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Some
eight years ago, when Republican presidential hopeful George W.
Bush was asked to name the military officer behind Pakistan's recent
coup d'etat, he racked his insubstantial brain and came up with
a category rather than a name: "General..." Admittedly,
Pakistan at the time did not exactly attract the sort of significance
it has acquired in the interim, even though the subcontinent had
been identified by analysts as the likeliest site of a nuclear conflagration,
particularly in the light of the Kargil confrontation, which the
Clinton administration had hosed down by leaning heavily on Nawaz
Sharif's government. The coup was widely perceived as, in part,
retribution for Sharif acquiescing to American pressure by pulling
the plug on that misadventure.
Bush
has, in the interim, become considerably better acquainted with
Pervez Musharraf, and has even mastered the art of pronouncing the
latter's name reasonably well, by his standards. In fact, the two
of them have learned to depend on each other to an extraordinary
extent: Musharraf because he feels he has little choice, Bush on
account of a myopia based on ignorance and ideologically inspired
malfeasance. But now Bush's days, at long last, are numbered: 11
months from now, he will be obliged to hand over power to his successor.
It
won't be known until November who that successor is going to be,
and by the time you read this the field may have narrowed down considerably.
Unfortunately, however, there may not be a huge difference between
Bush and the next president in the context of Pakistan's plight.
Despite
the Bush administration's abysmal record internationally as well
as in the domestic arena, there is no guarantee that he will be
succeeded by a Democrat. But although the Republican field - wide
open at the time of writing - inevitably offers greater cause for
concern, the leading Democrats can hardly be construed as guarantors
of a less destructive US foreign policy.
International
affairs generally don't feature as a primary concern in US presidential
contests, but the events of recent years have made a difference.
Iraq, for instance, was prominently on the agenda when the Republican
majority in both houses of Congress was overturned at the 2006 congressional
elections. A similar phenomenon ought to have been in play during
Bush's bid for re-election in 2004, a year-and-a-half after the
gratuitous invasion of Iraq, but the extent of the disaster was
still being disguised by a substantial proportion of the mainstream
media. Besides, John Kerry, the Democratic candidate, despite his
status as a veteran of the Vietnam War, as well as the domestic
movement against that outrageous instance of American aggression,
was more keen to depict himself as a war veteran rather than as
a veteran of anti-war activism.
In
the present context, the leading Democratic hopefuls have broadly
been inclined towards a progressive (albeit less than complete)
pullout from Iraq, whereas their Republican counterparts have generally
held out the prospect of continued occupation, with John McCain
taking credit for last year's "surge" on account of having
advocated a larger troop presence all along.
The
only exception is Ron Paul, a traditional Republican isolationist,
who would withdraw US troops not only from Iraq and Afghanistan,
but also from NATO and all United Nations operations. In his opinion,
the 9/11 attacks were, effectively, blowback: "They attack
us because we've been over there. We've been bombing Iraq for 10
years. I'm suggesting that we listen to the people who attacked
us and the reason they did it." In many respects his worldview
would undoubtedly be an improvement on the status quo, but the US
cutting itself off from the rest of the world is hardly a realistic
prospect, and Paul failed to make a mark in the early caucuses and
primaries.
Pakistan
planted itself on the agenda in the wake of the traumatic events
of December 27 - exactly 28 years, coincidentally, after the Soviet
military intervention allowed the US to become less secretive about
its efforts to nurture and equip the forces that eventually yielded
the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.
Presidential
candidates tend to rely on opinion polls and focus groups before
formulating expressible opinions, but in the case of Benazir Bhutto's
assassination, there was little time for such niceties. That may
explain why Hillary Clinton expressed herself in generalities before
latching on to the context of empathy as a mother and a female politician.
"I have known Benazir Bhutto for more than 12 years, she's
someone whom I was honoured to visit as first lady when she was
prime minister," she eventually noted. "Certainly on a
personal level, for those of us who knew her, who were impressed
by her commitment, her dedication, her willingness to pick up the
mantle of her father, who was also assassinated, it is a terrible,
terrible tragedy."
She
also cited "the failure of the Musharraf regime either to deal
with terrorism or to build democracy," adding that "it's
time that the United States sided with civil society in Pakistan."
There's more than a sliver of truth in that opinion, but her chief
rival, Barack Obama, wasn't exactly being facetious when he pointed
out that Hillary's role in authorising the attack on Iraq played
a crucial role in swinging American attention away from the Taliban
and Al-Qaeda, implying that Pakistan's fate was a consequence of
the military debacle set in motion by the decision to overthrow
Saddam Hussein.
The Washington Post
slapped down Obama for capitalising on the tragedy, although the
point he and his aides made wasn't really out of context. It did,
however, tend to reinforce a couple of fallacies. For instance,
the widespread notion that the US would have been better off concentrating
on Afghanistan than venturing into Iraq is defensible at one level,
but on the other hand the idea that greater military strength would
somehow have resolved the Afghan troubles is a dangerous illusion.
Obama also noted that Americans "stand with [Pakistanis] in
their quest for democracy and against the terrorists who threaten
the common security of the world." He spoke to the US ambassador
in Pakistan, as well as Pakistan's ambassador in Washington, but
it was his rival John Edwards who managed to get through to Musharraf,
reminding him of the need to establish democracy, as well as allow
an international investigation into Benazir's assassination.
