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US threatened to bomb Pakistan back to the Stone Age
By Kranti Kumara and Keith Jones
27 September 2006
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Pakistani President Pervez Musharrafs revelation that
a top US official said Pakistan would be bombed back to
the stone age if Islamabad didnt break its ties with
the Taliban and provide logistical support to the US conquest
of Afghanistan is yet another example of the mobster methods that
have come to characterize US diplomacy, especially under the Bush
administration.
Coming five years after the event and under conditions where
Musharraf is under heavy pressure from Washington to do still
more to assist the US in south, central and west Asia, the revelation
also points to the increasingly desperate position of Pakistans
military strongman.
In a pre-taped interview broadcast on CBSs Sixty
Minutes last Sunday, Musharraf said that in the days immediately
following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks Pakistans
intelligence director was told by the then US Deputy Secretary
of State, Richard Armitage, that Pakistan could either totally
acquiesce to the Bush administrations demands for cooperation
in the war on terror or Be prepared to be bombed.
Be prepared to go back to the Stone Age.
Musharraf, in his autobiography, In the Line of Firewhich
was published this Monday, by CBS subsidiary Simon & Schusterfurther
claims that he war-gamed the US as an adversary, but
concluded that in any such clash Pakistan would have been crushed,
especially since Pakistans arch-rival India would have sought
to exploit the situation.
Musharrafs revelation of the US war threat, which was
first reported by CBS on Thursday, September 21, led to a bizarre
scene the next day when George W. Bush and the Pakistani president
concluded a bi-lateral meeting at the White House with a joint
press conference.
When asked about the threat made against Pakistan, Bush claimed
that the first time he had ever heard of it was when he had read
a report of Musharrafs remarks in that days newspaper.
I guess I was taken aback by the harshness of the words,
said Bush. All I can tell you is that shortly after 9/11,
Secretary [of State] Colin Powell came in and said, President
Musharraf understands the stakes and he wants to join and help
root out an enemy that has come and killed 3,000 of our citizens.
.. I dont know of any conversation that was reported in
the newspaper like that. I just dont know about it.
Responding to the same question, Musharraf claimed that he
could not elaborate further on the fact that the US had threatened
to all but annihilate his country, which with 150 million people
is the sixth largest in the world, because he was honor-bound
by the contract he had with Simon and Shuster not to comment until
the official launch of his autobiography.
Trying to make light of the matter, Bush then broke in, In
other words, Buy the book, is what he is saying.
Throughout the press conference, Bush heaped praise on Musharraf,
calling the dictator a strong defender of freedom
and a strong, forceful leader.
Pakistans president and armed services chief, meanwhile,
was at pains to prostrate himself before the US president. I
trust President Bush, he declared, and I have total
confidence in him that he desires well for Pakistan and for our
region. And I trust him also that hes trying to do his best
for bringing peace to the world.
Armitage has denied that he ever threatened Pakistan with military
action, let alone to bomb it back to the Stone Age. Indeed the
former number two man at the state department would have us believe
he has never threatened anyone in his entire life. According to
Armitage, he had a strong and factual exchange with
the head of Pakistani intelligence post 9/11 in which he told
him Pakistan would need to be with us or against us. For
Americans, this was seen as black or white.
The denials of Armitage and Bush are, to say the least, preposterous.
As any politically literate person knows, for decades the US
has bullied and threatened governments all over the world and
pressed for the ouster of regimes deemed insufficiently amenable
to US economic and geo-political interests.
But whereas in the past this was generally done surreptitiously,
through covert destabilization campaigns and coups, and whereas
in the past the US made a pretense of upholding law in international
relations, under the Bush administration, Washington has waged
and asserted the right to wage further pre-emptive warsi.e.,
illegal wars of aggressionwhile routinely issuing publicly
threats of violence against countries like Syria and Iran.
In threatening Pakistan with war, Armitage made explicit the
choice Bush had said that every state had to make in the wake
of his proclaiming an open-ended, worldwide war on terrorismyou
are either with us or against us.
Nevertheless, Musharrafs revelation has proved embarrassing
for the Bush administration.
In announcing to the Pakistani people in September 2001 that
his government was distancing itself from Afghanistans Taliban
regime, Musharraf said that failure to do so would imperil the
countrys national interests. But he had never said, till
last week, that the US had threatened Pakistan with war. Such
a war, it need be added, would not only have meant death and horror
for countless Pakistanis. It could potentially have had horrendous
consequences for all of South Asia and the world, since Pakistan
is a nuclear-weapons state and the first priority of any US attack
would undoubtedly have been to try to destroy Pakistans
nuclear capacity.
So why did Musharraf choose to reveal this threat now, five
years after the fact?
Clearly he is intent on promoting his autobiography, which
he hopes will boost his image as a progressive leader
at home and internationally.
But the real reason is to be found in the multiple crises swirling
around Musharraf, crises which threaten his life as well as his
regime.
As CBS noted in an on-line report on the 60 Minutes
interview and the Musharraf autobiography, Most heads of
state wait until they are comfortable in retirement before sitting
down to write their memoirs, but in the case of Pakistans
President Pervez Musharraf there are no guarantees that he will
live long enough to have one.
There is widespread and deep-rooted popular anger at Musharrafs
support for US imperialisms attempt to secure a stranglehold
over the oil resources of the Middle East and Central Asia through
military conquest. Musharrafs neo-liberal economic policies
have caused economic insecurity and social inequality to grow,
adversely effecting Pakistans toiling masses. But the governments
use of its privatization program to reward supportive companies
has also alienated substantial sections of the elite.
Recently the Pakistani government was forced to sign a humiliating
peace treaty with tribal leaders in the Waziristan
region after waging a two-year war, at the behest of the US, in
pursuit of Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters who have taken refuge
there.
