| A
frequently asked question in Pakistan these days is whether
we have any government. The question is not completely off the
mark. The country has, perhaps, never before seen such disorder
and incompetence in its history. The euphoria generated after
the landmark February 18 elections has turned into dismay. Never
before has an elected government lost the trust of the people
in such a short period of time.
Since
coming to power four months ago, the PPP-led coalition government
has blundered through one crisis after the other. With an economic
meltdown staring us in the face and rising militancy threatening
to tear the nation apart, there seems to be little sense of
urgency. Cronyism rules the roost as governance falters.
Incompetence
is writ large at every step that the new government takes. The
latest example was the decision to place the ISI under the interior
ministry, a decision the goverment was forced to reverse within
a few hours. It came as a bolt from the blue. On the evening
of July 26, a few hours after Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani
left for Washington for a critical meeting with US leaders,
the government placed the ISI and IB under the control of the
interior ministry through a hurriedly prepared notification.
Asif
Ali Zardari, the de facto ruler of the country, in an interview
from Dubai, hailed the move as a step towards civilian control
over the controversial spy agency. Other government officials
said the decision had the consent of the president and military
leadership.
But
in Rawalpindi the reaction was the complete opposite. The mood
that evening at the wedding reception of the son of Salahuddin
Satti, Chief of General Staff, was dismal. There was a feeling
of shock and disbelief among the top brass attending the ceremony.
According to one guest, a grim-faced Chief of Army Staff, General
Ashfaq Kayani, and Chairman Joint Staff Committee, General Tariq
Majeed, kept discussing the situation. “I was certainly
not consulted,” General Kayani told a guest. The other
generals were even more riled up. Director General ISI, Lt.
General Nadeem Taj was conspicuous by his absence. He was said
to be busy contacting the prime minister, who by that time had
arrived in London.
Hours
later, the government backtracked on its decision saying there
was some ‘misunderstanding.’ But the damage was
already done. It not only exposed the government’s ineptitude,
but also soured the civil-military relationship.
The
imprudent decision, which ultimately caused the government such
embarrassment, was apparently taken by Asif Zardari at the advice
of a close associate, who had met Zardari a few days earlier
and apparently told him that it would be good to take steps
to tighten the government’s control over the ISI before
Prime Minister Gillani’s visit to Washington. The cabinet
was unaware of the decision. Zardari perhaps misjudged the situation
and did not anticipate the response it provoked.
One
can understand the eagerness on the part of the government to
clip the ISI’s wings. The agency has been accused in the
past of destabilising civilian regimes. Its involvement in domestic
politics has made the organisation very controversial. It has
become so powerful that it is often described as a state within
a state. But the decision of placing it under the interior ministry
was not the solution to the problem.
What Zardari and his kitchen cabinet did not understand is that
about 80% of the ISI’s role is related to external security,
which does not come under the domain of the interior ministry.
As far as civilian control is concerned, the agency already
comes under the chief executive, who is the prime minister.
In any case, intelligence agencies all over the world report
only to the chief executive. It was foolish even to think that
the spy agency involved in regional counter-intelligence operations
on three fronts – Afghanistan, Iran and India –
could be placed under an interior minister with a controversial
record.
What was really required was to close down the ISI’s domestic
political wing and that could have easily been done through
an act of parliament with consensus. Almost all the political
parties agree on the need to clip the ISI’s role in the
country’s politics. But many observers believe that by
placing it under the interior ministry, the government actually
wanted to use the agency for its own political ends.
There
is also a need for stronger civilian control over the ISI’s
external security operations, but this can only be done if the
government itself is strong and has a clear national security
policy. The fact is it does not have a clear policy direction
on any issue, leave aside national security.
There
is complete fragmentation of power, with no one really in charge.
It is a government run by remote control. Many in the party
believe that Mr Gillani is just a dummy prime minister and all
the important decisions are taken by Zardari, who spends most
of his time in Dubai. According to one insider, everything is
micro managed by Zardari and his unelected cronies. The cabinet
has little say in the decision making process.
While
his official title is that of adviser, Rehman Malik is the de
facto interior minister and the most powerful person in the
government. A former FIA official who fled the country after
the dismissal of the second Benazir Bhutto government in 1996,
Malik is not only looking after internal security, but has lately
been dabbling in external security matters as well. This was
probably the reason why he was so keen to get the ISI under
his control. Malik came closer to the PPP leadership during
his exile in London. He is believed to have made a lot of money
in the Oil for Food Programme in Iraq during Saddam Hussain’s
rule. He has also been a beneficiary of the controversial NRO.
Anwar
Majid, a close friend of Zardari, is another powerful member
of the unelected coterie. A businessman, he is de facto in charge
of banking and the financial sector. Shaukat Tareen, a well
known banker and a close relative of Majid, heads the economic
team. Senior bankers and officials of financial institutions
complain about the arbitrariness which has become the hallmark
of this government. Last month, the finance ministry through
an order, changed the MDs of several joint corporations like
the Pak-Libya, Pak-Kuwait and Pak-Iran without informing the
partners and their boards of directors.
Personal
loyalty rather than professional competency is required for
appointment on crucial government and diplomatic posts. The
Foreign Office was stunned when Zardari appointed his close
friend Hussain Haroon Pakistan’s new envoy to the United
Nations. With no work experience and no college education, his
appointment to this top diplomatic position seems incredulous.
In
another controversial move, Zardari stopped Zamir Akram, a senior
member of the foreign service, from proceeding to Beijing to
take charge as Pakistan’s ambassador. Zamir, who was additional
secretary at the prime minister’s secretariat, was appointed
to the new position by Mr Gillani himself. China had accepted
his credentials but days before his departure, King Zardari
decided that he was not loyal enough. Foreign office fears that
some other crony of Zardari may get this crucial posting. “It
is a most dismal situation,” said a senior foreign ministry
official. All these ad hoc decisions have had a huge demoralising
effect on other officers.
Zardari’s
own feeling of insecurity has pushed him to depend more and
more on the external powers. The recent murder of Khalid Shahanshah,
chief of security for Benazir Bhutto, shook him so much that
he rushed to confer with western diplomats on the security situation.
Given this scenario, one cannot repose much confidence in the
new dispensation.
|