eyes of the western world. Like every human
being, he is fallible, e.g. the ill-advised “Referendum”
in mid-2002 was a disaster that brought the President
down from the pedestal we had put him on, this despite
the fact that he was genuinely popular at that time.
Given that the President was fed
up with my friend Zafarullah Khan Jamali for any number
of reasons unknown to most Pakistanis, there must
have been urgency for removing him only days after
the Federal Budget was passed, in fact the third day
after the first-ever National Security Council (NSC)
meeting? Some grace was certainly shown by officially
dining him out! The NSC was meant to be a “buffer
entity” in which issues of prime national security
interest would be discussed so as to forestall drastic
changes such as the change of PM. As one of those
who have strongly recommended the formation of NSC
and its effective functioning thereof, not only as
the constitutional “buffer entity” envisaged
because of our special political circumstances where
PMs tend to have short career spans but as a national
security clearing house, the NSC has turned out to
be a severe disappointment in its first appearance
in its buffer mode. As for confronting national security
issues in the manner of NSC in the US, we ain't seen
nothing yet!
Shaukat Aziz has the qualifications
as a technocrat in his CV to be a good Prime Minister.
As for being a politician, he wouldn't have got this
far in Citibank, and in Pakistan, unless he had been
street-smart. He is intelligent, suave and charming,
has excellent contacts the world over (and in the
country), is very personable and above all, has the
trust of the one person who really matters, General
Pervez Musharraf. Citibank was not stupid to select
him to head its “private banking” unit.
When Citibank's President John Reid was taken to task
by the US “Senate Committee for Money-Laundering”
and ordered to clean up Citibank's act with respect
to dubious clients depositing tons of tainted money,
he brought in Shaukat Aziz to do just that. Shaukat's
strong suit Public Relations (PR) helped him in good
stead in walking a tight-rope as a deposit-taker,
on the one hand to keep Citibank's clients from pulling
their money out while on the other ensuring that the
money deposited was not illegal, when there is more
or less a fine-line whether the money stashed in “private
banking” accounts (mainly to escape taxation
and other cynosure from the country of origin) is
legal or not. While Shaukat Aziz does not claim to
be an economist he was always a good banker, his career
advancement in Citibank must be a model for all upwardly
mobile banking professionals. As Finance Minister,
he was lucky on two counts, viz (1) as a technocrat
member of an autocratic regime he had the necessary
backing to keep on implementing the reforms envisaged
by his political predecessors, implemented only partly
by both PPP and PML (N) Finance Ministers because
of political considerations and (2) 9/11 came in really
handy, Pakistan otherwise would have defaulted (no
fault of the ruling regime) on debt repayments by
Sept 15, 2001. Persevering with the reforms diligently
and because of debt forgiveness, debt re-scheduling,
inward remittances, etc Shaukat represented the success
of Pakistan being turned around economically. We are
now sitting pretty with over US$ 12 billion in the
foreign exchange kitty, how many Finance Ministers
in Pakistan can claim that? Even good generals need
destiny on their side at the right time!
Jamali's exit could have been better
orchestrated to ensure Shaukat does not get the rough-ride
he has started to get in our political quagmire, this
will become far worse as time goes by. Shaukat Aziz
should have been elevated to Deputy PM and then taken
the election route he is now taking. Once Shaukat
was elected as MNA Jamali should have resigned at
a convenient time. If Ch Shujaat was needed for the
interim, Shaukat Aziz should have been Deputy PM (and
PM in all but name). At an appropriate time because
of “ill health” Shujaat would have called
it quits, after all he is genuinely ill. The way Jamali
was packed off restores to the public psyche the perception
that despite our “democratic” façade,
our government remains very much a military regime,
whatever democracy there is has been manipulated.
In most muslim countries except for Malaysia and Turkey
a single authority supersedes democracy, in our case
it is the President in his more potent role as Army
Chief.
As one of those who generally (and
genuinely) support the Pakistan Army and its Chief,
a major cause for concern is something that is probably
more coincidental than intentional but could become
a matter of great controversy for this regime sooner
rather than later. As much as one detests ethnicity,
having suffered personally because of a Punjabi/Bengali
mixed origin, in our real world only lip-service is
given to the concept of a “global village”,
ethnicity is very much a fact of life. As much as
merit must surpass all other considerations, pragmatism
and realpolitik dictate prudence and soul-searching,
“fools rush in where angels fear to tread!”
Gen Pervez Musharraf is a Pakistani first but he is
also a Mohajir, the problem is that both the Naval
Chief Shahid Karimullah and the PAF Chief Kaleem Sadaat
are also of the same ethnic origin. What are the chances
that the next COAS (if Gen Musharraf takes off his
uniform) or VCOAS (if he doesn't) will also not be
the same? While the present choices may well have
been on merit and future choice may also be on merit,
in the absence of an ethnic balance a whispering campaign
needs addressing before it gets out of hand. Shaukat
Aziz has already been called a number of things he
is certainly not, i.e. a Qadiani, a US citizen, etc,
his wife (who happens to be a God-fearing muslim housewife
to the core) has wrongly been labelled a Jewish businesswoman.
With Shaukat as PM almost everyone who matters in
important decision-making posts in Pakistan will be
of similar ethnic background (notwithstanding the
fact that Shaukat's mother was from a Kashmiri family
from Jullunder). Since we may have reached the stage
in Gen Musharraf's career where he is likely to shoot
the messenger bringing bad news, the President's close
advisors (and intelligence agencies) would rather
shove this issue under the carpet and only tell the
President what he wants to hear, I would rather Pervez
Musharraf faces this issue now and not put his own
existence in line. The opposition may well let Shaukat
Aziz take oath as PM before bringing the entire government
machinery to a standstill on this potent emotional
issue. In the meantime another outlandish theory is
gaining currency, the “Chile Solution”
where Gen Pinochet remains Army Chief having given
up the Presidency he occupied for almost two decades.
Many suggest that the Musharraf gameplan is to elevate
Senate Chairman Muhammadmian Soomro to President while
remaining in the Army House a la Pinochet. Possible?
Given three PMs in three months, anything could be
even though anyone with little knowledge of Musharraf
would know this would not be an option! The frustrating
thing is that because of his name recognition among
world leaders and his personal PR par excellence,
Shaukat will always make a good PM. At this time he
would have made a wonderful Foreign Minister for Pakistan,
particularly at this juncture in our relations with
India. As an asset Shaukat Aziz will be lost to this
nation if he is mired in extraneous controversy in
the near future.
It would stand to reason and logic
that Pervez Musharraf has thought out this “calculated
risk”. As an avid military student he is a strong
believer in one of the more important lessons of Field
Marshal Slim's “Unofficial History”, “do
not take counsel of your fears”. Pragmatically
Pervez Musharraf must balance this against taking
“one risk too many” with the “great
silent majority” in Pakistan who still believe
he holds the national interest above his own.
M. Ikram Sehgal