Zardari is in DC this week, Robert Fisk is in So. Calif.  today & Tuesday
Fisk will also be on Suzy Weissman's 'Beneath the Surface' today, 5 pm,
KPFK, 90.7 fm.  The best jounalist in the Middle East, rarely here.  --Ed

From: "Sid Shniad" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/sep/07/pakistan.usa

The Guardian       September 7, 2008

Asif Ali Zardari: the godfather as president

He may be a pliant partner for the west, but with his record of corruption,
Zardari is the worst possible choice for Pakistan

Tariq Ali

Asif Ali Zardari – singled out by fate to become Benazir Bhutto's husband
and who, subsequently, did everything he could to prevent himself from being
returned to obscurity – is about to become the new President of Pakistan.
Oily-mouthed hangers-on, never in short supply in Pakistan, will orchestrate
a few celebratory shows and the ready tongues of old cronies (some now
appointed ambassadors to western capitals) will speak of how democracy has
been enhanced. Zardari's close circle of friends, with whom he shared the
spoils of power the last time around and who have remained loyal, refusing
all inducements to turn state's evidence in the corruption cases against
him, will also be delighted. Small wonder then that definitions of democracy
in Pakistan differ from person to person.

There will be no expressions of joy on the streets to mark the transference
of power from a moth-eaten general to a worm-eaten politician. The affection
felt in some quarters for the Bhutto family is non-transferable. If Benazir
were still alive, Zardari would not have been given any official post. She
had been considering two other senior politicians for the presidency. Had
she been more democratically inclined she would never have treated her
political party so scornfully, reducing it to the status of a family
heirloom, bequeathed to her son, with her husband as the regent till the boy
came of age.

This, and this alone, has aided Zardari's rise to the top. He was disliked
by many of his wife's closest supporters in the People's Party (or the
Bhutto Family Party, as it is referred to by disaffected members) even when
she was alive. They blamed his greed and godfatherish behaviour to explain
her fall from power on two previous occasions, which I always thought was
slightly unfair. She knew. It was a joint enterprise. She was never one to
regard politics alone as the consuming passion of her life and always envied
the lifestyle and social behaviour of the very rich. And he was shameless in
his endeavours to achieve that status.

Today, he is the second richest person in the country, with estates and bank
accounts littered on many continents, including a mansion in Surrey worth
several million. Many of Benazir's inner circle, sidelined by the new boss
(Zardari did rub their noses in excrement by having his apolitical sister
elected from Larkana, hitherto a pocket borough of the Bhutto family)
actively hate him. Benazir's uncle, Mumtaz Bhutto (head of the clan) has
sharply denounced him. Some even encourage the grotesque view that he was in
some way responsible for her death. This is foolish. He is only trying to
fulfill her legacy. He was certainly charged with ordering the murder of his
brother-in-law, Murtaza Bhutto, when Benazir was prime minister, but the
case was never tried. Characteristically, one of Zardari's first acts after
his party's victory in the February polls was to appoint Shoaib Suddle, the
senior police officer connected to the Murtaza Bhutto ambush and killing, as
the boss of the Federal Intelligence Agency. Loyalty is always repaid in
full.

In the country at large, his standing, always low, has sunk still further.
The majority of Pakistan's 190 million citizens may be poor, illiterate or
semi-literate, but their instincts are usually sound. An opinion poll
carried out by the New America Foundation some months ago revealed Zardari's
approval ratings at a low ebb – less than 14%. These figures confirm the
view that he is the worst possible slice of Pakistan's crumbly nationhood.
The people has had no say in his election. Parliamentary cabals have already
determined the result. I do not take too seriously the recent revelation
that a psychiatrist had pronounced him suffering from acute dementia,
incapable of recognising his children due to a chronic loss of memory. This
was, as is known, designed for the courtroom had he been prosecuted in
London or Geneva for large-scale money-laundering and corruption. All that
is in abeyance now, since he has been elevated into a crucial figure in the
"war on terror".

