"His critics call him a Western poodle, the cartoons have fanned the
flames, and now Bush is coming to town."
"For Musharraf to crack down with force is therefore a high-risk
strategy, giving his opponents a pretext to raise the temperature
further. He now faces his toughest 10 days in power as the countdown
begins to a visit from George Bush. Unless Musharraf can quell, or at
least contain, the dissent before then, the visit looks set to be
engulfed by the "rolling campaign" of street protests that Pakistan's
religious parties have warned they can deliver."


If CICBush43 is not very careful during his trip to Pakistan, we may
be saluting "President Cheney" a couple of weeks from now. 
Regardless, it is only a matter of time before Musharraf is gone and
Pakistan tips into the extremist Islamist bloc.  Then we will rue the
CICBush43 decision not to complete the war on terror job in
Afghanistan in 2002 rather than adventure into Iraq for oil and ego.
Definitely "The Mess"!

David Bier

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article346493.ece

 Toppling Musharraf: Heat rises on Pakistani leader

His critics call him a Western poodle, the cartoons have fanned the
flames, and now Bush is coming to town. Katherine Butler reports from
Islamabad on the attempts to unseat the President

Published: 20 February 2006

Minutes after India's cricketers beat Pakistan in Lahore last week, a
casually dressed man with a moustache strolled confidently across the
ground and was handed a microphone. Relaxed and smiling, Pervez
Musharraf looked every bit the modern politician, delighting the crowd
with jokes about India's star batsman's long hair. The style was more
Bill Clinton than military dictator. And there was scarcely hint that
this was a man who had survived two assassination attempts, or that he
is struggling to hold his turbulent Islamic nation together and is now
facing renewed threat as Pakistan hovers on the edge of an
anti-Western implosion.

Just 24 hours after the cricket international the centre of Lahore was
in flames and dead bodies lay on the streets, as the crisis over the
"blasphemous sketches", as Pakistanis call the Danish cartoons of the
Prophet Mohamed, moved into a new, violent and for Musharraf,
treacherous phase. After a week in which protests spread like a rash
across the country, many of them violent, Musharraf intervened
yesterday to ban a mass rally planned for the capital, Islamabad, and
ordered the detention of hundreds of ringleaders.

Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the leader of Jamaat-e-Islami, the religious party
that called yesterday's rally, was placed under house arrest. Just
hours earlier he had warned of a nationwide campaign to unseat the
President if Musharraf were to hinder the protests. "We will not stop
till we achieve our objectives against the present rulers," he said.
"General Pervez Musharraf is acting as the representative of western
civilisation and is fighting a battle against Islamic values."

For Musharraf to crack down with force is therefore a high-risk
strategy, giving his opponents a pretext to raise the temperature
further. He now faces his toughest 10 days in power as the countdown
begins to a visit from George Bush. Unless Musharraf can quell, or at
least contain, the dissent before then, the visit looks set to be
engulfed by the "rolling campaign" of street protests that Pakistan's
religious parties have warned they can deliver.

This crisis is no longer just about cartoons. It has become entwined
with the desire by Musharraf's Islamist enemies to destabilise him by
fanning a much wider uprising against what they see as his traitorous
alliance with America.

The Pakistani leader is also the army's chief and still, as far as we
know, has the most powerful wings of the military firmly on his side.
But Pakistan is also still a hotbed for al-Qa'ida-affiliated
extremists and jihadi militants hiding out and training in the wild
ungovernable provinces along the border with Afghanistan. Twice, they
have tried to blow up the President.

The Taliban, who fled here after being driven from Kabul, have not
gone away either. Musharraf's removal, by elements who believe he is
not Islamic enough, could open the way for dramatic regional
instability, the threat of jihadists getting hold of Pakistan's
nuclear weapons, or provoking a nuclear war with and India, and what
Bush himself once warned would be "the worst form of Islamist
militancy" in South Asia.

The American flag and branches of Kentucky Fried Chicken have already
been burned in most street protests. In Peshawar, crates of Pepsi Cola
and DVDs of Hollywood films were ransacked from shops and symbolically
destroyed, and posters appeared showing not just the Danish Prime
Minister but George Bush beside him, their grinning faces superimposed
on the bodies of a pair of dogs.

How the protests tipped into deadly clashes with a wider political
focus and the potential to topple Musharraf is murky. But then since
Pakistan's birth in 1947 its politics has been murky and violent. And
its leaders have a history of meeting violent ends variously ending up
exiled, jailed, or ousted in coups. One was hanged and one died in an
unexplained air crash.