Oblivious to Pakistans tribal and ethnic complexities,
the US pressed Pakistan to send troops into the tribal border
regions for the first time since 1947 and to wage a brutal counter-insurgency
campaign that caused large numbers of civilian casualties and
included collective punishments of entire villages and tribal
groups.
The conflict is said to have resulted in 4,000 deaths, including
at least 900 Pakistani troops.
Under the treaty signed with the tribal elders
the Pakistan military is obliged to withdraw its forces from this
area, to return all arms confiscated by the military and to pay
reparations to the tribal leaders for the damage done by the Pakistani
military to life and property.
The Musharraf regime also faces a serious crisis in the south-west
province of Baluchistan, a crisis that the bourgeois opposition
to Musharraf and much of the press warns could, if not defused,
lead to an implosion akin to that of 1971 when East Pakistan broke
away to form Bangladesh.
For two years resource-rich Baluchistan has been wracked by
a tribal insurgency, fed by complaints that the Pakistani elite
is siphoning off the provinces wealth. But the insurgency
escalated to a national crisis, when the Pakistani military killed
the long-time Baluchi tribal leader Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti in
late August 2006 in what appears to have been a deliberate assassination
aimed at thwarting any attempt to reach a negotiated settlement.
By revealing the US threat to attack Pakistan, Musharraf is
trying to persuade his bourgeois critics that there is no viable
alternative to his policy of doing Washingtons bidding and
that in September 2001 he moved adroitly to secure the interests
of the Pakistani elite under conditions of grave danger.
He also is likely trying to send Washington a message that
there are limits to how far he can go in accommodating its demands.
The think-tank Stratfor in a September 22 report points out
that Musharrafs comments were publicized just a day after
Bush remarked that US forces would enter Pakistanwith or
without Pakistani permissionto capture or kill Al Qaeda
leaders if the US obtained actionable information.
According to Stratfor, which has links with US intelligence
and other government agencies, both Musharraf and Bush are publicly
positioning themselves for more intensive operations by the US
military inside Pakistan itself. Mired in crisis, the Bush administration
is desperately looking for a foreign policy success
such as the capture or killing of a top Al Qaeda leader ahead
of the upcoming November congressional elections
The US elite, Pakistan, and Islamic fundamentalism
While Musharraf now boasts that he war-gamed the
US in September 2001 before deciding that he best bow to Washingtons
demands, the Pakistani elite never anticipated, let alone wanted,
its geo-political maneuvers in Afghanistan to place it on a collision
course with Washington. This is especially true of the Pakistani
military, which has a decades-long close partnership with the
Pentagon.
It was the US after all, under the Democrat Jimmy Carter and
subsequent Republican administrations, which pressed Pakistan
to play a pivotal role in transforming Afghanistan into a Cold
War battlefield.
At the USs behest, Pakistan took a leading role in organizing
the Afghan Mujahidin and served for a decade as the conduit for
sending US and Saudi Arabian money and arms and foreign Islamicist
fighters to Afghanistan, thereby planting the seeds from which
Al Qaeda and the Taliban sprung in the 1990s.
After Soviet troops were withdrawn from Afghanistan, the US
effectively washed its hands of Afghanistan. This left the Pakistani
elite free to try to realize its own ambitions of using Afghanistan
to give it strategic depth in its confrontation with
India and to serve as a gateway to the oil-rich post-Soviet Central
Asian republics. But the Clinton administration did support the
coming to power of the Pakistani-backed Taliban. Just as it cynically
allied with Islamic fundamentalists elements and various other
communalist forces, while singling out Serb chauvinist atrocities
for denunciation, in the dismembering of Yugoslavia.
One further point should be made.
The US establishment maintains that it was the December 1979
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan that drove it to forge a strategic
alliance with Pakistans then military dictator Zia-ul Haq.
The truth is the US was more than happy to see Zia depose Ali
Bhutto, Pakistans populist, democratically-elected prime
minister, in 1977. And, Washingtons plan, of which Zbigniew
Brzezinskis now boasts, to goad the Soviet Union into invading
Afghanistan by stoking an Islamic opposition to the secular, pro-Soviet
government, was always predicated on the fact that the US would
be able to arm the Afghan Islamicist opposition through Pakistan.
If relations between the Carter administration and Zia soured
for a time in 1979 it was principally because the Pakistani government
was pursuing nuclear weapons in defiance of the US.
No sooner had the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, than the Carter
administration came running to Zia with an offer of economic aid.
On assuming office the Reagan administration embraced Brzezinskis
strategy and soon made Zias regime the third largest recipient
of foreign aid.
The US-backed Zia regime presided over the Islamicization
of Pakistan. It provided state patronage to right-wing religious
parties, encouraged religious organizations to assume social and
educational functions the state was no longer prepared to finance,
introduced laws discriminating against women and minorities, and
helped generate sectarian religious divisions that continue to
plague Pakistan. As for Pakistans involvement in the Afghan
civil war, not only did it give a major boost to the growth of
fundamentalist religious-political organizations and provide a
new source of power and influence to the military and its intelligence
agencies, it also contributed to the development of a host of
social problems in Pakistan, from drugs to a Kalashnikov-culture.
The Bush administrations threat to wage war on Pakistan
in 2001 and subsequent fulsome embrace of the dictator Musharraf
as a major US ally in the war on terror is only the
latest in a long series of events in which the US elite, in pursuit
of its own predatory geo-political objectives, has shown itself
to be utterly indifferent, in fact hostile, to the Pakistani people
and their most elementary democratic rights.
See Also:
Washington threatens wider Middle East
war
[20 September 2006]
Bush reaffirms support for
Pakistani dictator
[26 August 2006]
Pakistans US-backed
dictator to stage bogus presidential election
[29 June 2006]
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