No Easy Answers to Pakistan Crisis
WASHINGTON - Amid growing polarisation between President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and Pakistan's civilian opposition forces, U.S. hopes of salvaging a power-sharing accord that would marry the military dictator to former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto are fading fast.
Indeed, Bhutto's public break with the military dictator -- enunciated, among other places, in a Washington Post column Wednesday that called on Musharraf to resign as both president and as army chief -- will make it much harder to patch together the deal that Washington had tried so hard to work out over the last several months, according to most analysts here.
That deal called for Musharraf to retain his disputed presidency on condition that he first permit Bhutto to return from exile and then hold elections that would give her a third premiership in exchange for his resignation as chief of the army, presumably in favour of his number two, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, a Washington favourite.
Kayani, routinely touted in the press here as a "moderate" and "pro-western" officer, has also been depicted as part of a group of military reformers who, according to the New York Times, "are widely believed to be eager to pull the army out of politics and focus its attention purely on securing the country", presumably from radical, Taliban-related Islamists who have both consolidated and expanded their control of the frontier areas along the Afghan border since Musharraf declared his state of emergency 10 days ago.
But with Bhutto put under house arrest in Lahore and thousands of other opposition politicians, activists, lawyers, and human rights defenders in detention around the country, it now appears that the deal is off, and Washington's options have become both narrower and the course of events much more risky.
The stakes could not be higher. Not only is the Pakistani Army's cooperation considered essential to stabilising Afghanistan against the Taliban and defeating al Qaeda, but the prospect that the worsening political crisis could fracture the military along regional lines is now looming as a worrisome possibility. Pakistan is believed to have some 50 nuclear weapons scattered around the country.
In addition, the Bush administration's failure to break with Musharraf and declare unequivocal support for the civilian opposition's demands risks both further alienating the vast majority of the more than 160 million Pakistanis whose image of the U.S. had fallen to unprecedented levels before the current crisis, and exposing Bush's "freedom agenda" for the Muslim world -- already a source of understandable scepticism -- as a total fraud.
"If anyone in the Muslim world still believed in the Bush administration's historic promise to support democracy over political expedience, those hopes are being shattered with the crisis unfolding in Pakistan," said Mohamad Bazzi, a visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
To try to redress the situation, the administration of President George W. Bush is sending Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte to Islamabad as his special envoy Thursday for talks with Musharraf, as well as meetings with other senior political figures, probably including Bhutto herself.
Negroponte's primary goal, according to insiders, is to see whether "Humpty-Dumpty can be put back together again," according to one administration official who asked not to be identified in a reference to the original power-sharing plan.
To that end, Negroponte will point to threats by Congress that would cut off nearly two billion dollars in mostly military aid it has appropriated for Pakistan each year since the "global war on terror" after 9/11, unless Musharraf rescinds the emergency, sheds his uniform, and permits free and fair elections to go forward, among other conditions. In addition, Congress could suspend the sales of long-sought F-16 fighter jets.
But many analysts here believe that will not be sufficient to bring Musharraf around. If anything, the Pakistani leader appears to have become increasingly confident that he can ride out the storm, particularly given the continuing mildness of western reaction, including Negroponte's own assertion in Congressional testimony last week that the Pakistani leader was an "indispensable" ally in the war on terrorism.
And, even if Musharraf bends to Washington's threats, according to Pakistan specialists here, it's increasingly doubtful that Bhutto, who has been reaching out in recent days to other opposition parties to forge a united democratic front, would go along at this point, lest she appear to be selling out her new partners, as well as undermining whatever personal credibility she retains. Just two days ago, she told the Financial Times unequivocally that there was "no chance" of negotiations with Musharraf being revived.
One point of leverage against Musharraf that could be more effective, according to one expert, Selig Harrison at the Centre for International Policy (CIP) here, would be suspending the 100 million dollars a month that the U.S. Defence Department provides directly to the Pakistani military in counter-terrorism funding, a significant portion of which is distributed in cash and used to ensure loyalty to the chain of command.
But, led by the Pentagon, the administration appears dead-set against putting that aid into play, fearing not only that it would reduce Pakistan's already-tepid and sporadic cooperation with the U.S. against al Qaeda and the Taliban, but also strengthen Islamist elements within the military who have long resented and even resisted serving Washington's priorities.
"If we use that leverage, we could move Musharraf to do many things, but I have no reason to believe we'll use it," said Harrison, who noted that even the International Crisis Group (ICG), several of whose board members who also served in top U.S. ambassadorial posts called Tuesday in a Post column for a military aid cut-off to Pakistan, exempted the counter-terrorist programme. "Frankly, without using that leverage, I think it's too late to do anything very effective," Harrison told IPS.
