Because the civilian side has no apparent stake in challenging and destabilizing India, a genuine democracy with civilian leaders at the helm of the state will radically transform the geopolitics of the sub-continent. This belief is so intoxicating that even the shrewd Indira Gandhi succumbed to the image of an internal transformation that Bhutto represented and strategically projected after 1971.
What if we introduce a little more complexity into the neat civil-military cleavage that underlies Indian imagery? First, let us not forget that it was Jinnah who was the first civilian leader who presided over the Kashmir invasion. Second, Pakistan’s tryst with democracy has always been a more complicated affair. Zulfikar Bhutto’s Pakistan is the closest we can trace to a genuine civilian advantage over the military structure. The circumstances, however, were unique. The Pakistan army had been thoroughly discredited after the 1971 war. And yet, despite such extraordinary circumstances, India’s quest to re-arrange the decks within Pakistan had little impact at Simla or after.