A Smart Coup: Why  One Last Military Intervention In 

 
…  But we are nowhere near that right now. Gen. Kayani certainly has no such thing  in mind according to people who have met him.
By AHMED QURAISHI
Monday, 15 February 2010.
With this catchy line, Dr. Farrukh Saleem  began his brief and fascinating account  of a meeting with General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
On Feb. 10, 2010, Gen. Kayani met a group of  Pakistani commentators and security analysts. The briefing was the third since  the military began asserting 
On January 28 and 29, Gen. Kayani told NATO  commanders in 
Earlier, he told Adm. Mike Mullen, Gen. David  Petraeus, and Gen. Stanley McChrystal that instead of worrying about appeasing 
This is a major development in the eight-year  US-led war in 
At one point, Mr. Saleem makes an interesting  observation about Gen. Kayani’s cool demeanor.
“Yes, he has the capacity for abstract  thought, cold rationality and coarse creativity - all in one,” he says. “And  yet he inhales reconstituted tobacco. Yes, he uses a filter and a cigarette  holder. Yes, he never takes deep puffs and, yes, he only consumes half a  cigarette at a time.”
At another point, Mr. Saleem makes an  interesting use of pun. Talking about the general’s smoking habits, he says the  following: ‘He knows that some of the things that he is doing are wrong, but  still won't give them up.’
Probably it’s a polite reference to the  conspiracy theories that fill the 
But the best part of his column  in The News International was this concluding paragraph:
“I can tell you that  I came back both proud but with a painful realisation; proud knowing that our  legions are being led by strategic minds and sad to have discovered the much  too visible an intellectual gap between our top political brains in 
  
  Could it be that the army rules not through the barrel of a gun but because of  their intellectual superiority? Could it be that the army rules because our  politicians have failed to institutionalize politics? Could it be that the army  rules because our political parties do not transcend individual human  intentions? Could it be that the army rules because it has structures,  mechanisms of social order along with strategic thinking?”
In essence, Mr.  Saleem hit at the core reason why the Pakistani military intervenes every time  politicians lead the nation to a dead end. 
Most importantly,  the above reasoning answers even a more important question: Why the military  mounts successful interventions and why the politicians can’t muster the moral  authority to resist them. 
Pakistani  politicians remain a chaotic, undisciplined and shortsighted bunch. Their  parties are messy and loose groupings of special interests in their crudest  form. Almost all of them have lifetime leaders who never give way to fresh  blood. And they are not public institutions but private, family-owned affairs. 
Since the return to  democracy in 
The best place in 
NDU officials, both  civilian and military, have one observation that has been constant during the  past eight years of national security workshops: Military officers, businessmen,  social activists and journalists often show the best performance. Politicians  come last. Most can’t even draft a single-page policy brief, or work with a  PowerPoint presentation. 
In essence, middle  class Pakistanis – military officers, businessmen, social activists and  journalists – fair better than the politicians, mostly a feudal landowning  elite.
This gets blurry  sometimes, but you get the general idea.
And middle class  Pakistanis can’t make it to political parties, let alone to the federal and  regional parliaments and governments. 
Elections might  change this, but certainly not in the foreseeable future. And 
If the national  deadlock continues with mounting domestic instability due to massive corruption  and mismanagement by our politicians, the military may have to contend with one  last intervention. It would be the last because if the military failed this  time to help set 
If it comes to a  military-led intervention, both military officers and politicians will have to  stay out of actual power. The army chief may not become a chief executive. The  military might have to look into a new concept called the ‘Smart Coup’, where  the military can bring capable Pakistanis to power with a firm executable plan  of reform over five years, or more, fully backed by the military.  There may  not be time to put the plan to vote. It will have to be implemented. 
This would be the  absolute last option. But we are nowhere near that right now. Gen. Kayani  certainly has no such thing in mind according to people who have met him. He  wants democracy to work for the time being and he has proven this by resisting  several opportunities to intervene over the past two years. 
Books on political  science and theory in 
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