He had earlier refused to face the vote and had dissolved the assembly, but the court declared his actions illegal. Khan refused to accept the rules of the National Assembly, tried to avoid the decision of the highest court of the country and retreated only a few minutes before the midnight deadline imposed by the court. It turned a commonplace parliamentary process into a thrilling thriller. He behaved like a child who realizes for the first time that other children also have birthdays. Because he believed that if he was not the person in charge of the house, he might as well burn it. In his next speech to the nation on April 8, Khan reiterated his claim that it was the United States that wanted him out. asked the people if they wanted to be a free nation or American slaves. The US would never do that in India, he said. Here he jumped, he drowned. As a cricketer, Khan has always been shy about expressing his feelings. Even in moments of glory, he offered half-hearted high fives and reluctant hugs with two blows. But when he became prime minister, he learned to move. And he was very angry. As he approached 70, he transformed into that angry young man who passionately expresses one contradictory sentence after another. For more than two decades, Khan has been more extreme in Pakistani politics, more popular in the elegant London community than Pakistani voters. a sports celebrity who wanted to become the savior king. To get the job of his dreams, he got rid of his idealism. Before coming to power, he said he would rather die than go to the IMF for a loan. a few months after he did, he went begging to the institution. He was surrounded by politicians who claimed to be the root cause of Pakistan’s problems. As prime minister, Khan avoided dealing with the country’s structural problems, instead making a moral crusade because in his youth he had lived a life of sin in the West and now not only was he atoned for it, but he wanted the nation to become a spiritual father. . In his head was not only the leader of Pakistan but also the leader of the ummah (Muslim community) who can also do 60 pushups on the go. Last month he gave a lecture to Muslim foreign ministers on how porn is responsible for increasing divorce rates. He is in his third marriage. While in opposition, he was concentrated on forging Pakistani rulers on his vital issues of corruption and nepotism. In power he seemed restless and distracted, as if he wanted to be on the road again. He rarely came to parliament, claiming he could not sit with thieves and robbers. Faced with a vote of no confidence, Khan waited for the army to save him. When he came to power, the army celebrated his rise and protected him from his political opponents. There was a strong sense within the armed forces that they had been used, abused and abandoned by the Americans in the “war on terror” of the latter. In Khan they saw a man who felt comfortable dealing with the west and always on his own terms. But that did not last. When Khan fell, it was not because he failed to surrender, it was because he fell against the army. Hahn was deeply offended when he wanted his own man to continue as head of the Interdepartmental Intelligence Service. Any political prime minister who interferes in the military or in the way he wants to run the country’s defense policy is considered an enemy. As soon as the army withdrew its support, the opposition parties moved for the assassination. Why does not Khan blame the army for its expulsion? Behind his sad face, there is a pragmatist at work. His party members are boiling in the army because he left them, but Khan himself does not want to burn the bridge that may one day bring him back to office. Khan came to power convincing voters that he was the only pure politician around, that everyone else was corrupt. Now everyone who opposes him is not only corrupt, but also a traitor and an American puppet. Khan never seemed comfortable in office and now he has been sent back on the road where he can start his crusade to save the country from the beginning.