There is genuine anger about the cartoons. It is on the lips of
everyone, from carpet sellers in Islamabad's Melody Market, to the
ruling elite. In recent days it has been difficult NOT to encounter a
protest by some group or other in the capital with traders, lawyers,
doctors, professional groups, parliamentarians and women all out in
force, watched from a distance by police carrying long sticks.

Muzaffarabad, the devastated town nearest the epicentre of the Kashmir
earthquake last year, looks as if it has suffered aerial bombardment
and most people are still housed in tents, but even here feelings run
high. On Thursday, aid workers arriving as part of the huge relief
effort still under way were ordered by the army to wait at the
makeshift airfield. It was inadvisable for Westerners to be anywhere
near "the procession", they were told.

That the Danish cartoons are seen as evidence of an "orchestrated"
attempt to humiliate Muslims might explain why protests have widened
beyond Scandinavian targets. But senior Pakistani intelligence sources
interviewed by The Independent in Islamabad are emphatic that a
handful of extremist Islamist groups Musharraf proscribed after 9/11,
and suspected of trying to assassinate him (perhaps with the
complicity of sympathisers in the army) on at least two occasions, are
manoeuvring behind the issue in Pakistan. Their aim is to bait the
government into a clampdown that will radicalise opinion further.

Farhat Ullah Babar, a senator for Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan's Peoples
Party, the most secular of the opposition parties, said the cartoon
anger was wide open for exploitation by those who see Musharraf as the
West's poodle. "It [the anger] is genuine, but the religious parties
have identified an issue on which the Pakistani people are very
agitated and which they can exploit to destabilise Musharraf."

The struggle between Musharraf, a liberal whiskey-drinking Muslim, and
the forces of radical Islam, has been simmering since he seized power
in a coup in 1999 and began promoting a modernising agenda. According
to this vision, which carries the Orwellian name "Enlightened
Moderation", Pakistan, a society so religiously conservative that a
mixed-sex marathon last month caused uproar, would be transformed into
a tolerant progressive state. It would still be an Islamic republic:
the government ministry currently trying to rein in the madrassas
(religious schools) for example, is also in charge of organising
pilgrimages to Mecca, and the national airline plays taped prayers
alongside safety announcements before takeoff, but a moderate one.

But if nudging Pakistan into the 21st century while avoiding the fate
of the Shah of Iran was already a challenge before 9/11, Musharraf's
partnership with Bush's "war on terror" has made the balancing act
almost impossible. The agenda to transform Pakistani society is now
seen by Musharraf's critics as complicity in a greater American plot
to extend secularism.

Hafiz Hussain Ahmad, a hardline cleric and a senator for an opposition
Muslim coalition also targeted by the clampdown, has an unequivocal
view of why Musharraf has to be removed. "His total policy is against
Islam."

Musharraf is, as one Western diplomat put it, "between a rock and a
hard place, caught between accommodating the US's demands and
preventing the further radicalisation of Muslims". His demand for
example, that the madrassas, for long the recruiting grounds for
jihadi terrorists, expel foreign students, provoked a fierce reaction,
so he has backed down. Even compelling the madrassas to register with
the government or teach science and other "worldly" subjects, is a
painfully slow process. Asked this week how many such schools there
are, the Religious Affairs Secretary, Vakil Ahmad Khan, answered: "It
is anybody's guess." Six years after Musharraf came to power Pakistan
appears as fragile, radicalised, and unmodernised, as ever.

At army headquarters in Rawalpindi, Musharraf's uniformed chief
spokesman, Major-General Shaukat Sultan Khan, admitted: "We will not
be deflected from our course, but events mean it is a case of one step
forward and two steps back."

Jamaat-e-Islami advocates an Islamic revolution, including the
imposition of Sharia law. Its leadership denies any involvement with
violence, but are, according to diplomats, "winding it up". As riots
raged last Thursday, Khurshid Ahmad, a senator for the party, spoke to
The Independent in the lounge of the Soviet-style Parliament House in
Islamabad. He declared of Musharraf: "He is an extremist, he took
power by force, he has manipulated politics and law. He can never meet
the expectations of an Islamic nation." To this bearded man in a linen
shalwar kameez and felt hat, the cricket-loving general might as well
be an apostate. But while most Pakistanis are not so hardline, the
religious figures know they can exploit the current tensions to
devastating effect against Musharraf.

"Weak and mute" Khurshid Ahmad insisted, sums up Musharraf's handling
of the cartoons crisis. "He is weak because he is trying to co-operate
with the US in its so-called war on terror ... There is a groundswell
of opposition now, and it could derail the government."

