By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Imran Khan’s Long March
Recently Pakistan’s
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif named Lieutenant
General Asim
Munir as the new army chief. The new leader must navigate complex
political, internal, and external challenges with the most urgent economic
crisis. Alvi was appointed by former premier
Imran Khan and belonged to Imran Khand-led Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party.
In early November, a
gunman opened fire on Imran Khan, the former prime minister of Pakistan, and
his supporters at a rally. One person was killed, many more were injured, and
Khan was struck in the leg. Although the motivation of the shooter, who was
detained, remains unclear, Khan quickly blamed the government and, pointedly, a
senior intelligence official for the attack. Since losing office in April in
the wake of a no-confidence vote, Khan has led a campaign against the new
civilian government and the generals seen as the actual power brokers in
Pakistan. He has deepened already fraught political tensions and put himself in
unprecedented direct conflict with the military, once his ally.
The shooting has not
derailed Khan’s “long march” on Islamabad’s capital. The rally at which he was
attacked was one of a series that he had been staging in cities across the
country to show the strength of his popular support. The next march stage
begins on November 26 in Rawalpindi, Islamabad’s twin city, with Khan
leading a mass demonstration to call for early elections. Khan seeks to return
to power, decrying the corruption and collusion of the politicians who usurped
him and the military leaders he feels betrayed him.
But there is more at
stake in Khan’s protest movement than his ambition. Once supported by (and
backed by) the military, he has challenged the civilian political establishment
and the army by mobilizing many Pakistanis to join his cause—and stand against
Pakistan’s traditional power blocs. He has upended some of the conventional
formulas of Pakistani politics and polarized the Pakistani electorate more than
ever. The military and the political establishment see Khan as the most potent
threat they have faced. As a result, Pakistan has become more unstable, and
political contestation now has even less to do with policy than before at a
perilous time of metastasizing economic and ecological crises. And neither side
is backing down.
The End Is Just The Beginning
After making his name
as the star captain of Pakistan’s national cricket team, Khan joined politics
in 1996 and expanded his political platform in the last decade by styling
himself as a maverick and an outsider. In doing so, he repudiated the
traditional political elites and the two parties that had long dominated
Pakistani politics: the Pakistan Muslim League, known as the PML-N, and the
Pakistan Peoples Party, known as the PPP. In 2018, he
became prime minister when his party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), defeated the incumbent PML-N. The military
perceived Khan as a pliant alternative to the two established political
parties, and he initially seemed to rule with its support. But
cracks in the relationship emerged as Khan pushed back on the appointment of a
new intelligence chief in 2021, eventually leading the military to withdraw its
support from him. When the opposition brought a no-confidence vote against Khan
this spring, his tenuous ruling coalition fell apart, and he was ousted as
prime minister.
Khan’s tenure ended
in April, well before his five-year electoral term was due to expire in 2023.
That premature conclusion was not altogether surprising: an elected Pakistani
prime minister has never served full-time in office. And although the manner of
his ouster was legal—he lost a no-confidence vote in Parliament—what underlay
it, as with all his predecessors, was his falling out with the military.
But for Khan, the end
was just the beginning. He has used his ouster to wage a powerful grievance
campaign, casting the current government as illegitimate and whipping up
popular support. He has alleged that the military and his political rivals
colluded with the United States to remove him, a conspiracy theory that, though
lacking evidence, has found ready support among his supporters. Day after day,
week after week, he has led massive rallies across Pakistan, demonstrating his
formidable street power.
These rallies are not
staid political events. They are carnivals full of musical performances
attended by men, women, and children. Voter preferences are difficult to
discern in Pakistan because pre-election polls are not regularly conducted in
the country. But Khan’s supporters tend to be urban and middle class, and many
young people are tired of Pakistan’s old political parties. They are a
generation produced by social media; not for them, the established parties’
dreary way of doing business through press conferences and dry speeches.
Pakistan’s demographic trends—64 percent of its population is under 30—may
favor Khan’s party more than his rivals in future elections. Although support
for Khan is concentrated in Punjab, the country’s most populous province, and
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which are both held by his party, his base cuts across
geography by drawing on disillusionment with the current political class. His
chief rivals do not have this broad-based backing; the PPP’s voter base is
concentrated in Sindh, and the ruling PML-N draws the bulk of its support from
Punjab, where it has been losing ground to Khan’s PTI.
A consummate
populist, Khan, offers his supporters a sweeping rejection of the institutions
that have long shaped their lives. At his rallies and countless interviews,
Khan has described the current government as dynastic and corrupt (he calls the
current prime minister “prime minister”) and undeserving of the office. But
more critically, Khan has taken on the military and derided its claims of political
neutrality. His rhetoric has occasioned a dramatic reversal of roles. When Khan
was prime minister, the PML-N and its allies had painted him as a puppet of the
military. Now back in power, the PML-N has completely shed its antimilitary
stance. Khan, in turn, has made railing against the military establishment one
of his defining mantras. Especially on social media, his supporters have
directed their ire at General Qamar Javed Bajwa, the army chief, arguably the most powerful man in
Pakistan. Khan and his party have redrawn previously maintained red lines of
criticism against the military, with the former prime minister pointing to the
military’s involvement in his ouster and making direct accusations against a
military official after his shooting.
This narrative seems
to be working: Khan’s political momentum has already translated to the ballot
box, with his party winning 15 out of 20 electoral seats in by-elections for
the Punjab provincial assembly held in July and six out of eight National Assembly
seats in by-elections held in October. The election results and huge crowds at
his rallies point to Khan upending the PML-N’s traditional power base in
Punjab. Meanwhile, the current government is struggling with back-breaking
inflation, dwindling foreign reserves, and a deepening economic crisis. It now
has reason to fear voters’ wrath.