Going by the early episodes in the nomination process, however,
Edwards - who also comes across as more progressive on most domestic
issues than Clinton and Obama - could, at best, aspire to a vice-presidential
slot on the ticket, and that too only if the latter succeeds in
stalling the formidable Clinton machine.
Yet, however wanting one might find the contenders on the side of
the Democrats, their Republican counterparts provide considerably
greater cause for concern. Mike Huckabee, for instance, reacted
to Benazir's murder by saying the American response should include
"very clear monitoring of our borders ... to make sure if there's
any unusual activity of Pakistanis coming into our country."
That non-sequitur points to the kind of philistinism that Bush brought
to the White House. But Huckabee - who was running out of funds
at the time of writing, and therefore was considered unlikely to
be a serious contender despite the attention he has attracted in
recent months - was by no means the most reprehensible of the lot.
Arguably the leading contender for that category is former New York
mayor Rudy Giuliani, whose reaction to the Bhutto catastrophe was
predictably anodyne, but who has consistently railed against "the
bloodlust of Islamic terrorists." According to Democratic senator
Joseph Biden, every sentence Giuliani has uttered during the campaign
consists of "a noun, a verb and 9/11." He was mayor when
the September 11 atrocities occurred, and his leadership was much
lauded at the time (in contrast with that of Bush), but subsequently
his opponents have found several gaping holes in it.
His advisers include some of the direst neoconservatives - including
Norman Podhoretz and Michael Rubin - and it was Giuliani who effectively
prodded fellow Republican Mitt Romney into making a television ad
in which he announced: "It is this century's nightmare - jihadism.
Violent, radical Islamic fundamentalism. Their goal is to unite
the world under a single jihadist caliphate. To do that, they must
collapse freedom-loving nations like us." Romney's response
was triggered by being taken to task for suggesting that an American
assault on Iran would require legal justification and a congressional
imprimatur.
He and Giuliani also have no problems with the torture by organs
of the US government that has become routine in the so-called war
on terror. John McCain, to his credit, opposes such interrogation
techniques, not least because he claims to have been subjected to
them himself during his stint as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam
War. He is also far more reluctant than any of his Republican colleagues
to dump on the illegal immigrants the US attracts from Mexico and
elsewhere in Central America. But the continued occupation of Iraq
remains on his agenda - he has gone as far as to allege that the
US is winning the war in the wake of the surge he had long recommended
- as does a possible attack against Iran.
Following Benazir's assassination, he pointed out that, unlike any
of his rivals, he had actually visited Waziristan and therefore
had a better idea of the conditions in that part of Pakistan. It's
safe to presume he is not troubled by Obama's suggestion that the
US should, on the basis of "actionable intelligence",
be willing to raid Pakistan's northern territories to track down
terrorists, particularly Al-Qaeda stalwarts such as Osama bin Laden
and Ayman Al-Zawahiri.
McCain, who was flattened by the Bush machine in an earlier bid
for the White House, is the likeliest contender among the Republicans,
and his reputation as a pragmatist may well afford him an advantage
in a one-on-one contest against Hillary Clinton. Obama, on the other
hand, evidently exercises bipartisan appeal that would boost his
standing in November, were he to be picked as the Democratic candidate.
His relative youth is probably an advantage against McCain's seniority,
although some voters construe it as inexperience.
The problem with Clinton is that, among other things, she would
probably feel obliged to be excessively gung-ho in order to prove
that a female commander-in-chief is the equal of any man. It's unfortunate
having to consider her candidacy in these terms, but also a reminder
that many of feminism's goals remain unaccomplished. Obama's eagerness
to militarily intervene in Pakistan is equally disconcerting, but
it's difficult to lose sight of the fact that as a presidential
contender in November, he would probably attract more support than
the former first lady.
It would be ideal for the moron in the White House to be replaced
by a genius, but that is beyond the realm of possibility: someone
with a clear-eyed view of recent events would have recognised, for
instance, that Benazir's martyrdom was facilitated by the Bush administration's
disastrous post-9/11 policies. The best one can hope for, in the
interim, is a knowledgeable and reasonably intelligent incumbent
who realises not only that the occupation of Iraq is an unforgivable
travesty, but also that firepower alone cannot offer a solution
to the travails of Afghanistan or Pakistan.
Beyond that, we have to tackle our problems ourselves. But the Bush
administration's shortsighted support for Musharraf clearly hinders
the prospects of a brighter future. The kind of assistance Pakistan
requires was summed up by a letter to Bush signed by eight senators,
in which they asked him to use his influence on the ex-military
dictator to push for a UN inquiry into the Bhutto murder plot, secure
the reinstatement of the unfairly dismissed Supreme Court justices
and the release of all those arrested during the emergency, and
arrange for a reconstituted election commission that meets the approval
of the main political parties. Their appeal is likely to fall on
deaf ears, and perhaps that's all for the best: notwithstanding
the harm caused by American intervention, the ideal solution to
Pakistan's multifarious problems would come from within.
That holds true regardless of who replaces George Bush: no dramatic
changes can be expected in Washington's approach towards Pakistan,
notwithstanding the anti-Musharraf rhetoric of some aspirants, which
is intended essentially to capitalise on anti-Bush sentiments among
the American electorate. Had it been otherwise, at least one of
them would have had the prudence to realise and the courage to point
out that Pakistan's current plight is not exactly unrelated to US
entanglement in this country, not only during the past eight years
but over at least three decades.
What Pakistan desperately requires is a break in this relationship,
or at least a recalibration, but that is as an unlikely consequence
of this month's electoral exercise here as it is of the main event
in November.
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