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"The
United States strongly condemned this cowardly act by murderous
extremists who are trying to undermine Pakistan's democracy. Those
who committed this crime must be brought to justice."
President
George W. Bush was among the first of dozens of world leaders to
release a statement on Benazir Bhutto's assassination. But by the
eighth year of his presidency, few people cared. With Bush now suffering
from lame-duck syndrome, the world was far more interested in what
the next American president had to say. Having already elected one
president of negligible intelligence, based on the statements made
by the candidates, it seems this time around, US voters are aiming
even lower.
Pakistanis,
and indeed most foreigners, have an impression that most Americans
are overweight and ignorant, a prejudice that was confirmed by Republican
frontrunner Mike Huckabee the night Benazir was assassinated. In
a breathtaking leap of logic he was able to link the situation in
Pakistan with US concern of illegal immigration across the Mexican
border. He told reporters on December 27, "We ought to have
an immediate, very clear monitoring of our borders and particularly
to make sure if there's any unusual activity of Pakstanis coming
into our country."
The
next day he expanded on this remark, digging an even deeper hole
he would never be able to extricate himself from. "When I say
say single them out, I am making the observation that we have more
Pakistani illegals coming across our border than all other nationalities
except those immediately south of the border." The only problem
with this clarification was that it was completely untrue. According
to figures released by the US Department of Homeland Security last
year, far more illegal immigrants come from the Philippines, China,
South Korea and Vietnam. Additionally, most Pakistani illegal immigrants
overstay their visas rather than unlawfully cross the Mexican border.
But
Huckabee wasn't done yet. Asked at a press conference why he feared
an influx of Pakistani immigrants in the wake of Benazir's killing,
he responded, "The fact is that the immigration issue is not
so much about people coming to pick lettuce or make beds, it's about
someone coming with a shoulder-fired missile."
Huckabee
lodged his foot even more firmly into his mouth when sounding off
on Pervez Musharraf. In an interview on MSNBC, he proclaimed, "Musharraf
has told us he does not have enough control of those eastern borders
near Afghanistan to be able to go after the terrorists." He
concluded by saying that he was worried about martial law continuing
in Pakistan, although the state of emergency had been lifted on
December 15.
The
Huckabee campaign released a statement after all of this saying
that the candidate had not misspoken or blundered.
Where
Huckabee's mistakes were those of fact, Democrat candidate Hillary
Clinton, who had personally known Benazir, slipped up by indulging
in conspiracy theories. Two days after Bhutto's assassination, Hillary
released a statement hinting that the army may have been responsible.
"There are those saying that Al-Qaeda did it. Others are saying
it looked like it was an inside job. Remember Rawalpindi is a garrison
city." She neglected to mention that Rawalpindi had been the
scene of a sustained suicide bombing campaign directed against the
army.
This
is not to say that Hillary didn't make any errors of fact. In an
interview with Wolf Blitzer on CNN on December 28, she said, "If
President Musharraf wishes to stand for election, then he should
abide by the same rules that every other candidate will have to
follow." She then compounded the error by telling ABC News,
"He [Musharraf] could be the only person on the ballot. I don't
think that's a real election."
Hillary's rival for the Democrat nomination Barack Obama used the
occasion to stroke his ego and revive his earlier calls for invading
Pakistan. Obama, who had said he would take unilateral action in
Pakistan and refused to rule out the use of nuclear weapons against
the country, said that Benazir's assassination only confirmed the
wisdom of his words. He also reminded voters that he had been drawing
attention to the problems in Pakistan for "some time".
In Obama's case, some time is all of four months.
Initially, the most sensible statement on Bhutto's death came from
a surprising source: former mayor of New York City Rudy Guiliani.
In the only display of restraint from a presidential candidate,
Guiliani said, "I think it is inappropriate to see it [Benazir's
assassination] in a political light
I don't think that would
be the most appropriate thing right now to talk about." According
to Guliani spokesman Maria Commella, as quoted by CBS News, the
all-important phrase in that statement was "right now"
which, she said, meant the day of Bhutto's assassination. A couple
of days later, Guliani released an ad interspersing images of Benazir,
Osama bin Laden and the burning Twin Towers. He used the ad to say
that America's enemies were assassinating foreign leaders and only
the hero of 9/11 could fight that war.
There
was only one constant amid the statements released by the leading
candidates for the US presidential elections. Without exception,
all the front-runners believed that the US had not only the right,
but also a duty, to intervene in Pakistan. Thus, it is not surprising
that the only words of wisdom came from a candidate who has absolutely
no shot at winning his party's nomination: Republican anti-war isolationist
Ron Paul. "They [Pakistanis] have to deal with it [Benazir's
assassination]. It's their country not our country
The sooner
we do less, the better it is for them and for us."
Amid
the flood of statements released by all the candidates, the conventional
wisdom among US political commentators was that Bhutto's assassination
would completely alter the Iowa caucuses on January 3, with candidates
such as Hillary Clinton and Rudy Guliani, who had greater foreign
policy experience than their opponents, expected to benefit. As
is usually the case, the conventional wisdom was completely wrong
with the inexperienced Obama and Huckabee winning in Iowa. Maybe,
Pakistan is not quite as important to farmers in Middle America
as it is to the mainstream media.
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