Egypt

In the euphoria of February’s ouster of long-ruling President Hosni Mubarak, the army was hailed as the country’s guardian and savior. But the military, spearheaded by the ominously named Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, has fast fallen out of favor among Egypt’s revolutionaries. Hundreds of dissidents languish in prison, while SCAF, led by Mubarak-era Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, has systematically imposed itself on post-Mubarak politics. Following landmark victories by Islamists in parliamentary elections, SCAF insists that an advisory council it appoints, not parliament, will be the major organ to shape Egypt’s new constitution.
READ: As Islamists Gain in Elections, a Power Struggle Begins
Pakistan

When it’s not playing a double-game in the war against al-Qaeda and the Taliban—Pakistan’s military intelligence agency, ISI, is an alleged abettor of extremist groups—it’s undermining the weak civilian democracy in Islamabad. Though fears of a coup following President Asif Zardari’s recent departure to Dubai for medical treatment seem unfounded, the military’s domineering role through decades of political turbulence in Pakistan—often buttressed by American support from afar—is well cataloged. In his latest column for TIME, Fareed Zakaria suggests that it’s high time the U.S. sheds its close ties with Pakistan’s top brass.













