Pakistan names new army chief as political turmoil over military influence deepens
Ousted PM Imran Khan's criticism has chipped away at army's reputation domestically
As November draws to a close, massive crowds are expected to descend on Pakistan's capital Islamabad and its twin city Rawalpindi, cheering on charismatic former prime minister Imran Khan who was ousted from power last April, and joining in his relentless call for snap elections.
The rally planned for Saturday coincides with a habitually tense transition that, by law, comes every three years in Pakistan: the appointment of a new army chief, the most powerful figure in the country which has a nuclear arsenal and constant tension with its neighbours.
On Thursday, the current government, a multi-party coalition led by Shehbaz Sharif, ended weeks of intense speculation by appointing Lt. Gen. Syed Asim Munir to the post. The decision comes at a time of fierce debate over the Pakistani military's role in politics.
Pakistan is also currently reeling from a flailing economy and the effects of historic, apocalyptic flooding that recently left a third of the country underwater, affecting more than 33 million people.
Khan's criticism makes transition volatile
Khan, a former cricket hero turned populist politician, has railed against the army, consistently accusing its leader of conspiring with his political rivals and the United States to orchestrate his ouster by a no-confidence vote in Parliament last April — a charge both Pakistan's military and Washington have called baseless.
Still, the criticism has chipped away at the army's reputation domestically, and it means this transition is particularly volatile, with higher than usual stakes for the country's fragile democracy, according to analysts.
"It's such a massive event because the army has inordinate powers in Pakistan," said Mosharraf Zaidi, a senior fellow and founder at Islamabad-based think tank Tabadlab.
"There isn't really a huge disparity over how Pakistan should conduct its relations with the rest of the world," continued Zaidi, who expects foreign policy and how the country handles its strained relationship with neighbouring India to remain stable under the new chief. Domestic politics, however, are another matter.
"The disagreements are all about who should run Pakistan," he told CBC News.
"So the biggest question to the new army chief will be: should the military withdraw significantly from civilian affairs, or should it double down and continue to try and broker the peace between warring political factions such as Imran Khan and the current administration."
Outgoing chief insists army won't meddle
Munir, the new head of the army, is the most senior ranking general aside from the one he is replacing.
He formerly served as the head of Pakistan's intelligence wing, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), but was removed as ISI chief in 2019 after clashing with Khan, then the prime minister.
Pakistan's military, with its outsized influence, has seized power and imposed martial law three times since the country gained independence 75 years ago. Even when civilian governments are in power, the army is widely assumed to be manipulating politics behind the scenes.
In his final public speech earlier this week, outgoing army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa acknowledged that the army's "unconstitutional" and decades-long interference in politics has led to increased criticism.
Still, Bajwa insisted the army had chosen in February of this year to no longer meddle in Pakistani politics, and he stated that senior military leaders were "strictly adamant" that the policy of non-interference would remain going forward.
Experts, though, are highly skeptical.
Experts predict political instability
"Many will find that difficult to believe because ultimately, the reason that Khan lost power in April is that he had fallen out with the military," said Madiha Afzal, a fellow in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings Institute in Washington D.C., in an email to CBC News.
"The outlook for Pakistan is political instability until the next election, whenever it is held."
Khan would like elections to be held immediately, as he accuses his political opponents of corruption and elitism. The current government is refusing to bend from its intention to hold elections as scheduled, no earlier than August 2023.
"The government has lost political capital over the last seven months and is hoping to regain it before the next election through some kind of an economic turnaround, which requires time," Afzal said.
That loss of political capital has been hammered home by the passionate droves of supporters that Khan commands.
"This protest is continuing," one supporter, Malik Qasim Shehzad, told Reuters earlier this month. "God willing, it will continue until Khan's legitimate demands are met."
Zaidi sees Khan as the most popular politician in Pakistan, though he believes support for the leader is lower than his base would like to think.
"There's no demographic in the country within which he doesn't enjoy support," Zaidi said. "He is a nationally popular leader in a way that, really, Pakistan hasn't had in a while."
An assassination attempt that saw Khan shot in the foot in early November forced him away from what his supporters call his "real freedom" rally for several weeks while he recovered.
The former leader is now returning just as the army chief is set to take over.
Analysts see more instability on the horizon.
According to Zaidi, the country "will continue to muddle along and lurch from one economic and political crisis to the next."