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Amid mounting political crisis
Pakistans military dictator survives assassination attempt
By Keith Jones
23 December 2003
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Pakistans military dictator, Pervez Musharraf, narrowly
escaped assassination December 14 when a bridge was almost levelled
by multiple bombs just seconds after his motorcade passed over
it. In a show of bravado, Musharraf has downplayed the seriousness
of the assassination attempt, but its sophistication strongly
suggests the involvement of elements within Pakistans military-intelligence
establishment.
No group has claimed responsibility for the assassination attempt,
which took place in a highly-policed section of Rawalpindi, the
twin-city of Pakistans capital. Five separate bombs, containing
hundreds of pounds of plastic explosive, were reportedly detonated
by remote control. Pakistani officials concede had his motorcade
not been equipped with a device that blocks out all radio signals
for a 200-meter radius Musharraf, who doubles as Pakistans
president and the chief of its armed services, would have in all
likelihood been killed. Because of the blocking device, the bombs
could only be detonated after Musharrafs motorcade had passed
over them.
Musharraf was quick to pin blame for the assassination attempt
on Islamic fundamentalist terrorists. Declared Musharraf, I
have been saying that the greatest danger to our nation is not
external; it is internal and comes from religious and sectarian
extremists, and this is a typical example of that.
That Islamic fundamentalist terrorists were party to the plot
to kill Musharraf is certainly possible. Under pressure from Washington,
Musharraf recently ordered a crackdown against Al Qaeda elements
said to be hiding in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. He has
also banned a number of Islamic fundamentalist groups with reputed
terrorist ties and has agreed to a border cease-fire with India,
which cuts across the Islamic fundamentalist-backed insurgency
in Indian-held Kashmir.
Pakistans military security establishment has long had
close ties to Islamic fundamentalist insurgents. During the Afghan
civil war, Pakistans Inter-Service Intelligence Agency (ISI)
served as the conduit for US funds to the Islamic fundamentalist
guerrilla forces. Pakistan supported the efforts of Islamic fundamentalists
to wrest the leadership of the insurgency in Indian-held Kashmir
from more secular nationalists and in the late 1990s Islamabad
was the principal foreign patron of Afghanistans Taliban
regime.
However, an article in Asia Times argues that Musharraf
staged the assassination attempt himself. It says that an unnamed
source in a high-level position in Pakistans security establishment
was adamant Musaharraf and his staff staged-managed
the bombing to alleviate pressure from Washingtonthe message
being that there are limits to the extent to which Musharraf can
accommodate himself to US demands.
Whatever the truth, the failed assassination points to the
fragility of the Pakistani regimea key ally of the Bush
administration in its war against terrorism.
Musharraf, who came to power in an October 1999 coup, has long
been involved in a precarious balancing act, trying to appease
Washington while simultaneously seeking to uphold Pakistans
traditional geopolitical and strategic interests in South and
Central Asia and to promote the domestic Islamic fundamentalist
right as a counterweight to his opponents in Pakistans traditional
political elite and the threat of popular opposition from below.
Under threat of being declared a hostile power by Washington,
the Musharraf regime effected a major shift in policy in the days
immediately following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,
withdrawing its support for the Taliban regime and providing crucial
logistical support to the US in its conquest of Afghanistan.
In a blatant quid pro quo, the US abandoned any pretence of
opposition to Musharrafs repressive regime, with Bush himself
repeatedly lauding the Pakistani dictator for his leadership and
the US and US-led agencies like the World Bank extending several
billions dollars in credits, loans and new weaponry to Pakistan.
(Musharrafs critics nonetheless note that the US aid has
fallen substantially short of the $10 billion hit that the Pakistani
economy took as a result of the Afghan war.) The World Bank and
IMF have also had high praise for Musharraf for pressing ahead
with privatization and other structural reforms.
In recent months, howeverand it is to this that the Asia
Times article made referenceMusharraf has come under
renewed pressure from Washington and US allies like Britains
Tony Blair to do more to curb Islamic fundamentalist extremism
and reduce tensions with India. The US fears that Al Qaeda has
succeeded in transforming Pakistan into a major base of operations.