Last month's air strike by the US on a Pakistani border village, a
failed attempt by the CIA to take out al-Qa'ida's top men, radicalised
opinion against the Americans. Aimed at Osama Bin Laden's number two,
Ayman al-Zawahiri, the missile killed more than a dozen villagers. The
country is now awash with the rumour that Musharraf had advance
knowledge of the air strike.

A violent separatist struggle meanwhile, is under way by tribal chiefs
and their private armies in Baluchistan, which has been wracked by
shootings and small-scale bombings and suspicions hover that India is
encouraging the separatists in revenge for the Pakistan's covert
backing for jihadist militants in Kashmir.

Musharraf meanwhile, has 70,000 troops hunting terrorists in the
tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, a vast region where Pakistani law
does not even apply, but the price, in terms of casualties and
domestic opinion is high. Intelligence sources say up to 50 Taliban
members were recently captured but Pakistan has been unable to take
credit because the domestic political fallout would be so damaging.

Pakistan's 1,700-mile border with unreconstructed Afghanistan means it
remains vulnerable to the instability there, but also stands accused
of failing to secure the border. And despite a tentative "peace
process" the spectre of war with India over Kashmir remains real.
Officially Pakistan has ceased sponsoring militants to carry out
attacks on India, but these groups have probably affiliated to al-Qa'ida.

These pressures have left Musharraf little space, or willingness, to
address a fundamental contradiction about his position. He seized
power illegally vowing to restore "true democracy", but six years on
is still reneging on his promise to "doff the uniform" - return
Pakistan to civilian rule at least before elections in 2007. The
absence of democracy is not the only contradiction about Pakistan.
Despite its strict religious identity, it remains one of the most
corrupt places on earth, where more than half the population is
illiterate and average annual income is $600.

Even the urbane Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz, a former chief executive
of Citibank, finds it hard to dispute the perception of Pakistan as a
failed state. At his Islamabad residence, set in acres of lawns and
fountains, he admitted: "Yes, we have an image issue. Tell people you
are going on a trip to Pakistan and they will ask you if you are
feeling alright." Musharraf's failure to grow a democratic political
culture meansmore turbulence is guaranteed if he were to be swept from
power. As one Islamabad insider put it: "There is no Plan B."

At a turning off the main road close to the Islamabad-Lahore highway
stands a replica of a nuclear warhead and a sign pointing to the Khan
Research Laboratories, founded by AQ Khan the "Father" of Pakistan's
nuclear bomb. This is where uranium is enriched for Pakistan's nuclear
weapons programme. Khan is now in disgrace after selling nuclear
technology to Iran and Libya, but fears about the programme's security
persist. If Pakistan's Western-friendly General were to be ousted,
could the West prevent jihadist groups, or their sympathisers getting
near the nuclear weapons?

Shaukat Aziz insists that the fact both India and Pakistan have a
nuclear deterrent is a guarantee of peace: "Peace is achieved through
strength not weakness. We must have the punch to defend ourselves."
But if Musharraf is swept away, who will control the punch?

Minutes after India's cricketers beat Pakistan in Lahore last week, a
casually dressed man with a moustache strolled confidently across the
ground and was handed a microphone. Relaxed and smiling, Pervez
Musharraf looked every bit the modern politician, delighting the crowd
with jokes about India's star batsman's long hair. The style was more
Bill Clinton than military dictator. And there was scarcely hint that
this was a man who had survived two assassination attempts, or that he
is struggling to hold his turbulent Islamic nation together and is now
facing renewed threat as Pakistan hovers on the edge of an
anti-Western implosion.

Just 24 hours after the cricket international the centre of Lahore was
in flames and dead bodies lay on the streets, as the crisis over the
"blasphemous sketches", as Pakistanis call the Danish cartoons of the
Prophet Mohamed, moved into a new, violent and for Musharraf,
treacherous phase. After a week in which protests spread like a rash
across the country, many of them violent, Musharraf intervened
yesterday to ban a mass rally planned for the capital, Islamabad, and
ordered the detention of hundreds of ringleaders.

Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the leader of Jamaat-e-Islami, the religious party
that called yesterday's rally, was placed under house arrest. Just
hours earlier he had warned of a nationwide campaign to unseat the
President if Musharraf were to hinder the protests. "We will not stop
till we achieve our objectives against the present rulers," he said.
"General Pervez Musharraf is acting as the representative of western
civilisation and is fighting a battle against Islamic values."

For Musharraf to crack down with force is therefore a high-risk
strategy, giving his opponents a pretext to raise the temperature
further. He now faces his toughest 10 days in power as the countdown
begins to a visit from George Bush. Unless Musharraf can quell, or at
least contain, the dissent before then, the visit looks set to be
engulfed by the "rolling campaign" of street protests that Pakistan's
religious parties have warned they can deliver.

