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Even
in the best of times, Pakistan's politics can defy the forecasts
of established pundits. And in times such as these, when hopes and
fears mix into a cocktail of grand confusion, it becomes even harder
to make any sense of the ensuing circus.
The political scene is a bewildering array of paradoxes.
None is more striking as one concerning the power of President General
Pervez Musharraf, who despite being on top of everything, is grappling
with fast multiplying challenges.
On
paper, and constitutionally, he is a very powerful president. He
can get rid of an erring government, make all important appointments,
including those of senior judges and the army chief and supervise
the affairs of government using his political weight. His presidential
status has been constitutionalised through a painstaking but successful
deal with the six-party religious alliance, the MMA. Through this
deal, the 17th Amendment has been passed, which embodies most of
the changes that General Musharraf had made in the constitution
before the elections took place.
The same deal has also paved the way for General Musharraf
to seek a vote of confidence (through a simple majority) from the
parliament, putting a seal of procedural legitimacy upon the status
he claimed through the controversial referendum held in 2002. To
mark his new status, he also addressed the joint session of parliament
on January 17. In the face of jeers and booing which made him break
out into a cold sweat, Musharraf thus fulfilled a requirement that
had been pending for a year - one which is supposed to be met at
the start of the first year of a newly-elected government.
Musharraf
has managed to cross all constitutional hurdles, while retaining
the power to dissolve the assembly endorsed by the parliament, and
has through the 17th Amendment deal, managed to drive a wedge in
the ranks of the the Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy,
with the PPP and PML(N) now fighting a war of words against the
MMA for legitimising Musharraf's rule.
With
all this under his belt, General Musharraf's plate should be void
of political problems. Yet his constitutional legitimacy has not
added to his political capital, nor yielded visible political stability.
And on the personal front, he is being attacked far more viciously
by the opposition than ever before. "He is a dictator and just
because he is wearing constitutional garb, that does not mean he
is a legitimate political leader," said Saad Rafiq, the Punjab
General Secretary of the PML(N). The sentiment is widely shared
by other parties of the ARD, which have been consistent in their
campaign against General Musharraf's rule.
The
MMA, frustrated and worried over the growing public perception of
its being a closet ally of General Musharraf, has also turned up
the volume on its criticism. Qazi Hussain Ahmad, Amir Jamaat-e-Islami
and the acting president of the MMA, in a recent interview, pulled
no punches against President Musharraf. "His time is up. The
clock is ticking. We have forced him to take off his uniform by
the year-end. Once he is gone, his unpopular foreign policy of bending
before the US will also be over," he said.
Qazi
Hussain is not the only one counting the days to when President
Pervez Musharraf will lose the protection of the khakis. Musharraf's
many other detractors, ARD parties included, believe that by committing
to a date for resigning his army post, General Musharraf has already
entered a lame-duck phase. Insiders say the leadership of the Pakistan
Peoples Party and the Pakistan Muslim League (N) is planning its
return around the date President Musharraf takes off his uniform.
To
ensure that he is not relegated to the same tragic ranks of powerful
civilian presidents like Ghulam Ishaq Khan and Farooq Ahmad Khan
Leghari, Musharraf's aides are busy building blocs of support for
him. There is a body of opinion that has suggested he take over
the reins of a United Pakistan Muslim League, and thus acquire a
political constituency that will see him through the tough political
times ahead.
Insiders say that the renewed efforts to speed up the unification
process of the Muslim League have been undertaken primarily with
this purpose in mind.
Mustering
political support without the backing of the barracks is inherently
problematic. The Muslim League's legendary adaptability to political
expediency aside, there is no consensus yet on whether handing over
the party's top office to a former army general and a sitting president
will do any good to the political fortunes of the party's leadership,
which is accountable to its constituencies.