It also believes that the insurgency which Pakistan has long supported
in Indian-held Kashmir is providing sustenance to Islamic terrorism
internationally. From a longer-term perspective, the US has increasingly
come to see the decades-old Indo-Pakistani conflict as dangerously
destabilizing a region in which it has suddenly taken great interest,
because of the possibility of tapping into South Asias virtually
inexhaustible supply of cheap labor and of using India to contain
China in Asia.
For the Pakistani ruling class and especially the military-intelligence
establishment the policy changes demanded by the US pose major
difficulties. Dating back at least to the dictatorship of General
Zia, Islamabad has cultivated the Islamic fundamentalist right.
As for the conflict with India over Kashmir, whose origins lie
in the 1947 communal partition of the subcontinent, the Pakistani
elite has long cast it as pivotal to Pakistans national
existence. The army in particular has justified its dominant role
in Pakistani political life on the grounds that Pakistan is locked
in a life-and-death struggle against a hostile and much larger
India and that the military can alone safeguard Pakistans
national existence.
Musharraf is himself closely identified with the most hard-line
anti-Indian elements. His 1999 coup arose at least in part out
of conflicts between himself and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif over
the latters decision to bow to US pressure and end the Pakistani
incursion in the Kargil region of Kashmir. Musharraf further bolstered
his hard-line reputation by refusing to bow before Indian pressure
when New Delhi mobilized for war in 2001-2002, answering Indian
threats to cross into Pakistan to end terrorism by
brandishing the threat of a nuclear response.
In recent weeks, even while taking steps against Islamic fundamentalist
extremists, Musharraf has been seeking to secure the
support of a six-member coalition of Islamic fundamentalist partiesthe
Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA)for a package of constitutional
changes. Musharraf has already imposed these changesthey
include the presidents right to dissolve the National Assembly,
creation of an army-dominated National Security Council, and Musharrafs
right to be simultaneously both president and armed forces chiefby
fiat under the so-called Legal Framework Order. But he wants the
MMAs support, so as to get them approved by the National
Assembly and to win a vote endorsing his presidency.
The MMA, for its part, is more than willing to assist Musharraf
in gaining this fig leaf of constitutional legitimacy, although
it has apparently resisted appeals to join the phony parliamentary
government Musharraf has fashioned for himself through ballot-rigging,
threats and bribery. The governing party in Pakistans two
smaller province, the MMA has benefited handsomely from the restrictions
Musharraf has placed on the traditional political parties, Benazir
Bhuttos Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and Sharifs Muslim
League (N). But it above all owes its new found prominence to
its criticism of growing US influence in Pakistan.
Adding urgency to Musharrafs attempt to gain greater
legitimacy is not only the possibility of being pressured by the
US into substantive negotiations with India, but also the worsening
economic situation. While the World Bank and investment firms
like Moodys applaud Musharrafs handling of the economy,
poverty and unemployment have in fact both risen sharply. According
to a recent report authored by the state bank, the percentage
of the population living in poverty has risen to 33 percent. Others
say the real figure is closer to 40 percent.
Growing popular anger over unemployment and price hikes, as
well as anger over Musharrafs refusal to cede them even
a modicum of power, have caused the PPP and Sharifs Muslim
League, who are allied in the so-called Alliance for the Restoration
of Democracy, to threaten to mount a Go Musharraf
campaign. Not surprisingly, the ARD leaders have jumped on Musharrafs
suggestion he might be willing to be flexible in negotiations
with India over Kashmir to charge him with betraying the countrys
national interest.
In a recent editorial Dawn, Pakistans largest
English-language daily and a critic of the Musharraf regime, expressed
fear that the power struggle within the Pakistani elite could
open the door to a venting of popular anger. Commenting on the
threat that the MMA or the ARD might mount a popular agitation
against the Musharraf regime, it warned: It will be short-sighted
to let the crisis simmer.... New perils might arise, as popular
discontent over economic and social problems mingles with the
MMAs protest drive. Once an agitation takes hold, there
is no knowing what turn events might take, particularly in view
of the fact that political parties have largely lost touch with
the masses and their problems.
See Also:
Pakistan extends ban on Islamic groups
[8 December 2003]
Pakistan intensifies military
operations in Afghan border areas
[4 November 2003]
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