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The latest Indo-Pak conflict: A true test of leadership for Imran Khan

MenInG

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He has seen many tricky situations in his years as a cricketer, then fought an epic political battle to win an election and now needs to confront a much more serious crisis.

The latest Indo-Pak crisis could well be the truest test of his capabilities as a leader of a nation but will he succeed?
 
Both countries will portray as a victory for themselves, so that shouldn't be an issue for him
 
You have to feel sorry for IK. The man has worked so hard to change the lives of his people. All he wants is a good peaceful life for them and now India is warmongering.

I think he will do the right thing but ensuring the lives of people in Pakistan are protected and an enemy is given a strong military response without it leading to all out war.
 
Unfortunately you need two hands to clap.

No matter how great you are as a leader, your constant begging for peace will be seen as a weakness in today’s ugly world of social media, twitter trollers etc.
 
i would say thank God its not pmln in power, otherwise nawaz would have done anything to ensure an elections win for his buddy... with IK, you know the best interest of Pakistan will be put forth
 
i would say thank God its not pmln in power, otherwise nawaz would have done anything to ensure an elections win for his buddy... with IK, you know the best interest of Pakistan will be put forth
He knows Pak cannot sustain a war with India economically, militarily and diplomatically..yet at the same time he is not in a position to dictate terms to the Army..they won't listen to him if he wants peace..
 
i would say thank God its not pmln in power, otherwise nawaz would have done anything to ensure an elections win for his buddy... with IK, you know the best interest of Pakistan will be put forth

Nawaz has nothing to tell. When it's about foreign affairs or defence Pak army doesn't let itself get overrun by crooks.

Nawaz tried twice to become the supreme ruler of Pak and failed both times.

Pak army has it tough but will not let Pakistan slip away.
 
He knows Pak cannot sustain a war with India economically, militarily and diplomatically..yet at the same time he is not in a position to dictate terms to the Army..they won't listen to him if he wants peace..

Come try to enter Pakistan again.
 
So far he has done exceptionally well.

Went on national TV to not only address people of Pakistan but India also

Asked them to provide evidence and he will make sure if anyone from Pakistan is involved will be dealt with.

Obviously India couldn’t because there isn’t any and didn’t want to because that would just defuse the situation, wouldnt help Modi’s cause.

Also provided clear message to the radicalized extremists nationalists Hindu government, any cross border activity will have retaliation.

What else do you expect from a true leader who promotes peace first and try to solve issues with talks but if the enemy attacks then gave an appropriate response to a PM who started a war to get re-elected.

Another thing India has failed to understand, he isn’t Nawas Sharif or Zardari where you can bully him, particularly a PM of a nation who uses hate, ignorance, and radicalized religious view to justify his cause to re-elect.
 
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Despite the political commentary indicating that Imran won with the support of the army, Imran was successful in portraying that Civilian government is in charge. I was very impressed with his speech asking for a proof. Seemed honest and the speech itself wasn't the usual run of the mill denial. But this incident brings army to the fore of Pakistani politics again. It is critical for him to show his strength while keeping the army at Bay. Add to this the financial strife Pak is facing and the brazen threat from India. These are unprecedented events for a new leader.
 
Modi is not even fit to shine shoes of Imran Khan. Imran has already handled the last two weeks with more sanity, dignity, and maturity than Modi will ever come close to.
 
IK should go on TV and make transparent any so called evidence India has shared from 2008 onwards. Dud ka dud paani ka paani.
 
No matter what IK can't do any worse then Nawaz or Zardari. He has done the right thing by not holding the military back.
 
I’m staying out of taking sides - I see severe errors on both sides.

What I will say is this: I’m a psychiatrist who followed Imran Khan’s cricket career closely from 1977 to 1992.

It’s obvious that he doesn’t back down and that he will always stare down the other side - consider how his Pakistan team resisted the overwhelming force of the West Indies from 1986-1990 across three massive Test series.

I can’t imagine that Modi would imagine that the “surgical strike” gambit would work against Imran Khan.
 
Imran Khan's speeches and his statements vs the what Modi is saying makes me feel that we are lucky to have IK leading us
 
With India tensions simmering, is Imran Khan ready for his first big political test as Pakistan's Prime Minister?

Pakistani cricket star-turned-politician and head of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan gestures as he delivers a speech during a political campaign rally in July 21, 2018.

(CNN)During Pakistan's national election campaign last year, Imran Khan was dismissed by detractors as a political lightweight and foreign policy novice who relied on populism and deference to the country's influential military for support.

Now, just over six months into his role as Prime Minister, those claims are being tested, as Khan finds his country closer to war with its nuclear-armed neighbor, India, than at any point in the past 20 years.

The crisis began earlier this month when a suicide car bomb attack in Pulwama, in Indian-administered Kashmir, killed 40 Indian paramilitary soldiers.

India blamed the attack on a Pakistan-based militant group, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM),and said Pakistan itself had a"direct hand" in it.

