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Pakistan's
ubiquitous establishment might be a super manipulator, but close
to the February 18 elections, it is facing its toughest time ever
since the days of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (1971-77). Mr. Bhutto, the
country's first elected prime minister, used his populism to keep
down the scheming generals, bureaucrats and politicians, but in
the end he was overthrown and sentenced to death. This time there
is no overbearing individual, just unique circumstances that are
ostensibly forcing the establishment led by General (retd.) Pervez
Musharraf to retreat from the seat of power it has occupied for
a decade.
Background
interviews with senior military and intelligence officials, besides
lengthy meetings with different party leaders, suggest that two
distinct events have set in place the process of the demise of the
old order that is likely to be hastened by the upcoming polls: first,
the separation of the offices of the chief of army staff and president
and second, the assassination of Ms Benazir Bhutto. These two events
happening back-to-back have thrown out of gear the standard plans
of the Musharraf regime to continue with its controlled and manipulated
democracy. Elections, which were once supposed to be a mere endorsement
of the status quo, now seem to have become seminal to the recasting
of national politics.
The
new army chief, General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, has set in motion
a steady and swift process of the army's disengagement from the
political affairs of the country, meeting the longstanding demand
of civil society and the political parties that the political deck
be cleared of the presence of the army brass. Army sources confirm
that by taking this step the new chief has only delivered on what
the institution really wanted. These sources say that General Musharraf's
troubled engagement in politics, particularly during the last one
year, has earned the army its worst public image ever. So much so
that the uniform, a symbol of pride and authority for members of
the armed forces, has become a stigma to hide and a red rag to an
enraged public emotion.
Apart
from issuing direct orders to all military men to cut off their
links with politics, General Kayani is also rolling back the army
from publicly prominent deployments such as monitoring duties in
civilian institutions, postings in the National Accountability Bureau,
Interior Ministry, etc. Organisations like the FWO and NLC, will
also be handed over to civilians in the next six months.
Ironically,
these 'about-turn on politics' orders have the most profound political
implications that can be imagined. In one go, these steps have blasted
a big hole in the base of the existing order. For instance, the
intrusive role of the Military Intelligence, which was largely seen
by the opposition as General Musharraf's favourite tool to fix political
problems, has now been reduced to insignificance. The agency is
being redeployed to its original work that suffered due to its deep
involvement in national politics.
The
army's return to the barracks has also considerably diluted the
stamp of extra authority that General Musharraf has tried to put
on all his steps following his retirement. The symbolism of keeping
the army house in his custody and generous references to General
Kayani as his protégé of sorts were aimed at giving
the impression that Musharraf represented a continuity which the
army fully backed and wanted.
However,
the speed with which General Kayani has moved to disengage the army
from politics has nullified the propagation of this impression.
In fact, a counter-impression has been created that General Musharraf
is really on his own and should not be associated in any way with
the armed forces. By far, the most significant evidence of how eager
the new army command is to sever links with their retired army chief,
is a reiteration by the ISPR that all troop deployment during the
election time shall be for purposes of "law and order maintenance
only." The army high command, it is clear, does not want to
give even a quarter to the mantra of free and fair elections that
is being chanted by General Musharraf.
Explaining
the stand, a senior official told Newsline that the army does not
want to be seen to be associated with the process of elections because,
"if these are not free and fair, either in reality or in popular
perception, the blame would fly fast towards those who supervised
them and it is not going to be us."
This
sense of explosive controversies centering on elections is heightened
by the new dynamics unleashed by Ms Bhutto's tragic death. The initial
assessments in the presidential camp of being able to "engage
with the post-Benazir PPP more effectively" is giving way to
the grim reality that political life has become slightly more complex
now.
The PPP leadership has sensed that while Ms Bhutto's loss is devastating,
at least for the upcoming elections, their party has the opportunity
to bounce back with a vengeance. And they are in no mood to take
General Musharraf seriously.
So while Musharraf is putting up a brave public face, insisting
that he is here to stay, insiders say that his camp managers are
worried sick that the elections might precipitate a calamitous situation
for their boss. These worries, some of which are shared by the PML-Q
as well, flow out of the fact that the pre-Benazir assassination
script has become completely redundant. Now, as one intelligence
official puts it, "All outcomes look problematic and each,
more than the other."
The
most preferred scenario would have been a straightforward victory
for the General Musharraf-backed PML-Q, which, once in power, would
have been a perfect companion for the retired general's dream-come-true
journey of five additional years in power. That scene looks improbable
as intelligence assessments available to Newsline do not give more
than 50 seats to the PML-Q. And that too is put under the heading
of "best-case-scenario." These assessments are way off,
say PML-Q leaders. Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi, former chief minister
of the Punjab, says that his party is going to win at least 110
out of the total 272 National Assembly seats and 60% of the 577
provincial assembly seats. He calls the doomsday scenario for the
Q-League as pure disinformation. Leaving aside the debate on the
numbers that different parties would notch up in the upcoming elections,
there are very few in the establishment who believe that a Q-League
government at the centre and in the Punjab is possible, or even
wise.
