SHASHI THAROOR: Mixed Reactions To Musharraf’s Exit

by admin ~ August 21st, 2008

PAKISTANI President Pervez Musharraf’s resignation brings to an end one of the more interesting curiosities of subcontinental politics: for more than four years, Pakistan had a president who was born in India, while India had a prime minister (Manmohan Singh) who was born in Pakistan. Since the two countries’ separation is now more than six decades old, that anomaly is unlikely to be repeated.

But it is not the only reason Indians are greeting Musharraf’s exit with mixed feelings.

Musharraf was someone who was easy to hate across the border. He had, after all, risen to the top of the military on the back of the Pakistani army’s Islamist elements, who came into their own (in what had previously been a rather Anglophile, British- and American-trained officer corps) during the decade-long reign of a fundamentalist military ruler, Gen Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq.

Indeed, though Musharraf displayed an urbane image, enjoyed his Scotch, and admired Turkey, he was not one of the Pakistani secularists so admired by Indian liberals. Instead, he cultivated a reputation as an anti-Indian hardliner.

The fact that his family had fled India upon Partition gave him an additional chip on his shoulder: it was widely said that he saw relations with India as a series of opportunities to wreak vengeance for what his family had suffered in the refugee upheav-als of 1947.

As chief of army staff, he directed the disastrous Kargil invasion of 1999, when Pakistan sent its soldiers surreptitiously across the ceasefire lines to capture vital heights overlooking a key Indian road. He was recorded by Indian intelligence boasting about the action on an open telephone line during a visit to Beijing.

Because the invasion was manifestly illegal and provocative, Pakistan denied that official soldiers were involved, with the result that when they were repulsed, at great cost to both sides, Musharraf refused to accept his own soldiers’ bodies.

It was a low point in Indo-Pakistan relations, and no one in Delhi was prepared to trust him ever again.

Within months, however, he had conducted a coup against Nawaz Sharif, and a year later declared himself president, a title meant to boost his stature when he visited India for peace talks in July 2001.

But Musharraf had come to power as the patron of the jihadis his army was financing, equipping and training for their forays into Indian territory, and few in New Delhi thought genuine peace could be made with such a duplicitous man.

Then came Sept 11, when, under intense pressure from the United States to support American retaliation in Afghanistan or face the consequences, he was forced to disown his proteges.

The Taliban, under whose rule Osama bin Laden had found a safe haven, had been created (and, in crucial battles, led) by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Now, Musharraf, to preserve his country’s alliance with the world’s sole superpower (and his country’s largest donor), had to betray his own.

For at least two years, though, he tried to have it both ways, cracking down at America’s behest on the Islamists on Pakistan’s western border with Afghanistan while sponsoring them on the eastern border with India.

A Pakistani-sponsored jihadi attack on India’s Parliament in December 2001 nearly provoked all-out war. But the double game proved unsustainable: the Islamists were less inclined than their now-ambivalent patron to draw sophistical distinctions between one kind of enemy and another.

The result was two assassination attempts against Musharraf in December 2003.

If Musharraf had previously been unwilling to choose sides, the attempts to kill him finally showed him which side he had to be on.

From then on, he seems genuinely to have tried to clamp down on the Frankenstein’s monster that he had sustained as an instrument of Pakistani policy.

For roughly four years, he represented the best that the West and India could hope for in a Pakistani leader: someone with military authority who seemed convinced that his own survival, and the interests of his state, demanded a clampdown on terrorism.

“I never thought I’d say this,” one senior national security figure in New Delhi said to me, “but Pervez Musharraf may be India’s best hope for peace with Pakistan.”

It could not last indefinitely. The first problems arose in the lawless “federally-administered tribal areas” (Fata) in western Pakistan.

Musharraf, concerned at all costs to avoid any military action that might provoke a tribal rebellion against his forces, tried to buy himself more political space by cutting deals with insurgent leaders in the Fata, signing peace agreements with the very chiefs his army should have been pursuing.

Meanwhile, internal difficulties worsened.

As anti-Musharraf sentiment grew within Pakistan, and repressive measures aimed at the judiciary and the press cost him ever more support among the intelligentsia, his hold on power began to slip.

His effort to cut a deal with Benazir Bhutto was a final attempt to remain in office through the election of a civilian leader acceptable to the public (and the West). Her assassination by Islamist elements foreclosed that option.

His fraying authority made him less effective and, indeed, less useful: the Taliban re-emerged in strength on Pakistan’s Afghan border, and his own ISI was proved to have been involved in the bombing of India’s embassy in Kabul.

By the summer of this year, the West and India were facing a Pakistan again in the grip of chaos, its border areas in Islamist hands and its ISI out of the control of the elected civilian government.

The prospects of an implosion of governmental authority in Pakistan are strong, and the consequences would be dire. But, by the time he resigned, he had lost the ability to do anything about it. — Project Syndicate

* The writer is a former under-secretary-general of the United Nations.

