Bush administration backs new power-grab by Pakistans
military strongman
By Vilani Peiris
10 November 2004
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With the backing of the United States, Britain and other western
powers, Pakistans military dictator-president, General Pervez
Musharraf, has staged-managed events so he can claim that he is
bowing to the peoples wishes when he renounces
a pledge to step down as head of Pakistans armed forces.
As part of a deal to ensure parliamentary passage of a series
of constitutional amendments that ex post facto sanctioned
his regimes anti-democratic actions and further enhanced
the militarys role in determining government policy, Musharraf
promised last December that he would step down as Pakistans
Chief of Armed Services (COAS) by the end of 2004. At the time,
Musharrafs pledge was praised by western governments and
much of the media as a step toward the return of full
civilian rule and democracy.
But Musharraf has become increasingly apprehensive at any weakening
of his hold over the military, the bulwark of his unpopular, pro-US
regime. For months he and his aides have been suggesting that
he could renege on last Decembers pledge.
Recently Pakistans parliamentwhich was chosen in
an election whose rules were rewritten to ensure a pro-Musharraf
ministryrammed through the President to Hold Another
Office Act 2004 over vehement protests from the opposition.
Comprised of Benazir Bhuttos Pakistan Peoples Party,
the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) loyal to former Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif, and an alliance of Islamist parties, the Muttahida
Majlis-e-Amal or MMA, the parliamentary opposition has condemned
the billwhich sanctions the present holder of the
office of President to hold another office in the
service of Pakistanas illegal and unconstitutional.
When the bill came before the National Assembly October 14,
the Deputy Speaker refused to allow debate, provoking an opposition
walkout. Similarly, in the upper house of Pakistans parliament,
Senators from the governing pro-military party, the Pakistan Muslim
League-Q, adopted the bill after the opposition had walked out
in protest.
The bill will come into effect once Musharraf, in his guise
as president, signs it into law. According to Pakistani press
reports, he likely will do so shortly after Ramadan concludes
this coming Sunday.
The Islamic fundamentalist MMA has been especially vociferous
in criticizing the bill. This is an attempt to cover up its own
role in helping Musharraf strengthen his hand by securing parliamentary
passage of the Legal Framework Order (LFO)a package of constitutional
amendments that gave legal blessing to his 1999 coup and subsequent
disbanding of parliament, extended his presidential term to 2007,
and created a new National Security Council that gives the military
a permanent and decisive say in formulating government policy.
Last December the MMA broke ranks with the other opposition parties
to vote for the LFO. It justified its support for Musharraf with
the claim that in return for its pro-LFO vote it had obtained
the General-Presidents pledge that he would forsake his
post as head of Pakistans armed services no later than December
31, 2004.
Musharraf has said that were he to give up his command of the
military, it could undermine his authority in pressing forward
with the war on terrorism and peace negotiations with
India.
The truth is that the Musharraf regime is increasingly beleaguered.
Its pursuit of IMF-style economic restructuring and support for
the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have intensified the
opposition from the working class and oppressed masses.
At the same time, the major shifts in geo-political and internal
strategy that Musharraf has made under intense US pressure have
caused serious rifts within the Pakistani elite and placed the
military increasingly in conflict with its traditional allies
in the Islamist parties and Muslim clergy.
First, Islamabad was forced to repudiate its ties to the Taliban
regime. Then, because the Bush adminstration views the Indo-Pakistani
conflict as cutting across its attempts to forge a strategic partnership
with India and the Kashmir insurgency as a breeding ground for
Islamic terrorism, Washington pressed Musharraf to make peace
overtures to New Delhi. However, the struggle against India has
long served as the crux of the Pakistanis bourgeoisies
legitimizing nationalist ideology and as the militarys main
justification for claiming a leading role in the countrys
affairs. Fears of Islamic extremism have also caused Washington
to press Musharraf to exert government control over the madrassahs
and otherwise restrict the political influence of Islamic fundamentalists.
Musharraf continues to cultivate many of these elements. The MMA
remains in government in two of Pakistans provinces, including
Baluchistan, where it serves in a coalition with the pro-Musharraf
PML (Q). But this balancing act is becoming increasingly difficult
and precarious.
Not least among Musharrafs reasons for keeping his COAS
post is his fear of dissent within Pakistans security forces.
It is widely acknowledged that two assassination attempts against
Musharraf last December could not have been carried out without
logistical support from elements within the military.
All sections of the parliamentary opposition have protested
against the Pakistani armed forces operations against alleged
al-Qaeda operatives and Taliban fighters in tribal areas bordering
on Afghanistan. The hunt for terrorists has taken
the form of a colonial-style pacification campaign in South Wazirstan,
with troops carrying out house-to-house searches and imposing
economic blockades on villages and entire tribes. Since the Pakistani
military launched its offensive in South Wazirstan last March
some 400 people have reportedly been killed.
The Bush administration has repeatedly hailed the dictator
Musharraf as a key ally in its war on terrorism, and given its
blessing to his authoritarian rule. Earlier this year, Washington
rewarded Pakistan with the designation of major non-NATO
ally. It is thus not in the least surprising that the Bush
administration has given its support to Musharrafs latest
anti-democratic power-grab. The US State Department said Musharrafs
reneging on his pledge to give up the post of head of Pakistans
armed forces would not affect progress towards democracy.
Declared State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, Progress
toward democracy in Pakistan doesnt rest solely on this
step ... We continue to encourage progress, and we continue to
encourage Pakistanis to look for ways to make progress.
Commonwealth Secretary General Donald McKinnon, who visited
Pakistan on October 21, was even more explicit in his support.
He declared that Musharrafs retaining control of the armed
forces would be democratic if parliament approves it.
McKinnon flatly rejected any suggestion that the Commonwealth,
which recently lifted the suspension placed on Pakistan after
the 1999 military coup, might have to reconsider its evaluation
that Pakistan was progressing toward democracy.
Australian High Commissioner to Pakistan Zorica McCarthy seconded
McKinnons remarks, saying We Australians have much
regard for President Musharraf and his policy against terrorism
threats not only in Pakistan but also in other countries.
See Also:
Musharraf imposes former Citibank
official as Pakistans prime minister
[3 September 2004]
Pakistan and Zimbabwe: a tale
of two autocrats
[26 May 2004]
Behind the India-Pakistan
ceasefire
[29 December 2004]
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