This crisis is no longer just about cartoons. It has become entwined
with the desire by Musharraf's Islamist enemies to destabilise him by
fanning a much wider uprising against what they see as his traitorous
alliance with America.

The Pakistani leader is also the army's chief and still, as far as we
know, has the most powerful wings of the military firmly on his side.
But Pakistan is also still a hotbed for al-Qa'ida-affiliated
extremists and jihadi militants hiding out and training in the wild
ungovernable provinces along the border with Afghanistan. Twice, they
have tried to blow up the President.

The Taliban, who fled here after being driven from Kabul, have not
gone away either. Musharraf's removal, by elements who believe he is
not Islamic enough, could open the way for dramatic regional
instability, the threat of jihadists getting hold of Pakistan's
nuclear weapons, or provoking a nuclear war with and India, and what
Bush himself once warned would be "the worst form of Islamist
militancy" in South Asia.

The American flag and branches of Kentucky Fried Chicken have already
been burned in most street protests. In Peshawar, crates of Pepsi Cola
and DVDs of Hollywood films were ransacked from shops and symbolically
destroyed, and posters appeared showing not just the Danish Prime
Minister but George Bush beside him, their grinning faces superimposed
on the bodies of a pair of dogs.

How the protests tipped into deadly clashes with a wider political
focus and the potential to topple Musharraf is murky. But then since
Pakistan's birth in 1947 its politics has been murky and violent. And
its leaders have a history of meeting violent ends variously ending up
exiled, jailed, or ousted in coups. One was hanged and one died in an
unexplained air crash.

There is genuine anger about the cartoons. It is on the lips of
everyone, from carpet sellers in Islamabad's Melody Market, to the
ruling elite. In recent days it has been difficult NOT to encounter a
protest by some group or other in the capital with traders, lawyers,
doctors, professional groups, parliamentarians and women all out in
force, watched from a distance by police carrying long sticks.

Muzaffarabad, the devastated town nearest the epicentre of the Kashmir
earthquake last year, looks as if it has suffered aerial bombardment
and most people are still housed in tents, but even here feelings run
high. On Thursday, aid workers arriving as part of the huge relief
effort still under way were ordered by the army to wait at the
makeshift airfield. It was inadvisable for Westerners to be anywhere
near "the procession", they were told.

That the Danish cartoons are seen as evidence of an "orchestrated"
attempt to humiliate Muslims might explain why protests have widened
beyond Scandinavian targets. But senior Pakistani intelligence sources
interviewed by The Independent in Islamabad are emphatic that a
handful of extremist Islamist groups Musharraf proscribed after 9/11,
and suspected of trying to assassinate him (perhaps with the
complicity of sympathisers in the army) on at least two occasions, are
manoeuvring behind the issue in Pakistan. Their aim is to bait the
government into a clampdown that will radicalise opinion further.

Farhat Ullah Babar, a senator for Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan's Peoples
Party, the most secular of the opposition parties, said the cartoon
anger was wide open for exploitation by those who see Musharraf as the
West's poodle. "It [the anger] is genuine, but the religious parties
have identified an issue on which the Pakistani people are very
agitated and which they can exploit to destabilise Musharraf."

The struggle between Musharraf, a liberal whiskey-drinking Muslim, and
the forces of radical Islam, has been simmering since he seized power
in a coup in 1999 and began promoting a modernising agenda. According
to this vision, which carries the Orwellian name "Enlightened
Moderation", Pakistan, a society so religiously conservative that a
mixed-sex marathon last month caused uproar, would be transformed into
a tolerant progressive state. It would still be an Islamic republic:
the government ministry currently trying to rein in the madrassas
(religious schools) for example, is also in charge of organising
pilgrimages to Mecca, and the national airline plays taped prayers
alongside safety announcements before takeoff, but a moderate one.

But if nudging Pakistan into the 21st century while avoiding the fate
of the Shah of Iran was already a challenge before 9/11, Musharraf's
partnership with Bush's "war on terror" has made the balancing act
almost impossible. The agenda to transform Pakistani society is now
seen by Musharraf's critics as complicity in a greater American plot
to extend secularism.

Hafiz Hussain Ahmad, a hardline cleric and a senator for an opposition
Muslim coalition also targeted by the clampdown, has an unequivocal
view of why Musharraf has to be removed. "His total policy is against
Islam."