The other attempt to
further strengthen the president's already strong hands in the system
- through the National Security Council - is not popular among most
political parties. While the ARD and the MMA are against making
this body part of the system, even by an act of parliament, some
within the PML(Q) believe there is little political virtue in backing
the NSC. "The short-term gains for the Pakistan Muslim League
are many,"says a senior member of the ruling PML(Q), who is
jockeying for a ministerial seat in the cabinet. At least the old
crises and power-play among the president, the prime minister and
the chief of army staff, which rocked the boats of sitting governments,
will be resolved at this forum. But we also know that the NSC will
further dilute an already enfeebled parliament, reducing it to a
debating club that even its members will not take seriously. As
parliamentarians, we have not much pride left. We are under constant
watch by the army. The NSC will shrink our stature even more."
Fears of the army dominating the political system are widespread.
There is a growing feeling in the ruling party that the government
is bearing the brunt of President Musharraf's political troubles.
As the opposition continues to shoot rapid-fire salvos and General
Musharraf advances on the dangerous path of publicly taking unpopular
decisions, his political allies' loyalties are being tested to the
utmost. And some are already keeping a fair distance from the presidential
quarters.
There is a groundswell of resentment against these policies and
this resentment is not confined to the political opposition. The
arrest of 11 members of the nuclear establishment and the humiliation
of Dr. A. Q. Khan, who appeared on national television to apologise
for proliferating nuclear technology to Iran, Libya, North Korea,
has resulted in massive public embarrassment for Musharraf's supporters.
The government's explanation that many of those being questioned,
led by Dr. A.Q. Khan, were "motivated by greed," and were
involved "in acts of transfer of nuclear technology to Iran
and Libya," has not cut any ice with the public which suspects
that Dr. A.Q. Khan, once anointed the father of the bomb, has been
targetted under US pressure. The general impression is that following
its volte face on Afghanistan and its acceptance of peace talks
with India on New Delhi's terms, General Musharraf is now bending
over backwards on the nuclear front at the behest of the US, thus
setting the stage for a nuclear rollback.
"There will be no nuclear rollback. Stop saying this. These
scientists committed a wrong and have paid for it. It has got nothing
to do with Pakistan's nuclear capability, which is increasing,"
maintained an irate General Musharraf at his press conference, where
he also announced that, on the federal cabinet's recommendation,
Dr. A.Q. Khan had been pardoned for his transgressions.
The successful media campaign of the families of the arrested scientists,
spread by the burgeoning ranks of the private-sector electronic
media, has blown holes in the official stand. The more the government
talks about the suspected crimes of these scientists, the greater
the reaction in the form of pointed questions involving the timing
of the arrests, the manner in which government officials have hurled
accusations against those arrested even before conclusive evidence
is found against them, and most importantly, whether any one of
these dubious transactions could have taken place without the consent
of the ruling generals.
Citizens' groups, lawyers, teachers, students, the business community
and opposition leaders have all expressed grave concerns. Even fiercely
anti-nuclear lobbies, like the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan,
have been forced to take notice of the matter, blasting the government
for short-circuiting the due legal process.
Inside the closed doors of the army's power corridors, there is
little sign of unease. "There is debate but in the end there
is consensus and consent," says a top level military official
when asked if public sentiment over Kashmir, India, the ongoing
operation in the tribal areas, and the arrest of scientists is ringing
in the army's decision-making bodies.
Some do not believe that the army's consent is voluntary, or even
permanent. Qazi Hussain Ahmad believes that because the army staff
exercises the power to make or break careers, many of those in disagreement
will not speak up as long as Musharraf remains head of the army.
"The moment he goes, you will see how much disagreement there
is on issues of national concern. None of his policies are popular,"
says the leader of the Jamaat-i-Islami.
Deaf to these concerns, General Pervez Musharraf marches on, professing
an unwavering belief in his policies. He has repeatedly stated that
those who disagree with his handling of sensitive national issues
do so out of incompetence or plain spite. As a result, he has banished
all critical feedback. Centralising decision-making, consensus in
the inner circle is reduced to a few nodding sycophants.
It
is unfortunate that all this is happening at a time when the course
of Pakistan's future is being shaped by external events, and when
genuine national debate is a must. If General Musharraf and members
of his charmed circle can steady the national ship from behind the
captain's helm, it will be a fantastic achievement. The cost of
failure will be steep: the loss of what remains in the way of political
sanity and stability for the country.
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