[The top five
in order of seniority all are highly trained professionals, each with certain
proven qualities and different backgrounds. All except one are Punjabis, an
unusual coincidence in a military that has a substantial Pakhtun presence and at
a time when the army is fighting a war inside its borders in the Pakhtun
territories.]
By Shuja Nawaz
Sang Tan/Associated Press
Nawaz Sharif, prime minister of
Economic Forum in
|
Since it was announced last month that Pakistan ’s army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, would be
retiring, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has kept the country dangling on his
choice, creating a new parlor game for the chattering classes in the process.
General Kayani has been characteristically mum, except for an unusual press
release that said he was leaving the office on Nov. 29, without closing out other
options, even as he accepted the concurrent role of chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
Mr. Sharif
could begin consolidating his power by making an early and firm choice to
replace General Kayani. Explaining the reason behind the choice would end speculation
about the process. Currently, the only certainty appears to be the fact that
there will be a new army chief come the end of November 2013 and whoever gets
the prime minister’s nod will be a changed person after that, for the office in
many ways makes the man.
The top five
in order of seniority all are highly trained professionals, each with certain
proven qualities and different backgrounds. All except one are Punjabis, an
unusual coincidence in a military that has a substantial Pakhtun presence and at
a time when the army is fighting a war inside its borders in the Pakhtun
territories.
The prime
minister should be looking for a leader who will inspire the army’s rank and
file, bruised by a seemingly never-ending conflict against their own
countrymen. Someone who has war-fighting experience or has been part of the
transformation of the Pakistan Army from a conventional army to one trained
also for asymmetrical warfare. Someone who will not necessarily agree with the
prime minister on everything but will be discreet in offering frank advice and
let the prime minister make the policy decisions after that. Someone who will
keep the army away from politics and not be a counterweight to civil power.
Someone who will remain in the background and allow the transition to civilian
supremacy occur over time.
General
Kayani, who took over from Gen. Pervez Musharraf, was a soldier at heart. He
immediately headed to the forward lines of the war inside the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas and made many such trips to see and to be seen with
his soldiers and officers who were fighting and dying in alarming numbers. Why
didn’t General Musharraf make such trips? Why didn’t the civilian leadership
also do the same? That mystery remains.
General
Kayani also designated his first year as the Year of the Soldier and the second
year of his first term to be the Year of Training. The latter was an uphill
battle since an army at war has little time for training. He kept foreign
relationships alive but played his cards close to his chest and surprised his
American interlocutors by acting in what he perceived to be Pakistani
interests, especially on the Afghan conflict. He also encouraged opening
discussions with India on a broad range of issues, though his innate caution
led him to tug back the government when it seemed to be moving too quickly on
some fronts.
His decision
in 2010 to accept the three-year extension that President Asif Ali Zardari
offered left a question mark on his tenure since it created a sense of
indispensability and broke the career trajectory of a number of deserving
generals, one of whom would have succeeded him. One day, we hope he will share
his thoughts on that process and the reason it happened.
By the time
his second term ended, there was a huge gap between him and his newest corps
commanders: some 16 courses at least at the Pakistan
Military Academy ; a lifetime in military circles. This gap was similar to
the ones that faced General Mohammad Zia ul-Haq and General Musharraf earlier.
It creates a negative dynamic, not just by making collegial decision-making
difficult between such a senior chief and his corps commanders but also by
stunting independent thinking as group think takes root in an organization that
is colored by one man’s thought processes and preferences over time. Such a
situation creates a culture where a request for comments is often marked by
many a “Yes” and some “Of course!”
During his
tenure, General Kayani tried to alter the outlook of the army on the true enemy
of the nation. His speech at
the Pakistan Military Academy on Aug. 14, 2012 ,
reflected his views and was seen as a shift away from what was called an
Indo-centric view to fighting a war within Pakistan :
The war
against extremism and terrorism is not only the army’s war, but that of the
whole nation. We as a nation must stand united against this threat. The army’s
success is dependent on the will and support of the people.
Under
General Kayani, the new army doctrine finally came out, and though written in
the opaque hybridized language of academia and the military –an odd combination
— for the first time, it spoke of Pakistan facing a “multifaceted threat.” Instead of naming India as the only threat to Pakistan , it talked of multiple threats and tried to focus
attention on the internal war being fought by the Pakistan Army.
For some
reason, General Kayani chose not to pursue that tack in his public utterances,
allowing the civilian government to open dialogue with India on a host of issues, including trade, but demanding that
progress needed to be on a broad front. His approach seemed to be “all or
nothing at all.” This effectively put the brakes on any breakthrough between
the two countries, given the weak coalition government of the Peoples Party on
the one hand and the weak coalition led by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in India .
Mr. Sharif
allowed that drift to continue. General Kayani’s offer to demilitarize Siachen
Glacier after the April 2012 avalanche killed 140 Pakistani soldiers and
civilians met with a brusque rebuff by India and provoked a bitter debate inside India on why it needed to protect that frozen wasteland from Pakistan and potentially China . The flare-up of firings across the Line of Control in Kashmir
in 2013 added to a growing mistrust between India and Pakistan .
A thoughtful
man, who read whenever he had the time, General Kayani was an unusual
autodidact, quite unlike his predecessor, who was not known to read much and
relied mainly on oral briefings and conversations to formulate his views.
General Kayani used private conversations to test his ideas but only after
reading up on the subject matter. He believed strongly in his ability to
present a logic and structure to his ideas, although it is unclear how effective
that was in changing minds of his interlocutors, especially in the White House.
There, his
unsolicited and unusual presentation of his white paper on the pitfalls facing
the American strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan ’s role in that situation met a cool reception after he
handed the document over directly to President Obama. One American official
harshly characterized the paper as “sophomoric.” Yet, President Obama, who also
relies on academic and logical frameworks for his own presentations, may have found
some use in the paper, which opened a window into General Kayani’s thinking.
Whether General Kayani changed any minds in Washington remains an open question.
General
Kayani’s abiding legacy will remain one of a general who resisted the
temptation to directly intervene in politics, choosing instead to stay in the
shadows – not surprising, given his background as former head of the
Inter-Services Intelligence directorate, and despite the call to intervene from
many in the political system. For that, he will be remembered kindly.
Prime
Minister Sharif’s choice of the new army chief will help define his third
tenure. He has selected four army chiefs in the past, some of whom viscerally
shunned politics but found themselves at odds with all for different reasons.
One, Gen. Asif Nawaz, died in office in 1993; another, Gen. Abdul Waheed,
persuaded Mr. Sharif and then-President Ghulam Ishaq Khan to resign
simultaneously in 1993. A third, Gen. Jehangir Karamat, resigned in 1996. The
fourth, General Musharraf, upended Mr. Sharif’s government in 1999 after the
Kargil War debacle and after Mr. Sharif sought American help to end that
conflict with India .
The prime
minister will have another shot at naming an army chief three years hence, if
he completes his own five-year term. In that sense, the choice this month is
important to continue the trajectory of civilian control of the military and
must be matched by civilian competence and responsibility. If all this were to
happen and Mr. Sharif selects the professional of his choosing and two
consecutive military transitions occur on his watch, without any extensions or
back-room deals, Mr. Sharif will have put his stamp on governance, and Pakistan wins.
Shuja
Nawaz is director of the South Asia Center at the Atlantic Council in Washington D.C. and is author of “Crossed Swords: Pakistan , Its Army, and the Wars Within.”