From the Los Angeles Times
Bush's best-laid plans
The Bhutto assassination demonstrates anew
the folly of the administration's efforts to manage history.
By Andrew J. Bacevich
December 30, 2007
Viewed from a historian's perspective, the Bush administration since
9/11 has ransacked the past to conjure up comforting expectations for
the future. President Bush excels in this exercise, expressing
confidence that the "untamed fire of freedom"
will one day soon "reach the darkest corners of our world." Yet as the
assassination of Benazir Bhutto reminds us yet again, events refuse to
play along. History remains stubbornly recalcitrant.
Bush would have us believe otherwise. History, he insists, "has a
visible direction, set by liberty and the Author of Liberty." That
direction, the president believes, tends toward peace, democracy and
freedom for all humankind. America's purpose, assigned by the Author of
Liberty, is to nudge history toward its intended destination. More
immediately, America's ostensible aim since 9/11 has been to make the
blessings of liberty available to the Islamic world. As democracy
spreads there, the threat posed by terrorism will diminish. Such at
least has been the assumption underlying Operations Enduring Freedom
and Iraqi Freedom, the two wars begun on Bush's watch.
This strategy of militarized liberation has been fraught with
contradictions, not the least of which has been the partnership forged
between the United States and Pakistan. Bush has repeatedly declared
Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf a valued and trusted ally. Since
9/11, the U.S. has provided Pakistan with at least $10 billion in aid,
most of it going to the army. In hopes of ensuring Pakistani
cooperation in the global war on terrorism, Washington has ignored that
nation's record as perhaps the world's most egregious nuclear weapons
proliferator.
Yet Musharraf has never shared Bush's professed commitment to democracy
and freedom. A career soldier,
Musharraf seized power in 1999 through a military coup. He is an
authoritarian dictator who represents the interests of the Pakistani
officer corps, distinguished less by any liberal inclinations than by
its pronounced Islamist sympathies and a paranoid obsession with India.
On Nov. 3, Musharraf declared a state of emergency, a pretext for
jailing critics and getting rid of a troublesome Supreme Court. He
ended the emergency on Dec. 15. Although Musharraf offers up occasional
testimonials on behalf of democracy, they deserve to be taken about as
seriously as Bush's calls for bipartisanship in Washington. It's cheap
window dressing.
Still, as long as Musharraf appeared to be a stabilizing force and
supportive of U.S. efforts to create a new Afghanistan, the Bush
administration turned a blind eye to his anti-democratic tendencies.
Not for the first time in U.S. history, ideals took a back seat to more
pragmatic calculations. Washington talked democracy but opted in
practice to support a strongman who promised order and cooperation
against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, despite the fact that Pakistani
assistance against the Islamic radicals operating within Pakistan was
never more than spotty.
During the last year, however, the strongman began to appear less
strong. Only as Musharraf's power waned did the United States actively
press Pakistan to get onboard the democratic bandwagon. First, the Bush
administration promoted a bizarre power-sharing agreement between
Musharraf and Bhutto. When that shotgun marriage failed, it insisted on
elections as the way to shore up the government's legitimacy. Now an
assassin has demolished these carefully laid plans, possibly thrusting
Pakistan into unprecedented turmoil while leaving Bush tied to a
partner who increasingly invites comparisons to the shah of Iran.
Faced with the prospect of "losing" Pakistan, what should the world's
sole superpower do? Despite Musharraf's flaws, should Washington back
him to the hilt as the only alternative to chaos? Or should Bush commit
the United States without reservation to building a strong democracy in
Pakistan?
To pose such questions is to presume that decisions made in Washington
will decisively influence the course of events in Islamabad. Yet the
lesson to be drawn from the developments of the last several days --
and from U.S. involvement in Pakistan over the course of decades --
suggests just the opposite: The United States has next to no ability to
determine Pakistan's fate.
How the crisis touched off by Bhutto's assassination will end is
impossible to predict, although the outcome is likely to be ugly. Yet
this much we can say with confidence: That outcome won't be decided in
the White House. Once again, as Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "events are
in the saddle, and ride mankind," with those events reducing the most
powerful man in the world to the status of spectator.
At the beginning of his second term, Bush spoke confidently of the
United States sponsoring a global democratic revolution "with the
ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world." Ever since that hopeful
moment, developments across the greater Middle East -- above all, in
Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon and on the West Bank -- have exposed the
very real limits of U.S. wisdom and power.
Now the virtual impotence of the U.S. in the face of the crisis
enveloping Pakistan -- along with its complicity in creating that
crisis -- ought to discredit once and for all any notions of America
fixing the world's ills.
Bush dreamed of managing history. It turns out that he cannot even
manage Pakistan. Thus does the Author of Liberty mock the pretensions
of those who presume to understand his intentions and to interpret his
will.
Andrew J. Bacevich is a professor of history and international
relations at Boston University.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times