A History of Failure: The Rise and Fall of Military ‘Experiment’ in Pakistan

Posted on September 17, 2007
Filed Under >Athar Osama, Politics
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Gues Post By Athar Osama

In October 1999, when General Musharraf came to power in a coup and declared himself the Chief Executive of the country, he was met by a silent nod of approval by his 150 million compatriots. Many of us thought, quite naively though, that he would fix what was wrong with our political system. Today, as he wheels and deals to secure another term in office, he hardly has the support of the masses to lean on.

What has gone wrong in these last 8 years for him is quite reminiscent of what went wrong with his predecessors. Today, as Musharraf seeks to have himself elected for a second term, it is useful to ask a question: Is military rule the solution to Pakistan’s problems? Is Musharraf any different than his predecessor generals?
Answering these questions is critical to charting a new course of democracy in Pakistan for it will address and counter the argument at the very center of the ongoing political saga and the impending presidential elections in Pakistan.

In this piece, I will argue that, if we look through history, there is a clear “pattern of failure” associated with a military rule in Pakistan. Broadly speaking, each of the three (or four) episodes of military rule in Pakistan can be divided into three phases each of these, quite predictably, ultimately leading to the other as the regime struggles to gain legitimacy and falls under its own weight. In totality, this pattern found across all three (or four) military regimes in past indicates the unsustainability and failure of the military experience in Pakistan.

Phase 1: Reform Agendas and Search for Legitimacy

The first phase of each of the three episodes of military rule in Pakistan was characterized by either the rolling out of a reform agenda ( e.g. Ayub Khan) or promises to “clean up the mess” (as with Musharraf) or return to civilian rule (as with Zia and Yahya). The primary purpose of the regime is to gain legitimacy before the eyes of the masses and, more importantly, before the international community on whose support (and aid) the regimes’ claim for economic progress generally rest.

In each of the three instances of military rule, the international legitimacy did come in due course of time ( e.g. Soviet invasion of Afghanistan for Zia, and 9/11 for Musharraf), although through questionable means. Another predictable pattern of all three military regimes is the initial burst of development and economic growth that they create thus providing a measure of relief to common man.

Here too, economic historians agree that the high economic growth rates seen during these periods were financed, in major part, by foreign aid coming from the Western countries (most notably America) and other external sources (such as expatriate capital during Musharraf era and Narcotics-funded Afghan Jihad during Zia’s period). Without foreign aid, and resultant loss of sovereignty, the economic growth wouldn’t have been possible. In all cases, it went away as soon as the foreign aid was stopped.

In that respect, military rule in Pakistan has also come at a considerable cost to the country’s sovereignty in that increasingly, during military rules in Pakistan, the country has aligned itself with Western interests ( e.g. Pro-West military alliances in 1950s and 60s, Afghan Jihad in 1980s, and War on Terrorism in 2000s) that may have taken a heavy toll on the country’s social fabric. What is also worth noting is that these alliances have often been undertaken without much thought to the costs and benefits to the country and without due regards to its own long-term interests. The creation of Taliban as a result of the Afghan Jihad maybe a case in point.

Phase 2: Legitimacy Remains Elusive & Democratic Facade

In the second of the three phases, with the quest for legitimacy remaining largely elusive, the regimes’ attention turns to providing a facade of civilian and democratic rule. This is done through a series of three steps: 1) measures to eliminate political opposition to the regime by banning the “old guard” political leaders and parties ( e.g. Ayub’s use of EBDO and Musharraf’s use of NAB cases) and co-opting others; 2) by isolating and elevating the General above the political fray through a pre-rigged referendum that ensures his control over the political apparatus; and c) by setting up alternate systems of governance ( e.g. Basic Democracies by Ayub and Local Bodies by Zia and Musharraf) to weaken the national and provincial political parties.

Why do these Generals even find it necessary to create the facade of democracy. Why can’t they simply rule under the Martial Law in perpetuity, like leaders of some other countries have chosen to do for years, even decades? I think the answer to this question lies within ourselves. I believe that the people of Pakistan are inherently a democratic people who would like to make decisions about their affairs for themselves. True, their efforts are often frustrated but that does not negate the first assertion.

