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India-Pakistan
New Nawaz
2015-01-11
[DAWN] Even though Nawaz has lost the meta game, its still looking good for him on the civilian side of things.

Lets start with the dodged bullet. Military courts handed Nawaz a political lifeline because it switched the conversation from governance failures to judicial incompetence.

Heck, the conversation on governance failure didnt even start thanks to the alacrity of the boys they wanted mil courts, they wanted them now and they werent going to let the Beautiful Downtown Peshawar
...capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly known as the North-West Frontier Province), administrative and economic hub for the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. Peshawar is situated near the eastern end of the Khyber Pass, convenient to the Pak-Afghan border. Peshawar has evolved into one of Pakistan's most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities, which means lots of gunfire.
moment pass.

Remember: this is a government that was adamant talks needed to happen and believed they could succeed.

Remember: last Jan, Nawaz went to parliament to give a speech everyone thought would lead to a military operation and came out having announced more talks.

Remember: this is a government that pretended to invent an internal security policy and then didnt even pretend to follow it.

But, post-Peshawar, few remembered any of that and even fewer cared. Because all anyone wanted to talk about was military courts.

Then, Nawaz managed to look busy. Real busy. Almost prime ministerial. He was chairing meetings, turning up in parliament, holding APCs, issuing statement after statement, working, working, working.

Reality seemed to match the spin for once. Nawaz brought the political class together. He manufactured consensus. He acted quickly when the consensus began to fray. He got a constitutional amendment done in double-quick time. He got the hangings up and running.

The critics may split hairs it wasnt because of Nawaz; it was all down to Raheel and the critics may be right. But thats beside the point.

Military courts are popular. Hangings are popular. Being hands-on, in front of the cameras and getting things done is popular. Nawaz has done all of that. Co-ownership is better than no ownership.

Its been a good run. And thats only the security side of things. Elsewhere, the gods have been kind.

A third of the way in, most governments here are usually just trying to paper over the cracks. No reforms, no structural changes, limp economy, rising prices, belt tightening, unpopular choices the only things that grow around this time is public disillusionment and a governments problems.

But Nawaz got lucky: oil happened. Prices start to fall. The economists and number-crunchers may argue over the real impact of falling oil prices, but economists and number-crunchers argue over everything. The political impact is clear: folk out in the street love it.

It doesnt matter that the government here has nothing to do with falling oil prices. It doesnt even matter if the average man in the street is aware that the government has nothing to do with falling oil prices.

What matters is that instead of entering a phase of rising anger and growing disillusionment, the public is faced with subsiding troubles or the feeling of subsiding troubles, anyway.

Throw in a couple of billion dollars of savings in imports; metro bus coming online in Isloo; maybe some electricity and road projects grabbing headlines; possibly a sweetheart deal on gas imports and its looking pretty damn good. By Pak standards, anyway.

Which is great for Nawaz because, well, we are in Pakistain.

The cherry on top of all of that: you only have to be better than the competition. Since Raheel isnt it that leaves just one realistic threat: Imran.

But Imrans had a poor month or so, politically speaking: Peshawar happened in the PTIs backyard and forced Imran to halt his get-Nawaz campaign. Imran can restart his campaign and probably will but, so what?

Assume Nawaz is churlish and stubborn and refuses to give Imran his judicial commission. Imran takes to the streets again. Then what?

Even before Peshawar, two things had become apparent: Imran has enough street support to sustain his protest movement, but not enough to overthrow the government; the only real threat to the government is the government itself.

Post-Peshawar, the only thing that has changed is that the government would have to make an even more catastrophic mistake for Imran to be able to capitalise what a limp, desultory government can get away with is much less than what a spry, populist government can.

Bottom line, post-Peshawar: Nawaz is weaker, but more secure. Old Nawaz wouldnt have liked it.
Posted by:Fred

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