On The Back Foot
In the face of Khan’s
populist juggernaut, the government and the military establishment have, in
concert, turned to familiar tactics. They have pushed hard against Khan, his
party, and the media channels allied with him, seeking to ensnare them in legal
troubles. In August, police filed antiterrorism charges against Khan for making
remarks that supposedly threatened police officers and a judge involved in a
case against one of his aides; the charges were thrown out by the Islamabad
high court a few weeks later. Some of Khan’s aides and senior party members
have been temporarily detained. A television channel sympathetic to Khan was
taken off the air, and journalists associated with it have reported feeling
pressured to leave the country. In October, one prominent journalist in
self-imposed exile in Kenya was killed in murky circumstances outside Nairobi.
Khan alleged that the journalist, Arshad Sharif, was shot in a “target
killing,” saying that Sharif had been under threat while in Pakistan for, among
other things, investigating corruption cases against the PML-N and PPP. And on
October 21, the country’s election commission disqualified Khan from contesting
elections for five years on corruption charges. The legal case appears flimsy,
and Khan challenged it in court.
None of these tactics
are particularly original; Nawaz Sharif, Khan’s predecessor and the brother of
the sitting prime minister, Shahbaz Sharif, was disqualified for life from
holding office in Pakistan in 2017 by the Supreme Court on charges of not
disclosing his income. But while Sharif left the country in 2019—he rules his
party (and some suggest the government) from London—Khan has stayed following
his removal from office and pursued a single-minded quest to return to power.
For both sides, the
next general election, constitutionally required to be held by the fall of
2023, looms large. If countrywide elections were held today, Khan’s party would,
in all probability, win, with one caveat: Pakistan is a parliamentary
democracy, and Khan’s choice of candidates would matter. In rural
constituencies, patronage politics still reign supreme, and family dynasties
hold sway. Khan wants elections to be held as soon as possible to capitalize on
his current momentum. He has called for the long march to reconvene in
Rawalpindi later this week; he has said previously that his party will continue
to stage sit-ins until the government announces the dates of the next national
election. As the ruling party, the PML-N, on the other hand, would rather wait
as long as possible to hold elections. Since the party would likely be blamed
for the country’s current troubles, its leaders hope to see the economy improve
and inflationary pressures ease (and, not least, corruption charges closed
against several of them) before voters head to the polls.
The military overtly
entered the fray, further complicating these calculations. In response to
Khan’s allegations regarding the death of Sharif in Kenya, the director general
of the Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistan’s leading intelligence agency,
held an unprecedented press conference that denied Khan’s claims. The military
has also publicly rejected Khan’s allegations regarding its involvement in his
November shooting. But the military perceives Khan as a formidable, even
existential threat, capable of unleashing large-scale widespread anger against
it and undermining its unquestionable dominance over Pakistan. The generals find
themselves decidedly on the back foot.
Sound And Fury
Khan’s campaign
against the political establishment has left the country more bitterly divided
than ever, with each side in its echo chamber. By making the fight against
corruption and dynastic politics the central pillar of his platform and using
it to attack both the PML-N and PPP, Khan has recast Pakistan’s politics as an
existential battle. The government, in turn, has tried to attack Khan’s
credibility and tarnish his image. Competition could get heated in the past
when the PML-N and the PPP were each other’s main rivals, but they never had
such high stakes nor seemed to have divided Pakistanis.
The clash between
Khan, the government, and the military has become all-consuming in Pakistan’s
media and the public sphere. It has unfolded while the country has lurched from
crisis to crisis. It has made Pakistan’s economic struggles—with record-high
inflation and dwindling foreign reserves—worse by increasing uncertainty,
diverting attention away from policy solutions, and distracting badly from the
necessary response to the late summer floods, which submerged a third of the
country. Apart from a short time at the height of the flooding, when the
government focused on relief efforts in devastated areas, this battle for power
has remained the central focus of the government, Khan’s party, the military,
and the media. The sense of instability and constant jockeying for positions
seems likely to continue until the next election. It may intensify if General Bajwa’s successor (due to be announced by the prime
minister this month as the general’s tenure expires) is someone Khan does not
favor. It may spill over into more violence; after all, Pakistan has a tragic
history of political assassinations.
Paradoxically, Khan
would probably not enjoy his current level of support had he not been toppled
in April. It seems likely that his popularity would have dwindled in the face
of the economic crisis and that he would have faced significant headwinds in
the next election. From the point of view of the current coalition government
and the military establishment, then, Khan’s surging popularity has likely
brought into question the wisdom of the campaign to remove him last spring.
Unfortunately for Pakistanis,
this incessant political combat has left little room for substance. Both sides
need a concrete economic plan to take Pakistan out of its recurring debt crises
and reliance on foreign donors. Politics may be Pakistanis’ favorite pastime,
but they are still starved for good choices regarding their country’s
leadership. No matter who comes into power in the next election, the underlying
realities of Pakistan’s economic situation and state of development are
unlikely to change.
It is unclear how this
power struggle will end. Backdoor talks between Khan and the military seem to
have failed. At various points in the seven months since Khan lost power,
political tensions had escalated to the point of near implosions, such as in
August when it seemed Khan might be arrested under terrorism charges or the
night after he was shot in November when his outraged supporters took to the
streets across the country. What is clear is that Khan is the greatest threat
Pakistan’s establishment has ever seen and that this unstable year in Pakistani
politics has not yet reached its denouement.
For updates click hompage here