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Writer’s view is personal, must not be
considered editor’s |
Bhutto, Bush, and Musharraf
Sender: MARJORIE GIBSON
By: John Chuckman
With the assassination of Ms. Bhutto, we are
given to understand, by many newspaper stories and broadcasts,
that anti-democratic religious zealots killed Pakistan’s last
hope for democracy.

Ms. Bhutto was in many ways an admirable and
accomplished leader, a talented woman of courage, but her
assassination was a far more complex event than simplistic
claims about the dark work of anti-democratic forces.
President Musharraf, for most of the years since the American
invasion of Afghanistan, was treated in public as an acceptable
ally by the United States. The U.S. desperately needed
Pakistan's help in its invasion of Afghanistan, a land about
which American politicians had little understanding. To secure
that help, America forgave Pakistan’s debts, removed its
embargo-bad guy status (for developing atomic weapons in
secret), provided large amounts of military assistance, and
even managed to swallow its pride over the embarrassing work of
Pakistan’s scientific hero, Dr. A. Q. Khan, who supplied
atomic-weapons technology to other countries.
Once Americans had mired themselves in Afghanistan – after all
the hoopla over a “victory” which amounted to little more than
massive bombing while the Northern Alliance warlords did most
of the fighting against their rival, the Taleban - the extent
of the mess into which they had put themselves slowly dawned.
This is particularly true regarding the almost non-existent
border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, a huge area that forms
almost a de facto third country of Pashtuns.
Intense pressure started being applied to Musharraf to allow
American special forces to conduct the kind of brutal and
socially-disruptive operations they have maintained in the
mountains of Afghanistan. The American approach to rooting out
the dispersed Taleban, following its initial “victory,”
amounted to going from village to village in the mountains,
crashing down doors, using stun grenades, holding men at
gunpoint in their own homes, separating the village's women
from the men's protection, plus many other unforgivable insults
in such a tradition-bound land.
All of this has really been getting them nowhere. In effect,
the American government demonstrated it had no idea what to do
in Afghanistan after it invaded, only knowing it wanted to get
the "bad guys."
Recently, Musharraf's position vis-ŕ-vis the U.S. has undergone
a dramatic change. Overnight, the State Department changed him
from valiant ally to enemy of democracy, and the American press
obliged with the appropriate stories and emphasis.
The reason for this change was simply Musharraf’s refusal to
cooperate enough with Bush's secret demands to extend America’s
special-forces operations into Pakistan's side of the Pashtun
territory: that is, to allow a foreign country into his country
to terrorize and insult huge parts of its population. In Bush’s
worldview, this only amounted to Pakistan’s fully embracing the
“war on terror,” but for many Pakistanis, the “war on terror”
is only one more aspect of American interference in their part
of the world. The Taleban is viewed by millions there as heroic
resisters, standing up to American arrogance, a view not
without some substance.
In trying to accommodate Bush, Musharraf launched various showy
operations by Pakistan’s army, but his efforts were viewed in
Washington as weak. The U.S. kept pushing the limits, trying to
force Pakistan to internalize the “war on terror,” and
Musharraf resisted. There was a horrific incident in which the
U.S. bombed a madrassah (a religious school) in rural Pakistan,
succeeding only in killing eighty children, falsely claiming it
was Pakistan’s work against a terrorist center.
Musharraf has, rather bravely, opposed America’s demands for a
de facto American invasion of his country. He has been
remarkably outspoken about American policies on several
occasions, not something calculated to endear him to Bush’s
gang. So, suddenly he became an undemocratic pariah who needed
to be replaced. It was easy enough to exploit public
dissatisfaction with a military dictator, even if he was only
trying to do his best for his country within some terrible
limits.
America gave Ms. Bhutto a blessing and a gentle push, likely a
bundle of cash, and undoubtedly the promise of lots of future
support, to return home as opposition to Musharraf. One could
fairly say that her assassination just proves how little
Washington policymakers understand the region. It sent her to
her death, desperately hoping against hope to get what it
wanted.
Ms. Bhutto was regarded in Washington as more amenable to
American demands in Pakistan. She had the double merit of being
able to give Pakistan’s government the gloss of democracy while
serving key American interests. But it couldn’t be clearer that
democracy is not what the U.S. was really concerned with,
because Musharraf was just a fine ally so long as he did as he
was told.
The truth is that Musharraf has, in opposing America's demands,
been a rather brave representative of Pakistan's interests, a
patriot in American parlance.
True democracy for a place like Pakistan is a long way off, not
because of this or that leader or party, but because of the
country's backward economic state. This is even truer for
Afghanistan. You cannot instantly create democracies out of
lands living in centuries-old economies, burdened with
centuries-old customs. The best thing America could have done
for this region would have been generous economic assistance,
but the U.S. has demonstrated, again and again, it has little
genuine interest in that sort of thing. The customs and
backwardness of centuries only melt away under the tide of
economic development. Democracy follows almost automatically
eventually.
The quick fix is what the U.S. demands, a quick fix to its own
perceptions of problems under the guise of supporting democracy
and opposition to terror, will achieve absolutely nothing over
the long term.
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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