By the time the General in question is at the mid-point of his rule, the regime is running out of steam. There is hardly a reform agenda left to implement. It is politics as usual with one set of corrupt stakeholders being replaced by another set of corrupt stakeholders. Even the Army is not spared of the signs and effects of weak leadership at the top. Ayub’s weakness during 1965 War is legendary and so are many of the instances of neglect to the duty of COAS during Zia’s time as narrated by none other than General K. M. Arif. Musharraf may be no exception.

Phase 3: Collapse of the Experiment

With the civilian “controlled” democratic experiment in a state of decline, the regimes begin the last of the three phases of their rule. This phase is marked by an intense and growing popular discontent and disillusionment with the “artificial” democracy that is being held together in place with the support and threat of a return to military rule.

It is also one where the General has become quite insulated from the pulse of the masses and is increasingly committing blunders–sometimes blunders of immense magnitude ( e.g. Ayub’s celebration of Decade of Development and firing of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, Zia’s firing of Mohammad Khan Jonejo as PM, and Musharraf’s recent reference against CJP)?in an attempt to perpetuate his rule.

It is at this point that the regime makes a last ditch attempt to buy more time for itself through political sloganeering ( e.g. Islamization by Zia, Development by Ayub, and Enlightened Moderation by Musharraf). However, each of these slogans are really meant to provide a few more years at the top to the Generals in question and nothing else.

This pattern is predictable and clearly points towards the lack of sustainability and failure of military rule in Pakistan. Today, Musharraf stands at the end of the last the three phases of his rule with all his energies focused towards merely elongating his rule and Pakistan’s misery by another few years. Should this happen with or without uniform it would only come at the expense of Pakistan and its people.

In either case, though, it is yet another chapter in a sordid tale that represents a general pattern of failure repeated at least three times over during 33 years of Pakistan’s history. Repeatedly, Generals–Ayub, Yahya, Zia, and Musharraf–have proven themselves incapable to rule over a people that may have erred in asserting their rights at the right moments in their history but are, nonetheless, acutely aware of them.

If military dictatorship was to be the best thing that ever happened to Pakistan since sliced bread, it would have worked by now. Instead, it has failed on each one of the three (or four) occasions that it was put into practice in this country. If military dictatorship had been this nation’s destiny, as it is sometimes argued, the people would have happily embraced it and not repelled against it.

But is not our destiny and it probably never will be. The army–both its men and leadership–has repeatedly shown its willingness and desire to distance itself from the actions of its sole-leader. Each time a general grabs power, and forces the army into political corridors, the latter, to its credit, is willing to play only so far. This happened not only during the events leading up to Ayub’s and Yahya’s resignation but also on several minor occasions as well ( e.g. army’s refusal to fire at PNA protestors under Zia’s leadership during Bhutto’s premiership).

For sixty years, Pakistan and its political institutions have been suffering from a disease–a political cancer of sorts–whose causes include, in that order, its inept and selfish political leaders, its adventurous military generals, its bureaucrats, technocrats, and intelligentsia who seem to benefit from and share in the spoils of this political (dis)order, and its poor people–oppressed as they may be–who refuse to take responsibility for their own destiny and assert their fundamental rights.

This cancer is silently eating away on the body of this nation. The patient is dying a slow but sure death. The only thing that a period of military rule, like we’ve seen on several occasions in the past, achieves is that it delays the inevitable. It provides the patient with a drip and a booster shot of some energy that creates an artificial impression that things are getting better but, that too, only for a while. When the signs of this booster shot wear off, however, we’re left with a patient that is weaker, sicker, and nearer to its death than it was before the military intervention was administered for not only is the booster shot only an artificial and temporary remedy, it also results in considerable waste of time–years, sometimes a decade–that could have been spent curing the cancer in the first place.