 

New Straits Times

Obama Dijangka Umum Calon Gandingan Hari Ini

by admin ~ August 20th, 2008



Hillary Clinton tak tersenarai dalam 3 nama bakal Naib Presiden AS

NEW MEXICO: Barack Obama dijangka akan mengumumkan calon gandingannya sebagai Naib Presiden Amerika Syarikat seawal-awalnya hari ini dan selewat-lewatnya Jumaat ini.

Akhbar New York Times berkata calon parti Demokrat itu belum menyatakan siapa pilihannya tetapi nampak memberi tumpuan kepada Gabenor Virginia, Tim Kaine; Senator Indiana, Evan Bayh dan pakar dasar luar, Senator Joseph Biden.

Desas-desus terbaru mengenai penamaan calon bagi Naib Presiden timbul semula apabila beliau mula mengecam hebat calon lawannya daripada Parti Republikan, John McCain, genap seminggu sebelum konvensyen pencalonan Demokrat berlangsung di Denver, Colorado.

Calon gandingan Naib Presiden juga turut diperkatakan di sebelah pihak Republikan dan laman web Politico.com dan Fox News menyatakan McCain akan menamakan calon berkenaan pada 29 Ogos ini, sehari selepas ucapan penerimaan Obama di depan 70,000 anggota Demokrat di Denver.

Tarikh berkenaan memberi peluang kepada McCain untuk mengehadkan liputan berita pasca pencalonan Obama di samping sambutan hari jadinya yang ke-72 dan memanaskan suasana menjelang konvensyen Republikan di St Paul, Minnesota mulai 1 September ini.

The Times, dalam laporan laman webnya, memetik penasihat Obama yang enggan disebut namanya sebagai berkata, beliau sudah pun mencapai keputusan ketika bercuti di Hawaii minggu lalu dan pengurusan kempennya bersiap sedia untuk pengumumannya.

Pihak pengurusan kempennya berkata, Obama akan memaklumkan penyokongnya pada peringkat akar umbi menerusi mesej dan e-mel. Beliau kemudian akan melancarkan kempen di seluruh negara bersama calon gandingannya.

Akhbar itu juga memetik pembantu Obama sebagai berkata, pengumuman itu akan dibuat paling awal hari ini dan selewat-lewatnya lusa.

Daripada ketiga-tiga calon yang disebut-sebut oleh akhbar Times, Kaine dijangka dapat memperhebatkan harapan Obama untuk menang di kawasan pilihan raya Virginia. Kaine dikatakan mempunyai hubungan rapat dengan pengundi Demokrat yang bekerja, tapi kurang pengalaman dalam dasar luar.

Biden, pengerusi jawatankuasa Perhubungan Luar Senat, dijangka dapat memperlengkapkan kekurangan Obama dalam bidang keselamatan kebangsaan. Beliau juga baru saja kembali dari Georgia dan mengeluarkan kenyataan tegas bagi membantah tindakan Russia ke atas kerajaan Tblisi.

Bayh, yang popular di Indiana, juga mempunyai kepakaran dalam dasar luar, mungkin menjadi pilihan sesuai memandangkan keakrabannya dengan saingan Obama ketika pemilihan calon, Hillary Clinton.

Bekas wanita pertama itu tidak termasuk dalam senarai, walaupun sesetengah penyokongnya menaruh harapan beliau akan dicalonkan. - AFP

Berita Harian

BLAIR’s LECTURE: Judge His Actions

by admin ~ August 20th, 2008

I REFER to the letters by Duncan Horne of Kuantan and N. S. Nathan of Skudai regarding Tony Blair’s lecture at the Sultan Azlan Shah Law Lecture recently (”Not fair to call him war criminal” and “Don’t be biased” — NST, Aug 18). I feel that neither has fully understood the issue.

Nathan’s letter says that “people may have their own views on this man because of his role in the invasion of Iraq. But that should not be used as the sole yardstick to measure this man and his wisdom”.

And Horne declares that “to brand Blair a war criminal is outrageous. He is not an evil person. Osama bin Laden and his devious network of suicide bombers are the ones we should be condemning. Blair would have felt well within his rights to defend his country and strive to flush out this global enemy”.

“For Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad to label Blair a war criminal is plainly ridiculous. May I remind readers that Blair was the man who eventually ended decades of religious-fuelled violence in Ireland.”

My response is this: Why is it ridiculous for Dr Mahathir to condemn Blair as a war criminal? It is evident for all to see that Bush and Blair invaded Iraq because of non-existent weapons of mass destruction and without the sanction of the United Nations.

This has caused destruction of infrastructure, the unnecessary deaths of thousands, the unleashing of sectarian violence, the Abu Ghraib prison scandal and the collapse of its economy. The war in Iraq is as much a war crime as Hitler’s invasion of Poland.

Everyone condemned the Sept 11, 2001, and the July 7, 2005 attacks by al-Qaeda, but they do not justify the horrendous suffering that Iraq is facing.

Sure, Blair could be credited with ending violence in Ireland, but it does not whitewash the crimes that he committed with regard to Iraq. If the above-mentioned acts cannot be used as the sole yardstick for judging Blair’s wisdom, what can?

 

New Straits Times