A
workable alternative to the pro-Musharraf League in power would
have been a healthy arrangement between them and the PPP. Intelligence
sources confirm that the option, attempted again after the assassination
of Ms Benazir Bhutto, by interlocutors of General Musharraf, drew
only derision from her party. "The two parties are poles apart
and are now also locked in blood-sport politics," says a senior
member of the shrivelled Musharraf camp, who admits that the PPP
is in no mood to even consider the Q-League as a serious competitor,
much less a potential partner to run the state of Pakistan.
Peoples
Party insiders claim that they are more inclined to forge an alliance
with the Pakistan Muslim League-N than with any other party. "We
are also counting on a group of independents who will declare themselves
after their electoral victory; some of them have indicated that
they would resign and contest again in case party loyalty is used
as a way to block their way," says a PPP source, who claims
to have a list of 20 such members of the PML-Q from the Punjab alone.
Such
claims might be propaganda, but these do underline the direction
of PPP politics these days. For the diehard detractors of the retired
general in the Nawaz League camp, this is a godsend. "There
is not even a debate in our party ranks and among our leaders: given
half a chance we would throw Musharraf out of power," says
a prominent Nawaz League leader, who travelled with the former prime
minister back to London and still carries the physical scars of
the beatings he took when General Musharraf took over in October
12, 1999.
This
passion for removing Musharraf translates into the most murky threat
facing the existing political order built around the retired general.
"Elections should throw up a stable arrangement because the
country can ill-afford another bout of political troubles, but the
alignment of political forces at this point does not foretell that
kind of a situation," says a member of the Intelligence Bureau
dealing with the politics of the Punjab.
There
are reasons other than revenge or anger that are at the root of
the growing possibility of a PPP-PML-N combine preparing to bring
Musharraf down. Any winner of the elections other than the PML-Q,
would want to look for a scapegoat for the impending challenges
that the future government would have to handle. Expanding terrorism,
an economic downturn, lawlessness and the back-breaking cost of
living, have combined to make governance a nightmare. A new government
would like to pin the whole blame on the previous lot, out of whom,
only General Musharraf survives. Only he represents the continuity
of the present system and, therefore, would be an ideal target for
all that might go wrong after the elections.
"The
country has suffered because one man has ruled this country for
a decade and made a mess of it," says Dr Zubair Khan, a staff
member of the International Monetary Fund, who also claims that
whenever he tried to render sound advice to the ruling junta it
fell on deaf ears.
Jehangir
Tareen, former minister for industries, agrees that the present
situation is seen by the voters as a direct result of the misgovernance
of the last many years.
"Voters
are angry, and thanks to the media remarkably well-informed. They
believe that the country has been rudderless all these years. They
will make the incumbent pay for the trouble their lives are in,"
says Mr Tareen who, being a former member of the federal cabinet
himself, anticipates a tough competition in a constituency where
he once thought he was totally secure.
The
other reason for shaking the throne of General Musharraf is the
burden of his personal stakes. For one thing, no two parties other
than the PML-Q and the MQM see him as someone who could forge consensus
in the country.
"The
original percentage of votes for the two parties (in 2002) is 24%
and 4%, which means that the remaining 72% of the voters do not
want General Musharraf around," says Dr Ijaz Shafi Gillani,
chairman of Gallup International in Pakistan.
General
Musharraf's presence carries for the parliament-to-be a most complex
agenda. The new assemblies will have to first decide the issue of
the legitimacy of his presidency along with providing indemnities
to the unconstitutional acts undertaken during and after Musharraf's
second coup on November 3. In other words, the parliament will be
asked to forge a consensus to pass the 18th Amendment in favour
of the president or else the constitution cannot be fully revived.
The 17th Amendment took nearly three years to be passed and even
then it created gaping holes in the constitution, giving General
Musharraf powers and privileges that became the perpetual bone of
contention between the political parties and the Presidency. Over
and above all of this is the unresolved issue of the judiciary's
independence and that of the incarcerated judges and leaders of
the lawyers' movement. They cannot be kept in custody forever, and
yet the moment they are released they will restart the movement
for the ouster of General Musharraf. So just when the country needs
an absolutely united and combined focus on the expanding threat
of the war against terrorism, divisive issues are littering the
national scene. Elections are taking place against a background
that is tightly filled with dangerous possibilities. But these could
also become the trigger to end an inglorious era of trickery and
tragedy.
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