Pakistan is tangled in the web of foreign factors and domestic conflicts. The US and its Western allies, regional countries, judiciary, media, executive, religious leadership and feudal lords or industrialists, are the stakeholders of power here.
While addressing the Arab League, Libya’s Col Qaddafi once warned the Arab leaders that ‘after his ‘removal or hanging’, their turn would come soon’, over which Bashar al-Assad and others laughed. Today, the noose has tightened against Assad and the turn is waiting for others too. Our political elite must know that when a foreign authority is confiding in you, he will be quick to get rid of you, when not needed.
A common pattern of deaths and assassinations of Pakistani leaders depicts that nationalist leaders have been killed or removed. In Pakistan, present political environment shows domination of regional political parties. These populist leaders are given safe havens in Western states and neighbouring countries, in the name of political asylum. These countries and their allies fund these separatist leaders and do much more covert things for them to weaken Pakistan and to disallow federal political parties to operate in tier areas of interest.
One does not need to go back much in history to observe as to how Liaquat Ali Khan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Zia-ul-Haq and Benazir Bhutto were assassinated. They were not killed due to domestic feuds. Their deaths had this commonality that allegedly foreign powers were involved and as such inquiries could not be made public. For the sake of stability of the country, there is a need to examine the pattern of ‘removing’ leaders, irrespective of their political merit, draw lessons from such incidents.
May 2013 elections in Pakistan can be viewed in the backdrop of international and domestic factors, interests and strategic environment. Pakistan, like most other countries, is a ‘relatively’ sovereign state. A country that is heavily under debt, and is forced to get loans to repay its loans, and accepts drone attacks obliquely, cannot be termed as completely sovereign.
To keep Afghanistan and Pakistan destabilized, the presently working plan is to roll down insurgency from the line of Hindu Kush Range that horizontally divides Afghanistan into Pushtoon and non-Pashtoon areas. This plan has multiple advantages, as even after NATO departs, the seeds of enmity and revenge between Afghanistan, the Tribal Areas and Pakistan will keep germinating.
Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) and Balochistan have an interesting commonality for foreign interests. Both are reasonably well-populated by Shias, and both have Chinese intruding into these regions. GB provides access to China to ports, like Afghanistan can provide such access to Russia and CARs. It must be understood that the regions that provide economic or military accesses can never remain peaceful and will have to be sabotaged. The geographic and religious reality will never allow peace and development to these unfortunate regions of Pakistan also, unless a prolific Pakistani leadership is ready to bear the consequences. Only a prudent government that is able to cruise through these predictable foreign interests has chances to bring some relief to the people. All states have right to pursue their own interests legitimately. While we should understand our own and foreign interests, we should have our strategies ready to counter inimical interests and thus win freedom, economic stability and peace for our people.
Jahangir's World Times First Comprehensive Magazine for students/teachers of competitive exams and general readers as well.