The administration's Plan B, which some analysts believe is already underway, is to "reach out" to other generals more responsive to U.S. interests, starting with Kayani, to press Musharraf to step down and take action of their own, if he fails to do so.
In that respect, the choice of Negroponte as chief envoy is particularly ironic. During his tenure as ambassador to Honduras in the early 1980s, Negroponte aligned himself unconditionally with its brutal armed forces chief, Gen. Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, who was so responsive to U.S. strategy in the region that his own commanders forcibly ousted him from office. Negroponte, who apparently was unaware of the barracks plot, was recalled a short time later.
© 2007 Inter Press Service
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11 Comments so far
Show AllPakistan needs to leave Afghanistan alone too being that its the Pakistani ISI that is funding and supporting the Taliban.
The whole thing is so confusing. How did it start? I'm lost. Maybe Ted Rall is right - we invaded the wrong countries. Everyone knows what country Bin Laden is living in. If Pakistan becomes an instant Islamist nuclear power, it brings India into the picture. India has promised a "final solution" if Pakistan cannot leave India and the disputed territories alone.
With no real way of knowing for sure I tend to lean with "indeepshiitake." These Neo-Cons will go down fighting. Do not under estimate the enemy. Especially the "Do as I say" bunch . . . . Of which Musharraf has learned well.
TheLorax: How about we consider that Musharraf is a dictator and doesn't want to negotiate with Bhutto? Under your scenario, what is the benefit to Musharraf to declare martial law and then cave in under popular unrest. If Musharref stepped down after this, he would have to seek refuge in another country because a lot of people would want him dead or imprisoned.
Consider that Bush only has a year left in office and the money might dry up soon anyway regardless of what actions Musharraf takes. I would say that Musharraf's need for self-preservation supercedes his loyalty to Bush.
"100 million dollars a month that the U.S. Defence Department provides directly to the Pakistani military in counter-terrorism funding, a significant portion of which is distributed in cash and used to ensure loyalty to the chain of command."
And the Pakistan military apparently is a highly professional organization !!
Thanks to the Lorax for putting this into plain words. We still have a lot of crooks left over from Nixon and Reagan. Negroponte is just one of them.
TheLorax: you got it: the good cop/bad cop script. I respect Lobe, but it's surprising that many "serious" analysts miss the same. However, some things may go off-script, and require improvisation. That's when things could really get messy.
TheLorax: You nailed it. Nothing to add.
Let's start framing current events in terms that make sense to an emancipated community of human beings on this planet.
Jim Lobe's headline "no easy answers" should read "Hard times for US imperialism, great opportunities for Pakistani people".
Lobe's first sentence is "U.S. hopes are fading fast" as if the only actor on the stage is the capitalist beast. That's what the beast wants us to think. Do we want to think what the beast wants us to think?
His first sentence should read "The opportunities of the Pakistani people rise as the hopes of the capitalist beast fade".
Let's not be steamrolled by the capitalist propaganda from Inter Press Service. Why does CD publish these articles?
This is so transparent. America wants Benazir Bhutto to run Pakistan because she's an American puppet. Once she's in charge America has a staging area for nuclear weapons in the Middle East. (Pakistani nuclear weapons)
Musharraf is on his way out and knows it but he needs to boost Bhutto's popularity first. So... he plunges the country into marshal law. He locks Benazir Bhutto up because if she is under house arrest she'll get even more attention. Note that although the media has been siezed MS. Bhutto was still able to speak from where she is "imprisoned". See how rapidly her popularity is growing? Soon the "evil dictator's iron fist" will begin to loosen as Bhutto comes out with more and more pro-democracy speeches. Musharraf will step down and she will rise as the "liberator of the people" of Pakistan.
If you think Musharraf and Bhutto aren't in kahoots and that the US isn't absolutely running the script over there you might want to play more strategy games.
Mr. Negroponte's real reason for going to Pakistan is to ensure that everything is going to plan.
"One point of leverage against Musharraf that could be more effective, according to one expert, Selig Harrison at the Centre for International Policy (CIP) here, would be suspending the 100 million dollars a month that the U.S. Defence Department provides directly to the Pakistani military in counter-terrorism funding, a significant portion of which is distributed in cash and used to ensure loyalty to the chain of command."
The defence department must be run by some REAL SUCKERS! Or they are REALLY CORRUPT.