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: Pakistan
Pakistan delays sending troops to Iraq
By K. Ratnayake
21 July 2003
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Nearly a month after agreeing in principle to sending
troops to Iraq, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has yet to
reach a final arrangement with Washington on the modalities
of such an arrangement. Behind the drawn-out delays are deep concerns
in Islamabad over the potential for a Pakistani force to become
bogged down in the US-led occupation, triggering opposition at
home.
With the number of US casualties from guerrilla attacks in
Iraq growing by the day, the Bush administration has been desperate
for other countries to send military contingentsboth to
legitimise and bolster the strength of its military occupation.
During his visit to the US in late June, Musharraf agreed to send
some 10,000 Pakistani troops to Iraq.
Washington was particularly keen for support from Pakistan,
as well as India, because of the size of the contingents proposed.
In the case of New Delhi, the US was looking for up to 17,000
troops, which would have made the Indian presence second only
to the US itself. US officials have spent considerable time and
energy attempting to pressure and bribe both countries into sending
soldiers.
After meeting with Bush at Camp David, Musharraf told the media:
He (Bush) did talk of the Iraq dispute, and we did discuss
Pakistan troops. In principle, we would agree, but we are looking
at the modalities... Asked about the modalities,
he indicated that one of them was the financial packagein
other words, how much money Pakistan would be paid for contributing
troops.
At the same time, however, Musharraf expressed his concern
about the perception of Muslim world and the need
for some sort of political camouflage. We need to see if
it [sending troops] can take place under the auspices of the UN,
or the OIC (Organisation of Islamic Countries) cover or GCE (Gulf
Cooperation Council), he said.
Musharraf has been walking a political tightrope ever since
the US invasion of Afghanistan. Desperate to retain Washingtons
financial and political support, the military strongman withdrew
his backing for the Taliban regime in Kabul and opened Pakistani
bases to the US military. Since then, he has bowed to US demands
for tougher measures to close the Afghan-Pakistani border and
to crack down on Islamic fundamentalist groups.
But any dispatch of Pakistani troops to Iraq is likely to lead
to escalating political turmoil at home. In the lead-up to the
Iraq invasion, millions of people took part in a series of anti-war
protests. Because of the opposition, the Pakistani government
was compelled to make limited criticisms of the US war plans and
did not support a UN resolution legitimising the invasion.
Opposition parties have expressed opposition to sending troops
to Iraq. Kushid Ahmed, a leader of the Islamic fundamentalist
Jamaat-i-Islami, declared that this is an alarming situation.
JI is the leading party in a six-party alliance, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal
(MMA), that made significant gains in last years national
elections and holds power in the governments of the North Western
Frontier Province (NWFP) and Baluchistanthe two provinces
neighbouring Afghanistan. The MMA has called for protests and
has threatened to organise a social boycott of soldiers
families.
The opposition Pakistani Peoples Party (PPP) of former Prime
Minister Benazir Bhutto also issued a statement criticising any
plan to send a military force to Iraq. But it did not rule out
eventually agreeing with such a proposal, stating only: [S]ince
the US went into Iraq without the United Nations sanction,
it would have been appropriate for Islamabad to take a decision
after necessary debate and discussion, weighing what would be
gained and what would be lost.
Caught between appeasing Washington and popular opposition,
Musharraf appears to be dragging his feet on making any decision.
A report in the Dawn newspaper on July 9 indicated that
Islamabad was making efforts to put together an Islamic
force advancing the concept of Muslim brotherhood.... Indonesia,
Malaysia, and Bangladesh and some North African countries are
on board. But nothing has eventuated.
New Delhis decision last week not to send an Indian contingent
unless it was part of a UN force makes any Pakistani involvement
less likely. In part, Musharrafs decision to agree in principle
was bound up with the need to counter growing military and strategic
ties between the US and rival India. The US had even offered to
place an Indian force in command of northern Iraq and to station
a senior Indian officer at US Central Command in Tampa, Florida.
With any Indian involvement off the immediate agenda, Musharraf
is no longer under the same pressure to match New Delhi.
The governments in both countries are nervous about committing
troops to what is more and more nakedly a neo-colonial occupation
of Iraq. There are bitter recollections throughout the subcontinent
of the way in the British used Indian troops as cannon fodder
in its wars.
During the First World War, some 1.5 million people were sent
as volunteers to the war front from the British colonies
on the Indian subcontinent. Some 700,000 of these soldiers were
sent to seize and protect oil fields in the Middle East. About
12,000 troops, including about 10,000 Indian soldiers, were killed
in Kut in 1916 as part of British operations to seize Mesopotamia,
then a province of the Ottoman Empire.
Another 31,000 soldiers died in the four-year campaign to establish
British dominance over what became Iraq. During 1920s, at least
1,000 Indian and Arab soldiers died during British operations
to suppress resistance to its occupation. India was dotted with
the funeral pyres of dead soldiers whose bodies were being returned
from the Middle East.
The last thing that Vajpayee or Musharraf want to do is to
rekindle these colonial memories by committing troops to a deeply
unpopular US occupation of Iraqparticularly one that is
protracted and dangerous.
See Also:
Antiwar protests in Pakistan
rattle the Musharraf regime
[15 March 2003]
US military insists on right
of hot pursuit inside Pakistan
[22 January 2003]
Islamic extremists
come to power in two Pakistani provinces
[12 December 2002]
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