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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Karachi bomb blast highlights Pakistani regimes political
crisis
By Vilani Peiris
20 June 2002
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The car bomb attack near the US consulate in Karachi last week
underlines the precarious political situation confronting Pakistans
military strongman General Pervez Musharraf. Under pressure from
the US he broke ties with the Taliban regime in Afghanistan and
now he must block armed Islamic militants from entering Indian
held Jammu and Kashmir. He faces growing opposition from the Islamic
fundamentalist groups that have had close ties to the Pakistani
military.
The explosion in Karachi, which killed 11 people and injured
at least 50 others, took place a day after US Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld left Islamabad. Rumsfeld insisted that Musharraf
crack down on Islamic groups opposed to Indian rule in Kashmir.
A million Indian and Pakistani soldiers along the border have
been on a state of high alert since last December when a group
of suspected Kashmiri separatists carried out an attack on the
Indian parliament building in New Delhi.
Last month, following an attack on an Indian army base in Jammu
and Kashmir, the Indian government of prime minister Atal Behari
Vaypayee ratchetted up tensions another notch, threatening to
launch military strikes against so-called training camps in Pakistani
territory. India accuses the Pakistani military of directly sponsoring
and organising the attacks inside Indiaa claim that Islamabad
denies. Both Rumsfeld and US Deputy Secretary of State Richard
Armitage met with Musharraf to demand that the Pakistani army
block Islamic militants from entering Indian held Kashmir.
Last week, New Delhi acknowledged a decline in what it terms
the infiltration of cross-border terrorists. But Musharrafs
actions have provoked widespread anger in Pakistan. Various Islamic
fundamentalist organisations, some with direct connections to
the armed groups active against Indian rule in Jammu and Kashmir,
are exploiting the situation.
A previously unknown organisation, Al Qanoon, claimed responsibility
for the bomb attack in Karachi. In a handwritten statement issued
to the press, it warned: America and its allies and its
lackey Pakistani rulers should prepare for more attacks.... [This]
bomb attack is just beginning of Al Qanoons jihadi (holy
war) operation in Pakistan.
Both the US and Pakistani administrations have immediately
seized on the terrorist attack to intensify police operations
in Pakistan. US President Bush warned that the US would continue
to hunt down those responsible. On Tuesday, the US reopened
its embassy in Pakistan and deployed a huge squad of 80 FBI agentsincluding
counter-terrorist operatives and SWAT team membersto assist
in the police investigation.
Since January there have been four attacks in Pakistan directed
against foreign nationals. Wall Street Journal correspondent
Daniel Pearl was kidnapped in January and later killed. On March
17, five people, including two Americans, died in an attack on
a Protestant church in Islamabad. On May 8, 15 people, including
11 French technicians, working at a submarine construction facility,
died in a bomb blast in Karachi.
On each occasion Washington has exploited the attack to add
to its substantial police and military presence inside Pakistan.
Significant numbers of US police, CIA agents and special forces
soldiers are now operating inside the country using the pretext
of Bushs global war against terrorism. While
the Bush administration insists that it is hunting down Al Qaeda
members who have fled from Afghanistan along with those responsible
for the terrorist attacks inside Pakistan, these operations increasingly
appear to be aimed at opponents of Musharraf and the US-backed
regime in Afghanistan.
Musharraf seized power in a military coup in 1999 from former
prime minister Nawaz Sharif after he bowed to US pressure and
stopped support for armed Islamic militants entrenched in the
strategic Kargil area of Jammu and Kashmir. Now he finds himself
under the same sort of fire from the Islamic fundamentalist organisations
to which he appealed just three years ago. The military has been
encouraging these elements over the preceding two decades.
Musharraf has attempted on several occasions to find support
among other political parties, including the Pakistan Peoples
Party (PPP) of Benazir Bhutto and the Pakistani Muslim League
(PML) of Nawaz Sharif. But he has been consistently rebuffed.
Bhutto recently published an open call in the British based Guardian
newspaper for Musharraf to be replaced.
Musharrafs anti-terrorist measures are aimed
not only against armed Islamic groups but his political opponents.
Last weekend police arrested three PML leadersRaja Zafarul
Haq, Syed Zafa Ali Shah and Siddiqul Farooqand are hunting
for a number of other party members. The three were initially
charged following a clash with police during a banned demonstration
in Rawalpindi last Friday. A court released them on bail. The
police then added a further charge under the countrys anti-terrorism
act and detained them again.
Among Islamic fundamentalist groups, Musharraf is perceived
as a traitor for abandoning armed Kashmiri groups that successive
Pakistani governments have declared to be freedom fighters.
At a meeting in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir,
attended by about 10,000 people, the leader of the extremist Jamiat-e-Islami,
Qazi Hussain Ahmed, warned his fighters would continue to cross
the Line of Control separating the Indian and Pakistani areas
of Kashmir.
The Pakistan based News reported that another Islamic
organisation, Muttahida Majlis Amal (MMA), recently held a conference
in Kashmir and issued a statement declaring: The Kashmir
jihad should continue.... The military government which had already
sold out Afghanistan must not do the same with Kashmir.
Last weekend conservative political and religious groups held
a meeting in Lahore attended by an estimated 15,000 to 20,000
supporters. Prominent Islamic leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman told
the crowd that Musharraf and the Pakistani army has sold
out Islam, jihad, Afghanistan and Kashmir.
At the same gathering, Qazi Hussain Ahmed declared: The
army should not follow the American agenda. We, the people of
Pakistan, want peace but not at the cost of our sovereignty. If
the situation requires us to fight along with our armed forces
[against India], we are prepared to do so. But we will not allow
the FBI and other US intelligence agencies to dictate terms to
us. They should pack up and leave.
Even among his closest supporters, there are signs that Musharraf
is losing support. Foreign Minister Abdul Sattar resigned last
Friday, despite the Pakistani presidents efforts to convince
him to stay on at least until national elections, due to be held
in October. A report in the Pakistan-based Herald last
week, about an unsuccessful attempt on Musharrafs life in
December, cited retired army general Talat Masood. He told the
newspaper: There are so many forces that have been unleashed
in the past months.... We are under pressure from all sides and
within.
Under siege and without any significant political base of his
own, Musharraf is heavily reliant on sections of the army and
state bureaucracy as well as on political and economic backing
from Washington. But the support from the Bush administration,
whose own intervention has exacerbated the Pakistani strongmans
isolation, is conditional. If Musharraf fails to meet Washingtons
growing string of demands, he could rapidly find himself without
any support at all.
The very fragility of Musharrafs grip on power is a potent
destabilising factor not only in Pakistan, but throughout the
region, under conditions in which any incident may become the
pretext for war between Pakistan and India.
See Also:
Danger of India-Pakistan war remains high
despite peace gestures
[13 June 2002]
US-Indian military ties: an incendiary
factor in an unstable region
[10 June 2002]
Tense military standoff between India
and Pakistan continues
[5 June 2002]
Bush speaks at West Point: from containment
to "rollback"
[4 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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