The death will surely come unless we, Pakistanis, learn to differentiate between treatment and life-support and make a resolve that we will treat this patient rather than leave it to die on a life-support system that is only meant to delay the inevitable. Saving this patient will require every ounce of energy and will power in our body and the best team of doctors that we can assemble but that’s the only sane thing to do at this moment–at any moment. The choice is ours, so can be the future.

About the Author: Dr. Athar Osama is a public policy analyst and an amateur historian of Pakistan’s political and constitutional history. He is also the Founder of Understanding Pakistan Project. An earlier version of this article was published in Dawn.com.

43 responses to “A History of Failure: The Rise and Fall of Military ‘Experiment’ in Pakistan”

  1. Usman Akram says:

    ME BHI PAKISTAN HOON TU BHI PAKISTAN HAI says:September 18th, 2007 3:45 am >> this is what should be taught in our books of Pakistan studies, rather the repeated crap of independence of Paksitan
    PLEASE!, the independence episode might be boring for you, but we need to teach our new generations how we got independence, removing that bit of history is like removing eary ears of Islam (before hijrat), who would like that?

    The editor has done a good job comparing all the generals and speaking of Military rule, I still regard Musharaf as better leader then other generals and politicians. We should not ignore the circumstances and dificulties he has faced during his terms.
    Pakistan has prosper during musharaf years, let me remind you when PTV used to have monopoly as to what news to show to public during PPP and PML governments and now, while musharaf is in power, there are more cartoons and funny clips of musharaf then any other. And let me tell you, all my class mates and friends are employed today.
    Fact is, it is our politicians once again, draging pakistan back to the dark age and when Pakistan will become ruins like afganistan it will be people like Nawaz sharief (who cannot even honor his promisses), Benazir (whose husband did murders and corruption under her very nose!) and people who support them to blame and I hell them.

  2. Aqil Sajjad says:

    Pakistan’s biggest problem has not been the restoration of civilian rule. We have been able to get rid of military governments in the past and are insha Allah going to be over with the present phase sooner or later. Our challange has been the sustainability of the democratic system. And this is something that only politicians and the civil society can fix by making sure that the political system does not degenerate to such an extent that the faujis get an opportunity to intervene. And this is where I strongly feel that the media and civil society have badly failed by not addressing the deeper structural issues that contribute to the weakness of our political system.

  3. Roshan says:

    Wonderful article Osama,
    I think we should not expect DEMOCRACY from a military ruler as the former is does not have the training to believe in democracy.
    The institution itself believes in command and control system, how can a person from that institution will believe believe in consultation and opposition.
    Ofcourse we are unfortunate to be ruled by the UNIFORMED military elite and politically incorrect politicians ‘Hum Musharraf ko wardee kay saath sau baar muntakheb karayain gay’
    The best case is the restoration of CJ by the lawyers community and the way they mobilized the people is commendable. It really shows that people of our country believe in democracy and they support those who have credibility.

  4. ali raza says:

    I think a dictatorial regimes’ search for legitimacy with political manuevers is futile. They need to derive their legitimacy from their performance. You can’t come in through the backdoor, and in Pakistan’s case I don’t think there is anything wrong with the back door, and then do an out- and then in through the front to become legit. If you come through the back door, fullfil your promises ASAP, and then leave whether successful or not.

    On a related note, I’d say that every government is legit by virtue of its office and performance. Be it a monarchy, a caliphate, dictatorship, democracy, or any hybrid. It is legit if it can excercise control over the land and manage the affairs efficiently.

  5. Faraz K says:

    I am going to echo the comments already made by a few here and say that may be instead of blaming individuals or the elites or the army’s generals, may be it’s our people and our society that should be blamed as a whole. Is something wrong with our mind sets? In every society there are always a few bad apples. But I firmly believe that if a nation has enough “good” people, the nation will flourish and prosper in the long run, under any form of system. If we remove Musharraf, we all know very well what our other choices would be. Why do we have only bad choices? It’s been 60 years now. It’s not just martial law. It has to be something deeper than that.

    I could be way off, but it’s a perspective worth exploring.

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