A small mystery remained. Why did the US suddenly withdraw support from
General Musharraf? An answer was provided on August 26 by Helene Cooper and
Mark Mazzetti in the New York Times. The State Department, according to this
report, was not in favour of an undignified and hasty departure, but unknown
to them a hardcore neocon faction led by Zalmay Khalilzad, the US ambassador
to the Security Council, was busy advising Asif Zardari in secret and
helping him plan the campaign to oust the general:

"Mr Khalilzad had spoken by telephone with Mr Zardari, the leader of the
Pakistan Peoples party, several times a week for the past month until he was
confronted about the unauthorised contacts, a senior United States official
said, "Can I ask what sort of 'advice and help' you are providing?" … Mr.
Boucher wrote in an angry email message to Mr Khalilzad. "What sort of
channel is this? Governmental, private, personal?" Copies of the message
were sent to others at the highest levels of the State Department; the
message was provided to the New York Times by an administration official who
had received a copy."

Khalilzad is an inveterate factionalist and a master of intrigue. Having
implanted Hamid Karzai in Kabul (with dire results as many in Washington now
admit), he had been livid with Musharraf for refusing to give 100% support
to his Afghan protege. Khalilzad now saw an opportunity to punish Musharraf
and simultaneously try and create a Pakistani equivalent of Karzai.

Zardari fitted the bill. He is perfectly suited to being a total creature of
Washington. The Swiss government helpfully decided to release millions of
dollars from Zardari's bank accounts that had, till now, been frozen due to
the pending corruption cases. Like his late wife, Zardari, too, is now being
laundered, just like the money he made when last in office as minister for
investment. This weakness will make him a pliant president of Pakistan.

The majority of the population is deeply hostile to the US/Nato presence in
Afghanistan. Almost 80% favour a negotiated settlement and withdrawal of all
foreign troops. Three days ago, a team of US commandos entered Pakistan "in
search of terrorists" and 20 innocents were killed. Zardari was being
tested. But if he permits US troops to enter the frontier province on
"search-and-destroy" missions his career will be short-lived and the
military will return in some shape or form. The High Command cannot afford
to ignore the growing anger within its junior ranks at being forced to kill
their own people.

The president of Pakistan was designed in the 1972 constitution as an
ornamental figure. Military dictators subverted and altered the constitution
to their advantage. Will Zardari revert to his late father-in-law's
constitution or preserve its existing powers?

The country desperately needs a president capable of exercizing some moral
authority and serving as the conscience of the country. The banished chief
justice, Iftikhar Chaudhry, automatically comes to mind, as do the figures
of Imran Khan and IA Rehman (the chairman of the Human Rights Commission),
but the governing elite and its self-serving backers in Washington have
always been blind to the real needs of this country. They should be careful.
The sparks flying across the Afghan border might ignite a fire that is
difficult to control.

Tariq Ali's latest book, The Duel: Pakistan on the Flightpath of American
Power, will be published by Simon and Schuster on September 15

***

From: Karin Pally

*Robert Fisk in the Southland September 22 and September 23*

Fisk has a new book, "The Age of the Warrior."

_Monday, September 22nd at USC, 7:30 pm in SAL 101_.
University Park
Los Angeles 90089

The room is Salvatori Computer Science Center, which, on the USC map, is
located just off W. 37th Place (SW corner more or less). The best place
to park would be either on Exposition Blvd., or across the street from
Exposition in the Natural History Museum complex.

_Tuesday, September 23rd at Chapman University, 7 pm_
Irvine Lecture Hall
One University Drive
Orange, CA 92866

Robert Fisk, the Middle East Bureau chief for /The Independent /(UK),
is a veteran war correspondent and one of the world's most experienced
journalists covering the Middle East. He has reported from across the
Arab world for the past thirty years and is the author of /Pity the
Nation/ and /The Great War for Civilization/. His new book is /The Age
of the Warrior/.



------------------------------------

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