http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-9-189665-The-garrison-state

The garrison state


Farooq Sulehria
<http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintWriterName.aspx?ID=9&URL=Farooq%20Sulehria>Saturday,
July 13, 2013

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The role of Pakistan's military in shaping state and polity has been the
subject of many scholarly works since the 1950s. Ishtiaq Ahmed's recently
published 'Pakistan-The Garrison State: Origins, Evolution, Consequences
(1947-2011)' approaches this issue from the perspective of international
relations.
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He extends the scope, though, because "the domination of the Pakistan
military cannot be explained merely as an effect of the Cold War; rather,
it is a peculiar evolution of historical and contemporaneous internal and
external factors, as well as religious-cultural and social dimensions".



As a result, the evolution of the country as a 'fortress of Islam' – a
description Gen Musharraf used in a televised speech in 2002 – is, in fact,
a delineation of the garrison state.



The beauty of Ishtiaq Ahmed's works is in his attempt to ground his
research in sound theoretical framework. In this case, he synthesises a
framework by combining the notion of the post-colonial state with Harold
Lasswell's concept of a garrison state. Viewing the 'fortress of Islam'
through such a theoretical prism, he is able to deconstruct the
'multi-layered connotations' this metaphor carries.



According to Ishtiaq, the metaphor 'fortress of Islam' was used to
"underline the Pakistan military's role as the core element in the
composition of a fortress". After all, a fortress "includes not only the
armed soldiers but also those who live inside it and perform multifarious
civilian tasks and functions and thus constitute a viable community".



What Benedict Anderson calls 'imagined communities' – a fashionable but
flawed theory – is in Pakistan's case "ipso facto, a garrison community,
vigilant and armed to defend and assert its independence, to thwart
aggression, and to carry out punitive actions against enemies".



In this regard, "the feeling of being beleaguered is imperative in order to
construct a strong and formidable fortress – a garrison". From the very
beginning, the establishment "staked its dominant position in Pakistani
society by prioritising security and defence" against real and imagined
foes.



Another important characteristic Ishtiaq attributes to the garrison is its
role as "an outpost of a state, kingdom, or empire". Contemporary garrison
states emerged "during the Cold War...as part of the global contest between
the United States and the Soviet Union".



In fact, it was Jinnah himself who set the ball rolling. To court the
Americans, he was the first to market Pakistan as an anti-communism
garrison. Ignored and rebuffed initially, the country's requests to rent
itself out as a US outpost in the fight against godless communism began to
bear fruit in earnest by the mid-fifties. However, this patronage by the US
had repercussions within Pakistan.



Pakistan's military began to emerge as a key political player. The changing
political realities found their first big expression in the form of the
first military coup, captained by Gen Ayub, in 1958. However, Washington
began to realise by the early 1960s that Pakistan was less interested in
countering communism, and that US patronage was being sought to fortify
itself against India.



Even if India was championing the cause of the Non-Aligned Movement,
Washington was not ready to annoy the country. Therefore, Pakistan was
armed against the Soviets. When Pakistan – in violation of stated
agreements – used the military might provided by the US against India in
1965, relations between Pakistan and the US were strained. Having developed
parasitic tendencies, Pakistan could not survive without a donor – and so
China was cultivated as a substitute.



Following the 1962 Sino-India war, China, in turn, needed Pakistan as a
satellite. Though Pak-China relations irked Washington initially, when the
US decided to court Beijing – driven by Cold War imperatives – Pakistan was
the preferred conduit. It was partly this role in mind that Nixon ordered
his (in)famous tilt during the 1971 war.



While semi-official narratives cast Washington's role during 1971 in a bad
light, Ishtiaq Ahmed highlights Pakistan's self-inflicted wounds instead of
blaming the US or China for Pakistan's dismemberment. Curiously, Sheikh
Mujib comes across as a reconciliatory leader – ready to work with the
army. Ishtiaq also shows that the military action was planned long before
it was launched in March 1971.



According to Ishtiaq, in fact, the Yahya-Mujib-Bhutto meet in March 1971 in
Dhaka was a camouflage. This indeed is a revealing assertion. Following the
debacle in East Pakistan, the Pakistan Army was in crisis. Bhutto rescued
it, and then tried to dominate it. In a way, he dug his own grave with a
khaki spade, paving the way for the Zia dictatorship.



Initially, the Zia regime was given a cold shoulder by Washington.
Pakistan, however, is lucky to have been blessed with a strategic location
that cannot be ignored by world powers. Consequently, Washington began to
cosy up to Pakistan once the Afghan jihad began in earnest. On the one
hand, the Afghan jihad exacerbated Pakistan's perennial concern regarding
its Islamised identity, while on the other, it helped Pakistan acquire
Saudi Arabia as another external donor. The latter, in turn, wanted to
contain Iranian influence.



Consequently, Islamisation under the Zia rule became intense, with dire
consequences for women, unions and religious and ethnic minorities. Ishtiaq
has brilliantly documented the brutalities suffered by women and minorities
as a result of the garrison state's ‘Islamisation’. The garrison state has
cost its people their basic rights, with budget allocations for education,
health and other basics embarrassingly low.



Once the Afghan jihad was over, Pakistan lost its relevance. Moreover, its
adventures in the name of strategic depth and nuclear ambitions further
turned it into an international pariah state. Thanks to 9/11, Al-Qaeda
revived the country's strategic value for Washington. However, post-9/11
Pakistan – driven by its dependency on Washington – has been running with
the militant hare and hunting with the US hound. The Taliban curse is a
consequence of this contradictory and self-defeating policy. How long will
it go on?



"Pakistan can continue as a post-colonial garrison state as long as the
donors are willing to provide it with the required resources and it can
convince or coerce its population that the struggle for survival
necessitates prioritisation of the allocation of scarce resources to
security and defence", says Ishtiaq (p.24).



One of the strengths of Ishtiaq Ahmed's work is his skill to use oral
history to fill gaps. His interaction with army generals, particularly Gen
Musharraf, offers interesting insights.



The writer is a freelance contributor.



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