Source: LUBP
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The farce of calling Nawaz Sharif anti-establishment
Is the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
Is the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
Is the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
Is the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
Is the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
s the Saudi-backed Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, who owns 95% of Pakistani judges along with a powerful section of media, is an ally of TTP and ASWJ, anti-establishment? At best, the current power struggle between Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif (or between ISI and Geo) may be described as domestic dispute between two powerful sections of establishment.
Those Pakistani liberals (many of them working or writing for Jang Group but also certain other pseudo-liberals) who are championing the recent situation in Pakistan as a struggle between the “anti-establishment” Nawaz Sharif and the Army are way off the objective analysis. If anything, the Saudi-backed pro-Taliban, pro-JuD, pro-ASWJ Nawaz Sharif has actually set back the idea of civilian supremacy with his rash attempt to concentrate power in his coterie of cronies.
– See more at: http://lubpak.com/archives/313338#sthash.QDriGvaK.dpuf
Categories: Asia
