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Musharraf's Playbook is the Same as the Bush Administration's
This post was informed by Shahid's participation in a National Lawyer's Guild-led delegation to Pakistan last December. The delegation, which consisted of four lawyers and four law students from around the U.S., visited several areas across Pakistan in early January and interviewed over 50 engaged participants in Pakistani government and civil society throughout the country, including jurists, elected officials, lawyers, journalists, civil servants, political party representatives, candidates for public office, international diplomats, students and activists. The delegation's preliminary report, "Defending Democracy: U.S. Foreign Policy and Pakistan's Struggle for Democracy," is posted here. Most of the Bush/Musharraf parallels in this post were drawn by Shahid; I (Naomi) have contributed some additional thoughts about the situation in the U.S. and Bush's negative influence on the world.
As we know well in this country, elections are a time for reflection. They are a time to consider who we are as a nation and what we want to become. Sometimes it is appropriate to stop and think about how lucky we are to have the freedom to make these kinds of choices. We should also think about the fact that there is no guarantee these freedoms will remain forever.
Take Pakistan, for example. Having endured a U.S.-backed military coup, martial law, and the assassination of their most visible opposition leader, Pakistanis will head to the polls on Monday to select members of their National Assembly in elections already plagued by widespread allegations of illegitimacy. Observers across the political spectrum have noted persisting restrictions on the press, politicized election administration at both the local and federal level, and the conspicuous lack of an independent judiciary to resolve electoral disputes.
Sadly, the United States is doing very little to help the situation in Pakistan and may well be making it worse. The Bush administration has consistently pressed for these elections to proceed despite security concerns and various allegations of unfairness. Not surprisingly, from an administration installed by a controversial Supreme Court ruling, its view appears to be that elections confer legitimacy on whichever regime emerges victorious, regardless of complaints about how the votes were tallied.
Even worse, these electoral similarities are only the tip of an iceberg reflecting deep connections between the agenda of the Bush administration and the Musharraf regime. While criticism has abounded of Musharraf's various abuses of the rule of law, observers have generally overlooked the means Musharraf has taken to squelch dissent of his administration, and how they resemble some of the tactics Americans have seen domestically. As one prominent anchor of a major Pakistani television news program suggested when discussing the threats to democracy in his country, "Musharraf's playbook is the same as the Bush administration's."
This is especially disturbing to me, as I have written recently about how the Bush administration seems to be following the playbook of twentieth century leaders, such as Stalin and Mussolini, who shut down democracies in their own countries. It is painful to think that the Bush administration is filling a similar role, making the United States of America an example for would-be tyrants.
At a broad level, both Bush and Musharraf have consistently magnified real threats to security in their public communications in order to promote fear and intimidate political opponents. In America, fear of another catastrophic attack in the wake of 9/11 was used to justify the round-ups of material witnesses, domestic spying and the PATRIOT Act. Meanwhile, in Pakistan, the threat of armed fundamentalists was cited as the reason to sack the Supreme Court and restrict the press.
In carrying out this governance by fear, both administrations have claimed that domestic checks on their agendas have given comfort to the enemy, effectively (if not literally) saying that "You're either with us, or against us." Nor have these accusations been confined to civil society.
Musharraf has framed Pakistan's former Supreme Court -- which he sacked with U.S. support in November for the second time last year -- as having interfered in his counter-terrorism efforts. Similarly, in addition to accusing opponents of the War in Iraq of undermining "our troops," officials in the Bush administration have derogated other branches of the federal government in order to aggrandize the executive branch. For instance, the White House has refused to provide Congress with documents necessary to understand the legal basis of the administration's torture policy, and when faced by challenges brought by detainees, sought to evade the jurisdiction of appellate courts such as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, from which a prominent conservative judge resigned in alleged protest.
The detainee cases are especially poignant. Both Musharraf and Bush have assaulted civil liberties, arguing against habeas corpus rights for detainees and resisting judicial efforts to ensure impartial trials. Student activists from Balochistan were imprisoned and even "disappeared" by Pakistani agents, while hundreds of detainees were imprisoned without trials for years at Guantanamo Bay. Recently, the Bush administration announced that six of these detainees would be tried in military court for their alleged involvement in 9/11, despite the fact that much of the evidence to be used against them was obtained as the result of torture and abuse.
While Musharraf's attack on judicial independence took the form of sacking the Supreme Court, removing the majority of its justices and jailing several of them, Bush has also compromised judicial independence, though in a more subtle fashion. When vacancies emerged on the U.S. Supreme Court, Bush nominated a pair of Justices whose principal qualification was prior service in the Reagan-era Department of Justice, where they championed aggressive theories aggrandizing executive power. Chief Justice Roberts even violated ethical rules by interviewing with the White House for his Supreme Court appointment at the same as he sat in judgment on White House detainee policy in the Hamdan case, in which he cast a deciding vote for the administration -- before the Supreme Court later reversed the decision.
Both Bush and Musharraf have largely ignored the real security threats they use to promote fear. Bush started a war in Afghanistan only to then grow distracted by an Iraq conflict whose only relation to terrorism was to encourage more of it. Musharraf has ignored his regime's ongoing support for militants despite the threat they pose to his own government, instead spending U.S. money on high-tech force structure (such as F-16s) for a hypothetical war with India.
Both presidents practice belligerence in their foreign policy decisions. Musharraf launched a war in the Himalayas before seizing power in 1999, for which he derived massive public support. The invasion of Iraq was similarly used by the Bush administration to rally support behind its other agendas.
