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: Pakistan
Musharraf regime seeks to stave off collapse
By Keith Jones
20 September 2007
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A lawyer representing Pakistans US-backed military ruler,
General Pervez Musharraf, told the countrys Supreme Court
Tuesday that if Musharraf is elected to a second term
as president, he will resign as chief of the armed forces before
taking the oath of office.
Opponents of the regime were quick to condemn Musharrafs
pledge as a ruse aimed at subverting the countrys constitution
and the democratic will of the Pakistani people.
For months Musharraf has been laying the groundwork for a phony
election, in which the sitting national and provincial assemblies
will be called upon to constitute a presidential college and to
elect him to serve as president until the fall of 2012.
Such a process would be a mockery of democracy. Not only were
the current assemblies chosen in elections held five years ago,
those elections were themselves fraudulent. Pakistans military
rulers placed numerous anti-democratic constraints on anti-government
parties, while the military-sponsored Pakistan Muslim League (Quaid-e-Azam),
and to a lesser extent the MMA, a six-party alliance of Islamic
fundamentalist parties, benefited from state patronage and outright
ballot-rigging.
The general has previously broken commitments to give up his
post as military chief. In Dec. 2003, Musharraf secured the support
of the MMA for a package of constitutional amendments legitimizing
his 1999 coup, expanding the presidents powers, and giving
the military a permanent and commanding voice in the shaping of
government policy, in return for a promise that he would step
down as head of the military by the end of 2004.
More importantly, Musharrafs resignation pledge is a
thinly veiled threat to use the full force of the military to
ensure his stage-managed re-election as president
and face down the burgeoning popular challenge to his regime.
Otherwise, why not cede to the oppositions longstanding
demands, immediately step down as army chief, and contest the
presidential election as a civilian?
Musharrafs lawyer did not say what would happen in the
event the general is not re-elected?either because
the Supreme Court rules that he cannot be a presidential candidate,
as he has violated the constitutional prohibition on holding two
government offices simultaneously, or if he failed to win the
election. But the only inference one can draw is that he plans
to remain head of the armed forces and invoke emergency rule or
martial law.
Musharrafs aides and prominent leaders of the PML (Q)
have raised such a possibility repeatedly over the past six months,
including in the past few days. In mid-August, Musharraf was reportedly
only dissuaded from such a strategy by a frantic late-night telephone
call from US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
Musharrafs resignation pledge has been unanimously rejected
by the opposition, including Benazir Bhuttos Pakistan Peoples
Party (PPP)?which, at the urging of Washington, has been seeking
to negotiate a power-sharing deal with Musharraf. But the Bush
administration effectively gave it the USs stamp of approval.
White House Press Secretary Dana Perino declared that the issue
of whether Musharraf should respect the Pakistani constitution
and not hold or seek the presidency while heading the military
was an internal Pakistani matter that well let them
debate.
It dubious validity and threatening character notwithstanding,
Musharrafs resignation pledge is a testament to the increasingly
desperate crisis of his regime. Musharraf has always been loath
to spell out when and under what conditions he will give up his
post as military chief, because the military and its US patrons
(most of the more than $10 billion the US has sent Pakistan since
2001 has gone to the military) constitute his regimes principal
bulwark.
If he now has had to make a formal pledge to give up his army
post and in the countrys supreme court, it is because his
regime is unraveling.
Musharraf has reason to fear that the Supreme Court will rule
his presidential candidacy unconstitutional; he hopes, by combining
threats and the offer of weakening his hold on the reins of power,
to win the justices support for his remaining president.
Pakistans Supreme Court is notorious for its subservience
to the countrys string of military rulers. But since Musharrafs
attempt to sack Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry backfired, precipitating
a mass opposition movement, the Supreme Court has repeatedly rendered
decisions cutting across the governments plans. In July
the court dismissed the governments trumped-up case against
Chaudhry and, to the governments dismay, it ruled last month
that Nawaz Sharif, the head of Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz)
and the prime minister deposed by Musharraf in 1999 could return
to the county. (See With Washingtons
blessing: Pakistani regime mounts massive security operation in
Sharif deportation)
Behind the courts sudden new assertiveness lies the increasing
apprehension within the countrys bourgeois elite over the
extent to which the military and various crony capitalists have
monopolized the benefits of Pakistans recent economic growth
and apprehension over the mounting popular opposition to the regime.
This opposition is fueled by the lack of democratic rights, spiraling
prices, increasing social inequality, and the Musharraf regimes
complicity in the USs wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Musharrafs resignation vow is also part of his continuing
courtship of Bhutto and her PPP.
Bhutto, the PPP chairperson-for-life and two-time prime minister,
continues to play a double game. The PPP has condemned Musharraf
remaining as army chief during the presidential election, criticized
his plans to get himself re-elected by the current legislative
assemblies, and said it may join Sharifs party, the MMA
and other opposition groups in quitting the assemblies in an attempt
to deny Musharraf the requisite quorum to secure his phony re-election
as president.
But Bhutto has also not ruled out forming an alliance with
Musharraf and has repeatedly warned of the danger that a popular
agitation against the military government could spin out
of control
Bhutto has announced her return to Pakistan for October 18,
which is not only a month away, but would most in all likelihood
fall after Musharrafs stage-managed presidential election.
Recognizing that the Musharraf regime lacks popular legitimacy,
the Bush administration has been desperately seeking to broker
a deal with Bhutto, whose PPP is generally held to be the countrys
largest political party and has in the past postured as a progressive,
even socialist party.
Washingtons aim in strengthening the Pakistani regime
is to make it better able to serve the USs predatory interests,
beginning with the mounting of a bloody counter-insurgency war
to root out the Taliban and other armed Islamicist groups in Pakistan.
Huge obstacles stand in the way of a Bhutto-Musharraf partnership.
There are major differences over the divisions of the spoils of
office and mutual suspicions, but also fears within the PPP that
they may be embracing Musharraf as he politically approaches his
death-rattle.
See Also:
With Washingtons blessing
Pakistani regime mounts massive security operation in Sharif deportation
[13 September 2007]
US seeks to save Pakistani dictator,
thwart democracy
[6 September 2007]
In a stunning rebuke to Musharraf,
Supreme Court orders chief justice reinstated
[21 July 2007]
Musharraf lauds Lal Masjid
massacre
[13 July 2007]
Mosque massacre: Washingtons
war on terror shakes Pakistan
[11 July 2007]
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