Tensions escalated even more this week, with an Indian airstrike on Pakistani soil, followed by retaliatory measures by Pakistani forces that resulted in the capture of an Indian pilot.

Michael Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the US-based Wilson Center, says the crisis will likely give Khan's popularity a boost.

"In Pakistan there's nothing like aggression from India to rally the people," he said. "The fact that Pakistan had India come into the country to stage these airstrikes, it's an embarrassment for the military. But the entire country will rally round Imran Khan to support him."

However, Kugelman said this is a political test for Khan, who formed his own party 23 years ago.

"He certainly is a neophyte, he has no experience as a national leader, he's been a politician for a number of years but hasn't been in a position of national power," he added.

A speech the Pakistani leader gave Wednesday, in which he pledged to return the captured pilot and advocated dialogue over further escalation, has cooled heads and shown Khan has more control of the narrative than some may have expected.

"This is a real test. Domestically, it's the first crisis of his administration," said Madiha Afzal, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC. "(However) I feel that he is passing the test right now. I'm seeing reactions from people who may otherwise be critical are glowing about how he is handling things."

She said that Pakistanis generally felt Khan had acted in a "measured" way -- which could ultimately open the door "for both parties to sit down."

"Now the ball is in (India Prime Minister Narendra) Modi's court. (Khan) says Pakistan is done -- it would take further action from India to re-escalate (violence)."

Pakistan watchers are also wary of the influence the military holds over the Khan government's foreign policy.
"We know that it is the military in the driving seat -- Khan is on board and is the public face," Afzal said.
It is an age-old problem in Pakistani politics, and one that has previously led the country down more aggressive paths.
"(The military is) pro-conflict. After 1971, the (last) time that India struck inside Pakistan, it rubbed the Pakistani military's ego very badly," Ayesha Siddiqa, analyst and research associate at London's School of Oriental and African Studies South Asia Institute, told CNN. "What analysts are saying and writing now is that they're baying for blood."

"We've seen what has happened with previous Pakistani prime ministers who have not been supplicant to military -- they haven't been able to accomplish anything," Pakistan journalist Rafia Zakaria said.

"It's difficult to tell if it's motivated by Machiavellian politics of the state, if he's somehow beholden to (the military) or he looks at Pakistani history and says, 'If I want to govern, this relationship is primary and I have to make it work'."
Non-state actors

Siddiqa says JeM, the terror group India accused of the deadly attack on troops in India-controlled Kashmir, now seems missing from the conversation.

"Currently it's very bilateral, no one is taking about what to do with the non-state actors," she said.

So what happens if Khan breaks with the army's policy of not overtly targeting militant groups? Afzal says the Prime Minister is stuck between a rock and a hard place.

"There's a sense that Pakistan may take some steps" to confront Pakistan-based militant groups, she said.

"If Modi accepts Khan's effort to engage in talks, (and) asks Khan to remove JeM entirely, at that point the military and he may not be on the same page. And that will be a test of his relationship with the military."

Zakaria added that Pakistanis "don't want war at all -- they're really quite tired of it."

The country has seen "anguish on every level," she said, including the massacre of more than schoolchildren in an army boarding school in 2014, and is "not quite as infatuated with extremism as they were 10 years ago."

http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/s...lict-A-true-test-of-leadership-for-Imran-Khan
 
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He may have good intentions and might want peace but this thread is irrelevant as he doesn't have the power to take decisions on Indo-Pak conflict.
 
He may have good intentions and might want peace but this thread is irrelevant as he doesn't have the power to take decisions on Indo-Pak conflict.

Neither does Indian government. Those sitting in Nagpur call the shots. Everyone knows it.
 
Neither does Indian government. Those sitting in Nagpur call the shots. Everyone knows it.

Yes indeed if Indians think that their govt & democracy is stronger than their military establishment then are the most naive peoples in world.
 
Yes indeed if Indians think that their govt & democracy is stronger than their military establishment then are the most naive peoples in world.

You can see the clear difference in the attitude and responses from military when our govt changed. Thats because govt has the ultimate say and not the military. Our Govt might think about vote bank before taking the decisions but they do take the decisions and not our military
 
You can see the clear difference in the attitude and responses from military when our govt changed. Thats because govt has the ultimate say and not the military. Our Govt might think about vote bank before taking the decisions but they do take the decisions and not our military

Can you plz elaborate that change in army? Or are you are pointing towards increase in killing of Kashmiris.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pakistan released the Indian pilot it had captured, capping a humiliating episode for India and a surreal week for him. <a href="https://t.co/pSlmtFIYIw">https://t.co/pSlmtFIYIw</a></p>— The New York Times (@nytimes) <a href="https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1101527544103399425?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 1, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pakistan released the Indian pilot it had captured, capping a humiliating episode for India and a surreal week for him. <a href="https://t.co/pSlmtFIYIw">https://t.co/pSlmtFIYIw</a></p>— The New York Times (@nytimes) <a href="https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1101527544103399425?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 1, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Very good. But....

8 Pakistanis killed by shelling since release. Great work by all the pacifists and IK!
 
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