The man who sold Pakistan

This time amirul momineen would be mullah radio.

The man who sold Pakistan - DAWN.COM

WE’RE already in the middle of it, so why not try and figure out the likely small print. Here’s an idea for the draft agreement:

“The Federal Government shall be under an obligation to take steps to enforce the Shariah, to establish salat, to administer zakat, to promote amr bil ma’roof and nahi anil munkar (to prescribe what is right and to forbid what is wrong), to eradicate corruption at all levels and to provide substantial socio-economic justice, in accordance with the principles of Islam, as laid down in the Holy Quran and Sunnah.”

Sound familiar? It should. That’s the operational part of the 15th Amendment that never was.

If you’re the conspiratorial or cynical sort, here’s a theory for the ages: the once-upon-a-time would-be amirul momineen is about to pull off the greatest political bait-and-switch this country, or perhaps any country, has ever seen.

Nawazul Sharif the amirul momineen. And this time, no one would see it coming — or even blame him for wanting it. It’s the TTP, stupid.

If only. If only that were true. The heart almost aches for it to be true. Anything but the tawdriness and ugliness of protecting Punjab over and above everything else. Amirul momineen would at least suggest a higher purpose.

No, there’s another villain in this piece. Imran Khan. Taliban Khan. The man who smashed this country on the rocks of extremism.

Oh, here we go again, the Khanistas will bleat. Blame Imran for everything. If a dog crosses a road, blame Imran. It’s not even Imran’s government, they will yell. He’s in charge of nothing.

All true. But that still doesn’t make him any less of a villain. In fact, precisely because he is in charge of nothing, he has the freedom to drag us all to ruin.

(KP is a bit prize that the PTI doesn’t even pretend to care about much; it’s Punjab the party really craves.)

The problem with Khan, the problem for all of us, is as simple as it’s ugly: he’s mainstreamed extremism.

Made it sexy, dressed it up, foisted it off on an audience that didn’t really understand what he is selling or why; packaged it as the little blue pill that will make all our troubles go away.

Without Khan, the right-wing wouldn’t disappear. Without Khan, there would still be the Taliban. Without Khan, there’d still be plenty of merchants of hate, bigotry and xenophobia. Without Khan, there’d still be a bunch of apologists.

But without Khan, none of that wouldn’t be as mainstream as it is with Taliban Khan running around.

Let’s play a little game. Imagine there was no Imran. No Taliban Khan on the national stage, no handsome mug and mischievous eyes plastered all over the country and shipped inside every TV. There’s just Zia and his progeny.

So, the usual is playing out. The Taliban are blowing up stuff and themselves, kidnapping a few here and there, issuing their usual threats of taking over the country, etc, etc. Par for the course, really.

Nobody really knows what to do about it. The boys are still playing their games. The pols too weak and scared. The public confused.

Then in walk the original apologists, the political extension of the extremist set. The usual chappies: Fazlu, Jamaatis, Sandwich, et al. And throw in some of the latter-day saints, like Burqa Avenger, aka Abdul Aziz.

And they all have the same message: Taliban misunderstood; all they need is some love; all we — Pakistan — need is some Islam; and all will be good. And boo to the Americans and their evil plans.

Folk listen for a bit, folk yawn, folk go back to their business and have some chai and samosas and laugh about it all.

Those goofy chaps, folk tell themselves, always taking themselves so seriously and pretending nobody knows what they’re all about.

Extremism stays where it belongs: on the margins. Because there’s no one credible to sell it to the centre and the mainstream.

Until Imran. Taliban Khan’s greatest gift is his power of simplification.

Simplification allows you to obfuscate. And obfuscation sells to helluva lot more people than the direct approach — if what you’re selling is the right-wing.

So Taliban Khan arrives with his simplistic formulae. Step one: Pakistan is broken, but Pakistan can be fixed, if only we had a more honest, more patriotic ruling class. Step two: Pakistan doesn’t have a more honest, more patriotic ruling class because they’re corrupt and beholden to outside interests. Step three: Anything that goes wrong inside Pakistan is because of the corrupt, unpatriotic ruling class. Step four: Taliban rose from among the people, a people oppressed by a corrupt and unpatriotic ruling class.

Step five: Taliban are misunderstood, and deliberately so by a corrupt and unpatriotic ruling class that is beholden to self-interest and outside powers.

See how that works?

It mainstreams hate, bigotry and xenophobia without ever sounding hateful, bigoted or xenophobic. It’s all couched in the language of understanding and pain and transferring blame.

And boy, has it sold. That handsome mug, those plaintive eyes, that soft, colloquial Urdu, those open hands — an irresistible package hawking irresistible simplicities.

And just like that, it’s mainstream. Your high-school kid, your average housewife, your gent on a charpai, your trousered and shirted office 9-to-5-er, every one of them a little Khanista.

Drinking from the fountain of refreshing truth, oblivious to its source. Lapping up Imran. Lapping up Taliban Khan, the man who sold Pakistan.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

I'll just add my two cents.

Nawaz Sharif and Zardari who have stashed billions in banks around the world have not sold Pakistan, and the guy who has given the country Shaukat Khanum and Namal has sold the country. The guys who have ruled the country for most of the democratic period during the past 4 decades have not sold the country and the guy who has got a government in one province seven months ago has sold the country. I feel these kind of articles are just smokescreens to obscure the reality. Flawed logic!

Cyril has been served a legal notice by PTI. Hopefully he will prove in court that 'Taliban Khan' has sold the country to the taliban.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

How many of these pseudo-intellectuals the PTI will take to courts? If you see groups-wise, Dawn and Jang is full of anti-dialogue crusaders. Others have a mix both. Even if talks succeed and there is peace in the country, the crusaders will says it's a sham peace and Pakistan will need to conduct an operation a 1000 years later, so why not now?

