Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Support for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Disappears at the Polls

Salman Masood has a story in today's paper about Pakistan's election victor, Nawaz Sharif, visiting his humbled opponent Imran Khan in the hospital. Khan is recovering from a broken back he suffered on the campaign trail. Sharif is riding high; his Pakistan Muslim League-N party surpassed expectations. He can afford to be gracious. The boisterous support for Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party evaporated at the polls. Charges of vote-rigging are being bandied about. And while I'm sure there is some substance to them, the underlying reality is that politics is a grubby affair. We like soaring rhetoric and big pictures; but when it comes time to vote, fear and hate are in the booth with the ballot. Khan's electrifying rallies -- like Nader's in 2000 -- didn't translate to a large percentage of the vote.

What troubles me about a Sharif-led government comes towards the end of yesterday's story by Declan Walsh -- the outsize influence of Saudi Arabia:
But in foreign policy, Mr. Sharif has another source of support: his close relationship with Saudi Arabia, where he whiled away his exile. King Abdullah helped broker Mr. Sharif’s return to Pakistan in 2007, and Mr. Sharif maintains close ties with Riyadh. That relationship, although discreet, could provide an alternative source of economic aid, as well as a powerful ally.
I'm not a big fan of the Persian Gulf monarchies and their deep-pocketed support for the global export of the Wahhabi movement.

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