From the Los Angeles Times
Pakistani crisis coming to a head
The
president's political fate hangs in the balance as a key vote nears and
the Supreme Court weighs legal challenges to his rule.
By Laura King
August 22, 2007
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — This country's long-running political crisis has
entered a decisive phase, with developments in coming weeks likely to
determine whether President Pervez Musharraf is able to hang on to
power or is pushed aside.
Exiled opponents such as former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto are
vowing to return and reclaim a place on the political stage. The
current parliament, whose rubber-stamp approval Musharraf wants for
another term as president, is nearing the end of its tenure. An
emboldened Supreme Court is weighing legal challenges to Musharraf's
participation in politics while he retains his position as military
chief.
And all the while, popular anger simmers. Celebrations last week
of the 60th anniversary of the end of British colonial rule and the
advent of statehood were muted not only by security fears but by a
sense among many Pakistanis that a transition away from military rule
is long overdue.
"This is supposed to be a time for national pride, but I don't see
how things can continue as they are," said shopkeeper Iqbal Hussein,
who allowed his three young sons out briefly into the sultry summer
evening to set off a few celebratory firecrackers on Independence Day.
"The only question," he added, "is whether the change will be peaceful
or violent."
The United States has key interests at stake in Pakistan, an ally
in the U.S.- and NATO-led war in Afghanistan and a nuclear-armed
regional power that is battling a small but virulent Islamic insurgency
of its own.
The Bush administration has been discreetly prodding Musharraf, a
secular general who seized power in a coup eight years ago, to accept a
power-sharing arrangement with Bhutto. But his standing has eroded to
such an extent that it is not clear whether such a deal would still be
in Bhutto's interest.
Even some of the Pakistani leader's longtime allies have begun
quietly weighing their options for a post-Musharraf era, analysts say.
"He's terribly unpopular, and anyone who stands with him now is
going to be unpopular as well," said political analyst Shafqat Mehmood,
a former senator. "Those around him can't speak about this aloud --
they would do so at their peril -- but in their hearts, they are
wondering what happens to them later."
Pakistan's powerful military, whose economic and political
influence extends far beyond the realm of national defense, continues
to back its commander-in-chief. But there have been signs that
Musharraf no longer enjoys the unquestioned authority of previous years.
This month, the general considered imposing emergency rule, a measure
that would have given him wide-ranging powers to act against political
opponents and the Pakistani media. Some analysts believe influential
military figures counseled him against such a drastic measure, which
probably would have provoked further unrest.
"There were indications that corps commanders were not very keen
on the idea," said Urmila Venugopalan, editor of the Asia-Pacific
section of Jane's Country Risk. Musharraf dropped the idea of an
emergency declaration, but aides said it remained an option.
After a long spring and summer of discontent, matters are coming
to a head, political and legal observers say. The clock is ticking down
on the five-year term of the current parliament, which was elected in a
2002 vote widely believed to have been rigged in the general's favor.
The vote on another presidential term for Musharraf by an
electoral college made up of national and regional lawmakers is to take
place between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15, the general's aides have said. The
Supreme Court, presided over by Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the chief
justice Musharraf tried to oust, has indicated it will entertain
challenges to the vote being conducted by current lawmakers, rather
than the new parliament to be elected by early next year.
The high court is also expected to be asked to determine whether
Musharraf should be held, at last, to the constitutional ban on holding
office while in uniform. Another legal provision that is expected to be
invoked by the general's opponents states that anyone who leaves the
military must wait two years before seeking public office.
Yet more legal challenges are expected to center on the fairness
of the upcoming elections, which are to take place within 90 days of
the parliament's dissolution Nov. 15. More than 20 million people
eligible to vote are missing from the rolls, and the court has ordered
officials to come up with an accurate and updated registry in the next
month.
Musharraf's opponents, meanwhile, are treading a delicate path of
their own. Bhutto's camp has been in talks with the general for more
than a year about an agreement under which she would return to lead her
party in the parliamentary campaign.
Bhutto, who served two terms as prime minister in the 1980s and
'90s, wants Musharraf to agree to relinquish his military role and
guarantee a free and fair vote. But she has warned that the window of
opportunity for a deal could soon close.
"Without progress on the issue of fair elections, this dialogue
could founder," Bhutto told the Council on Foreign Relations last week.
"And now, as we approach the autumn, time is running out."
The terms of the prospective deal are believed to include a
reversal of a ban on Bhutto serving a third term as prime minister, and
the dismissal of corruption charges that have forced her to spend
nearly a decade in exile.
But Bhutto is under growing pressure from another exiled former
prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, whose party's popularity now rivals or
exceeds that of hers, according to recent polls. Any association with
Musharraf, even one that serves to remove him from a position of
absolute power, could leave her tainted by his unpopularity, analysts
say.
Sharif has an appeal pending before the Supreme Court seeking to
overturn his banishment at the hands of Musharraf, who overthrew him in
1999. Bolstering his party's appeal, the court this month freed a
jailed party leader, Javed Hashmi, whose case has emerged as a major
rallying point for the opposition.
At this juncture, the Bush administration appears to be using its
influence primarily to push for free and fair parliamentary elections,
sidestepping the question of whether Musharraf should be allowed to
continue as military chief.
During a visit to Pakistan last week, Richard Boucher, the U.S.
assistant secretary of State for South and Central Asian affairs, said
the Pakistani leader had pledged to "address or deal with the issue of
the uniform . . . during the course of this transition."
Asked whether he believed the general would in fact do so, Boucher
replied, "Yes." Then he added, "We'll see."
The U.S. failure to exert pressure on Musharraf to relinquish his
military role has left many Pakistanis cynical, believing that the
expediency of an alliance with him trumps the U.S. commitment to
democracy in the region.
American presidential administrations, commentator Mahir Ali noted
acidly in an op-ed piece in the Dawn newspaper, "can rarely resist a
suitably obsequious man in uniform."
In the years since Musharraf joined the United States-led war
against the Taliban in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, Pakistan's
military has been the beneficiary of billions of dollars in U.S. aid,
cementing the general's grip on power.
Some analysts point out, however, that Musharraf's takeover was
welcomed at the time by many Pakistanis, who were weary of incompetence
and corruption in the elected governments of Sharif and Bhutto.
The Urdu-language daily newspaper Islam noted that for the first seven
years of Musharraf's rule, "opposition parties failed utterly to launch
a meaningful movement against him."
Support for military rule in Pakistan tends to be cyclical, said
historian Jon E. Wilson of King's College in London, adding that the
current cycle appears to be drawing to a close.
"Military governments do impose some kind of order, and civil
society is messy," he said. "In some ways, military rule is the
centerpiece of how Pakistani society is ordered. But it's impossible to
sustain permanently."
--
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times