And, perhaps most significantly, both Presidents have taken strong measures to intimidate the press. Musharraf removed entire channels from the air, while banning certain personalities from appearing and censoring what little content remained. Those journalists who challenge the media blackout -- at least in Urdu-language outlets most watched by Pakistanis -- are subject to intimidation and personal threats. In the U.S., journalists who have exposed state secrets (such as the domestic spying program revealed by The New York Times) have been threatened with prosecution.
President Bush once promised that his administration would spread freedom around the world. Instead, he is apparently teaching other world leaders how to promote fear and diminish freedoms in order to assume and maintain power. He has nothing to share, but fear itself.





15 Comments so far
Show Allit's called the "NATIONAL SECURITY PRESIDENTIAL DIRECTIVE NO. 51" and bush is going to use to cancel our 2008 elections.
read all about it.
/then turn on american idol and forget all about it
I doubt that the US/Israeli backed massacre at the Red Mosque helped much either.
Busharraf... Supreme Dictator of America-stan
I do not believe that the 2008 election is going to be cancelled in this country, and I do believe American voters have better choices available to us for recovery from error than does Pakistan.
Pakistan is a failed state and the main supporters of the Taliban. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB227/index.htm
Not much hope of recovery there and we aren't doing much better here under Bush.
We need to cultivate the faith that democratically legitimate measures, which protect the rights of citizens, will be sufficient to control threats to public security.
It ain't just Bush that's the problem. The American government supports feudal lords like Bhutto, covert wars, and corporate capitalism.
And use a name. This is bad journalism...
As one prominent anchor of a major Pakistani television news program suggested when discussing the threats to democracy in his country, "Musharraf's playbook is the same as the Bush administration's."
And who is "I" here? Wolf or Buttar...?
This is especially disturbing to me, as I have written
And the concluding statement sums up most US presidents...
President Bush once promised that his administration would spread freedom around the world. Instead, he is apparently teaching other world leaders how to promote fear and diminish freedoms in order to assume and maintain power.
Wolf is such a political hack. Aren't there other voices that could make it to CD other than Wolf? Buttar should have had this article published in his own name, in his own voice without some hack telling him what to write.
Well DUH ! America has no true interest in promoting democracy in Pakistan or Afghanistan. Musharraf is an old puppet linked to the previous policy of American covert support for the Mujahideen to drive the Russians out of Afghanistan.
The real agenda in the region is the development of Central Asian oil and natural gas by American corporations requiring pipelines through Afghanistan and Pakistan to India and the Arabian Sea for Asian markets.
A summary of events:
http://www.ringnebula.com/Oil/Timeline.htm
The problem now is that the Pashtun majority of Afghanistan has been driven from power and replaced with an American occupation in alliance with Tajik and Uzbek (minorities in Afghanistan linked to Tajikistan and Uzebekistan) warlords and mercenary thugs linked to the heroin trade. What is often called the "Taliban" are ethinc Pashtuns who have controlled much of Afghanistan and western Pakistan for centuries.
"It is our right to defend our country. We are not a threat to other countries. But we have to use our rights when our country is occupied by foreign forces." - Mullah Omar, Taliban leader
For two good reads on the realities in Afghanistan which link to policy in Pakistan, check out the following.
Swan Song for NATO 13/02/08
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article19350.htm
And some earlier reporting by Pilger.
This War Of Lies Goes On 11/16/01
http://www.johnpilger.com/page.asp?partid=361
This is yet another example of a failed imperial policy and endless suffering.
If corporations and governments did not have an interest in building a pipeline from Afghanistan to the ocean through Pashtun lands, one might see some articles about Pastun nationalism. But instead, we get crap articles on Afghanistan that do not explain the reality of the ethnic issues there.
Imagine what the Soviet Union papers said about Pashtun nationalism when the Russians were trying to get a pipeline through Afghanistan. Damn little, that's what.
Are we any better?
And Obama has said he will go into Pakistan unilaterally---a violation of international law by the way---so no change there either. That's our choice again this year: Obama v. McCain, voting for the lesser of two evils.
Obama's foreign policy advisers are hawks, just like McCain's. Both want to increase the military budget and the number of troops.
Where's the change, Obama fans?
odd that you would say that Stalin shut down a democracy in his own country. Leninism had accomplished that task already, no?
Bush & Musharraf took power at roughly the same time (within months of each other) and in roughly parallel manners - a military coup & a stolen election, both subsequently legitimatised by packed Supreme Courts.
Makes one wonder if the same "invisible hands" installed both of them to do their mischief.
All Pakistanis know how to compare & contrast, their difficulty is how to place their votes to oust Busharraf (glad to see my frequent usage of this epithet for Pak's president is used, see above - canuckchuck - for your own president! How's that for similarity) & yet see a bizarre result.
As Stalin was wont to say, "it's not the votes that matter, it's who counts them". How does one get over that? Go to the Supreme Court? Well you guys tried that too, didn't you? OldRascal has just commented on that see post prior to mine above.
Both Mushy and Bu$h the inferior are doing a better PR version of Vlad the Impaler.
Seems many counties are using the same playbook this year.
Do you really think Cheney would claim so much executive power and not stick around to use it? Hand it over to Dems?
Cheney may just decide to stay on as vice pres again. Can't do that you say? The executive branch can do anything they want.
If they can't rig it to win they just may declare Marshal Law over some bio hazard or nuke incident. Don't put anything past these NUTJOBS.