Musharraf is, as one Western diplomat put it, "between a rock and a
hard place, caught between accommodating the US's demands and
preventing the further radicalisation of Muslims". His demand for
example, that the madrassas, for long the recruiting grounds for
jihadi terrorists, expel foreign students, provoked a fierce reaction,
so he has backed down. Even compelling the madrassas to register with
the government or teach science and other "worldly" subjects, is a
painfully slow process. Asked this week how many such schools there
are, the Religious Affairs Secretary, Vakil Ahmad Khan, answered: "It
is anybody's guess." Six years after Musharraf came to power Pakistan
appears as fragile, radicalised, and unmodernised, as ever.

At army headquarters in Rawalpindi, Musharraf's uniformed chief
spokesman, Major-General Shaukat Sultan Khan, admitted: "We will not
be deflected from our course, but events mean it is a case of one step
forward and two steps back."

Jamaat-e-Islami advocates an Islamic revolution, including the
imposition of Sharia law. Its leadership denies any involvement with
violence, but are, according to diplomats, "winding it up". As riots
raged last Thursday, Khurshid Ahmad, a senator for the party, spoke to
The Independent in the lounge of the Soviet-style Parliament House in
Islamabad. He declared of Musharraf: "He is an extremist, he took
power by force, he has manipulated politics and law. He can never meet
the expectations of an Islamic nation." To this bearded man in a linen
shalwar kameez and felt hat, the cricket-loving general might as well
be an apostate. But while most Pakistanis are not so hardline, the
religious figures know they can exploit the current tensions to
devastating effect against Musharraf.

"Weak and mute" Khurshid Ahmad insisted, sums up Musharraf's handling
of the cartoons crisis. "He is weak because he is trying to co-operate
with the US in its so-called war on terror ... There is a groundswell
of opposition now, and it could derail the government."

Last month's air strike by the US on a Pakistani border village, a
failed attempt by the CIA to take out al-Qa'ida's top men, radicalised
opinion against the Americans. Aimed at Osama Bin Laden's number two,
Ayman al-Zawahiri, the missile killed more than a dozen villagers. The
country is now awash with the rumour that Musharraf had advance
knowledge of the air strike.

A violent separatist struggle meanwhile, is under way by tribal chiefs
and their private armies in Baluchistan, which has been wracked by
shootings and small-scale bombings and suspicions hover that India is
encouraging the separatists in revenge for the Pakistan's covert
backing for jihadist militants in Kashmir.

Musharraf meanwhile, has 70,000 troops hunting terrorists in the
tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, a vast region where Pakistani law
does not even apply, but the price, in terms of casualties and
domestic opinion is high. Intelligence sources say up to 50 Taliban
members were recently captured but Pakistan has been unable to take
credit because the domestic political fallout would be so damaging.

Pakistan's 1,700-mile border with unreconstructed Afghanistan means it
remains vulnerable to the instability there, but also stands accused
of failing to secure the border. And despite a tentative "peace
process" the spectre of war with India over Kashmir remains real.
Officially Pakistan has ceased sponsoring militants to carry out
attacks on India, but these groups have probably affiliated to al-Qa'ida.

These pressures have left Musharraf little space, or willingness, to
address a fundamental contradiction about his position. He seized
power illegally vowing to restore "true democracy", but six years on
is still reneging on his promise to "doff the uniform" - return
Pakistan to civilian rule at least before elections in 2007. The
absence of democracy is not the only contradiction about Pakistan.
Despite its strict religious identity, it remains one of the most
corrupt places on earth, where more than half the population is
illiterate and average annual income is $600.

Even the urbane Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz, a former chief executive
of Citibank, finds it hard to dispute the perception of Pakistan as a
failed state. At his Islamabad residence, set in acres of lawns and
fountains, he admitted: "Yes, we have an image issue. Tell people you
are going on a trip to Pakistan and they will ask you if you are
feeling alright." Musharraf's failure to grow a democratic political
culture meansmore turbulence is guaranteed if he were to be swept from
power. As one Islamabad insider put it: "There is no Plan B."

At a turning off the main road close to the Islamabad-Lahore highway
stands a replica of a nuclear warhead and a sign pointing to the Khan
Research Laboratories, founded by AQ Khan the "Father" of Pakistan's
nuclear bomb. This is where uranium is enriched for Pakistan's nuclear
weapons programme. Khan is now in disgrace after selling nuclear
technology to Iran and Libya, but fears about the programme's security
persist. If Pakistan's Western-friendly General were to be ousted,
could the West prevent jihadist groups, or their sympathisers getting
near the nuclear weapons?

Shaukat Aziz insists that the fact both India and Pakistan have a
nuclear deterrent is a guarantee of peace: "Peace is achieved through
strength not weakness. We must have the punch to defend ourselves."
But if Musharraf is swept away, who will control the punch?





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