It is not
the enemy without, but the enemy within that is pounding
on Pakistan's door. Terrorists, militants, extremists,
freedom fighters, angry young men - call them what you
will - have declared war on Pakistan.
Bomb
blasts, rocket fire and missile attacks in Karachi,
Lahore, Quetta and Islamabad. Corps commander, minister,
chief minister, prime minister-designate and the President
himself - all have been in the range of fire.
Pakistan
appears to be a country at war with itself, as it celebrates
its fifty-seventh year of independence this August.
And while most of the militants are ISI-trained mujahideen
- remnants of the Afghan war - they have now been joined
by another breed of jihadi: the educated young Pakistani
professional - the cardiologist, the orthopaedic surgeon,
the computer engineer. What unites the two widely disparate
groups? A growing anger, impatience and frustration
with Musharraf's domestic and foreign policies and his
pro-US tilt that "borders on servility," according
to his critics.
In
his desire to fight the American war on terrorism on
Pakistani soil, Musharraf has compromised national interest,
to his own, and the country's detriment. Political forces
have been sidelined or coopted, and decisions are being
taken at the GHQ, never mind democracy and parliament.
Few
are in favour of sending troops to Iraq, but the Musharraf
government has yet to come out with a clear-cut no to
the US request. Two Pakistanis employed in Iraq have
been executed as a consequence, but that barely matters.
The government has been crowing about the fact that
a Pakistani has been asked to head the UN mission in
Iraq. Pakistani troops are expected to follow close
behind. To what end? To fall in with the American strategy
that a Muslim presence might blunt the Iraqi attacks
on Bush's boys, or worse still to use them as human
shields?
Meanwhile back home, a political rebellion is
brewing as the army battles the locals in Wana and Balochistan
- bullet for bullet. Nearly 150 soldiers and several
hundred people have lost their lives in what is being
viewed as a battle between the Pakistan army and the
Pakistani people. The last time that happened, we lost
half the country. Are we destined to repeat past tragedies
once again or will sanity prevail before it is too late?