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

I know, but still its going too far now. These journalists know that they can defame anyone and get away with it...its strange that these journalists have never used this kind of language against Zardari and NS who have literally destroyed the country.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

This is all getting so moronically personal. There's not a hint of doubt about that. It's no longer about Pakistan, no longer about peace, no longer about Taliban, it's now all about venting vile, opportunistic and passionately personally hate for Imran Khan. The agenda is crystal clear, and I do hope these two penny journalists get their faces whacked with heavy law suits. In a war like situation, if you have the nerve to call an elected figure and a chair of second largets party a 'Taliban', then your sorry self better have something to say as back up in the court room as well. Yes, how about evidence to prove he is behind all the violence in Pakistan; prove it that PTI has a miltant wing like other so called liberal parties; prove it that his party has clear political and strategic links with Taliban a la PMLN and LEJ, SSP etc; come with evidence to prove he is a Saudi wonder boy.

You know you have a problem in Pakistan when fascists who call themselves Pakistani 'liberals' hate Imran more than Taliban! PTI must take a serious and proactive approach against such damaging accusations. Such rubbish articles don't even worth the paper they're written on. How sad.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

It provides an opportunity for everyone to see how the reins of media could be controlled. I will salute media strategy of the Sharifs for the remarkable wonders it has achieved. PML-N government is fully backed by the media and it is virtually allowed to remain unscathed come what may. On the other hand, PTI's media strategy, I would wonder if there is any, has flopped miserably. Imran personally has to jump in to attack or defend everything in the media, which shows that the party needs a mechanism of internal governance to monitor and spread party's footprints across the civil society as well as the media.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Easily the most rubbish 'news' websites out there. Total propaganda factories. I'm guilty of playing safe and posting their articles simply because Pakistanis seem to trust that website more than others.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Wrong! They are worth millions of dollars in 'FDA' in media industry.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

...And btw, Pakistanis must seriously rate their country so low if they think a man like Immie can easily sell it off.

The title is actually quite hilarious, if you like me, have appreciation for dark humour.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

If a title like "Shame on you, Mr. Khan" can go, why not this one? You cannot talk about standards and Pakistani media in the same breath.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Who on earth reads this rubbish? People in Pakistan (the ones I happen to know) can't even bothered to spare a minute to read such junk.

It's quite obvious how these websites write for NRP audience, who have the luxury to indulge in such ideological nit picking from the comforts of their war free home.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

These so called liberal journalists claim to be the biggest proponents of freedom of speech, but in reality they don't want to hear opposing voices. What discourse would be on this board if everyone starts propagating the same ideas? Are people allowed to have their opinions or these 'liberals' will decide? Another hypocrisy can be judged as they consider a military solution to FATA, but a peaceful one for Baluchistan. On Karachi they are quiet (as so called liberals are responsible for the mayhem there), although the deaths in that city would be at par with those killed elsewhere.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

"Main hath jorta hoon Punjab ko kuch na kaho-CM Punjab
^^ That was a deal breaker and thats why IK took initiative and sold Pakistan.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

This guy has completely lost his mind

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Killings in Karachi average more than what happens in the rest of the country. Strikes/mourning have become regular monthly events, costing the city in billions. Yet there is no voice asking MQM why no month can pass by without seeing a city-wide strike? Statements of even a third-tier MQM leader is treated like a godly revelation, getting as much prime-time of the media as the party wants. Yet the supra-gods of journalism dare not say a word against the sack-stitcher. There comrades are recorded live confessing to conducting paid interviews, yet no voice is raised against them. They operate from a sphere which simply does not fall in any category of moral, professional or ethical purview.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

I'm not a fan of IK's politics but this article is just ridiculous. All these hypothetical situations and assumptions just add up to all the conspiracy theories our nation is strangled with, right now. If they really want to put up something, do their investigation and quote it in the article that serves as a evidence otherwise mention it that its just your opinion, nothing more than that.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

I am surprised to see this piece ("of sh!t") on Dawn as column not as blog. The title of this piece is also sensational. Cyril is just attention-whoring with this. Looks like Cyril saab has been smoking some of that same afeem that Afeem F. Paratha uses before he writes his blog.

PTI is right to serve him a legal defamation notice.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Another lafafa journalist.. Oh by the way just read harpoon* Rasheed yesterday column...

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

Having met Cyril once or twice I agree with a lot he says. Is he a liberal? Yup. Is he against the Taliban? Yup. But doesn't change the fact that Imran has made being a Taliban sympathizer main stream. The only difference between him and Maulana Diesel or Sandwich is that he says it in politically correct terms in an English accent. And whatever your politics Imran Khan is a Taliban apologist. His reaction during the Church bombing in Peshawar was hilarious. He is exactly not what the province needs. The ANP now that is a party worthy to fight of the Taliban.

Imran Kha and his PTI are Taliban Lite.

Re: The man who sold Pakistan

He never said that Imran Khan is a part of the Taliban, he simply stated that it has become mainstream to sympathize with them because of Imran Khan.

Is that accurate? That's debatable, but I find it shocking that we're holding dialogue with people who openly reject the authority of the state, basically stating that if I have enough guns and conviction the government of Pakistan will have to deal with me. Yes, yes, what muddies up the water is the fact that the state itself is corrupt and incompetent, but are the Taliban really the answer? Can you really reason with people who are willing to butcher innocents to force their version of government upon everyone?

Imran Khan wanted talks, and we're getting them. He has no right to claim that the talks will be sabotaged because of "preconceived" ideas, because that's exactly what Israel does. At some point he has to clue in to the reality that dialogue with the Taliban can only go so far.