Thursday, August 10, 2023

Did US ask for Imran Khan’s removal as Pakistan PM after he visited Russia?


al Jazeera:

Did US ask for Imran Khan’s removal as Pakistan PM after he visited Russia?


The Intercept report cites an alleged ‘cypher’ that shows a top US official told a Pakistani diplomat ‘all will be forgiven’ if Khan is sacked.



Khan was sacked from power in April 2022 after he lost a no-confidence vote in parliament [File: K M Chaudary/AP]
By Abid Hussain
Published On 10 Aug 202310 Aug 2023



Islamabad, Pakistan – A United States-based news outlet has published what it claims to be the details of a diplomatic “cypher” – or a secret cable – that suggests the US administration wanted to remove former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan from power last year.

Khan was sacked from power in April 2022 after he lost a no-confidence vote in parliament. He alleged he knew of the “cypher” while he was in office which, according to him, proved the US hatched a conspiracy with the help of his political opponents and the Pakistani military to remove him.

He later made a U-turn, saying he wants good relations with the US, but continued to blame his successor Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the military for orchestrating his removal.

Khan is currently serving a three-year sentence and has been barred from politics for five years after he was convicted of corruption charges by a court in the capital Islamabad last week. He denies the charges and says the action against him is aimed at stopping him from contesting elections, expected later this year.


Is this the end of Imran Khan's political career?

On Wednesday, The Intercept news website published purported details of a conversation between Pakistan’s then-ambassador to the US, Asad Majeed, and Donald Lu, the Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, on March 7 last year.

The conversation, according to the report, took place less than two weeks after Khan visited Moscow on February 24, the day Russia invaded Ukraine.

In the meeting, Lu reportedly told Majeed the US and Europe were “quite concerned” about Khan visiting Russia and Pakistan taking an “aggressively neutral position” on the Ukraine war.

“I think if a no-confidence vote against the prime minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington because the Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the prime minister. Otherwise, I think it will be tough going ahead,” Lu is alleged to have told Majeed, who sent the details of the conversation in the “cypher” to Islamabad.

“One month after the meeting with US officials documented in the leaked Pakistani government document, a no-confidence vote was held in Parliament, leading to Khan’s removal from power,” said The Intercept.

US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller on Wednesday said the comments reported in The Intercept do not show the US taking a position on who should be Pakistan’s leader, adding that the US had publicly and privately expressed its concern regarding Khan’s visit to Russia.

“But as the former Pakistani ambassador to the United States himself has stated, the allegations that the United States has interfered in internal decisions about the leadership of Pakistan are false. As we have stated, they are false. They have always been false, and they remain false,” Miller said.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry has not issued any statement on The Intercept’s report.

Rana Sanaullah, Pakistan’s interior minister until the parliament was dissolved late on Wednesday, dismissed the report in an overnight post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“Though there is nothing new in this story, the investigation needs to be held to establish the authenticity of the information or source document. Potentially, it is a very sinister, treacherous, and seditious act,” he wrote.

A former Pakistani diplomat told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity the contents of the alleged cypher can be seen as commenting on the country’s internal policies, but “there was nothing beyond that”.

“The tone and tenor of the conversation recorded in the cypher took me by surprise, but I don’t think there was anything more to it, in context of the alleged conspiracy,” he said.

But Raoof Hasan, spokesman for Khan’s Pakistan Tahreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, said the Intercept report validates the former prime minister’s stance since his removal.

“When the government received the cypher, Khan did the right thing as he took it to the National Security Committee [NSC], in which it was unanimously agreed that it amounted to blatant interference in Pakistan’s internal affairs and was entirely unacceptable,” Hasan told Al Jazeera.

The PTI spokesman said the Sharif government also held an NSC meeting to discuss the cypher matter, where the previous decision of the committee was endorsed.

“The new government, led by Shehbaz Sharif, also conducted their own meeting with the NSC and they approved the decisions taken under the PTI government and accepted that it was a grave interference in Pakistan’s internal affairs.”


4 comments:

  1. The reality is, today China has far , far, more influence in Pakistan than the USA.
    In fact, China has tentacles of power and influence throughout Pakistan politics and society .

    So, if a Pakistan PM got booted out due to foreign influence, who is the more likely party ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your geopolitics are imaginative and non-factual. Please don't mislead others. China is only interested in doing business with other countries and has always believe in non interference others' internal affairs. Your allegation is only fit for your uncle SAM.

      Delete
  2. China is Pakistan's largest trading partner, largest foreign investor....and very importantly largest single debtor.
    In Pakistan , what China wants, China gets.

    The Wankees, whatever influence they previously had in Pakistan, had already been sidelined years ago.

    So, if a Pakistan PM got booted out due to foreign influence, who is the more likely party ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wakakaka…

      Know nothing fart of the twisted kind!

      Pakistan has the changed of pmship as frequently as u wash yr knotted undie. During these many change of the pm, has China demands/requests any policies changes of the new administration?

      None! Zilch!

      So, what do China want in changing these Pakistan pm?

      For fun? To clear a boring political scene? To test his political influences?

      For yr minion kind of political understanding, "Pakistan PM got booted out due to foreign influence" is bcoz of China lasting friendship with Pakistan!

      Wow… Pakistanis r all China lovers! There r no yank myrmidons within the Pakistani political science. There r no interpersonal/political rivalries!

      Mfer, do stick within yr uncle Sam's dictation of what he says go - it's yr ultimate worth of political fart!

      Delete