The
Band Played On
Continued Military Rule in Pakistan
Kamran Asdar
Ali
(Kamran Asdar
Ali teaches anthropology and Middle East studies at the University
of Texas-Austin.)
May 9, 2002
| Further
Info
Hamza
Alavi's article, "Pakistan Between Afghanistan and India,"
in Middle East Report 222 (Spring 2002), examines the contradiction
between secularism and democracy in depth. To order individual
copies of Middle East Report or to subscribe, visit MERIP's
redesigned home page.
|
On May 8, a
bomb blast rocked central Karachi, killing at least 14 people, including
a number of French nationals. This suicide bombing comes on the
heels of the brutal murder of Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal
reporter, allegedly by Islamist extremist groups who had recently
fallen out of the favor of the Pakistani military government. Similar
explosions have hit churches and other places of worship around
the country this spring. In Karachi, Shia professionals have been
assassinated in escalating sectarian violence that has gripped the
larger cities of Pakistan.
Some have argued
that elements within the Pakistani security services are still involved
in assisting the perpetrators of these attacks. The guilty parties
would be those elements of the state security apparatus who have
been left out in the cold by Gen. Pervez Musharraf's regime. The
military junta, in contrast, blames these incidents on outside influences
seeking to destabilize Pakistan. Eight months after the September
11 tragedy, the regime seeks to portray Pakistan as a changed polity.
ARMY DEMOCRACY
On April 30,
a referendum extended Musharraf's presidency for five years. As
with a similar exercise conducted by the dictator Zia ul Haq in
the 1980s, popular participation in the referendum was dismal --
estimates variously say that 6 to 30 percent of the electorate showed
up at the polls. Accurate assessments of turnout were impossible
due to widespread double voting and other fraud. Yet the semblance
of an electoral process allowed the military junta to ascribe a
democratic legitimacy to the current episode of army rule in Pakistan.
Although much
criticism of Musharraf was levied by sections of the Pakistani press
and the political opposition, international condemnation of the
referendum farce was muted. The US preferred not to take a position
at all. "It's for the Pakistani people to judge what the referendum
means in terms of returning the country to democratic civilian rule,"
said State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, adding that US
hopes for greater democracy in Pakistan are pinned to October's
planned parliamentary contests. Boucher's noncommittal stance came
as no surprise. As long as Musharraf's regime allows US and allied
troops to use Pakistani territory for the remainder of the US war
against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, Pakistan's internal politics will
remain secondary to the larger geopolitical goals of its most important
ally.
POLITICAL
THEATER
The Taliban
and al-Qaeda owe their existence, in part, to past machinations
of the Pakistani military in fomenting radical Islam. Today Musharraf
and his fellow generals, acutely sensitive to their international
portrayal, have cynically used their newfound status as darlings
of the Western press to project a distinctly secular image. In a
major address to the nation (and the world) in January 2002, Musharraf
promised to curtail the activities of extremist groups and to reform
the madrassas (Islamic schools) that infamously graduated many of
the Taliban. He positioned himself as a moderate Muslim ruler who
had heeded the wishes of the silent majority in Pakistan that opposes
extremism and fanatical Islam. His desire to rid Pakistan of extremist
elements was affirmed when he invoked the secular, modernist father
of the Pakistani nation, Mohammed Ali Jinnah. Jinnah, a British-trained
lawyer from a minority Muslim sect, successfully led Indian Muslims
in their struggle to establish an independent Pakistan. His speeches
and writings emphasize a vision of a secular, democratic and modern
national entity populated primarily by Muslims, but providing equal
citizenship rights to all religious groups that lived within its
boundaries. Musharraf seeks to wrap himself in this vision of a
modern, moderate and Muslim Pakistan.
For a military
man who came to power through a coup and who was essentially committed
to the Pakistani military's involvement in Afghanistan and to its
incursions into Indian-held Kashmir, the January speech was indeed
a major policy change. While the rest of the world praised Musharraf
for his brave decision, Pakistanis themselves knew that they may
have been witnessing another performance in the country's ongoing
political theater, directed and produced by the military's General
Headquarters Central. The military now seeks to distance itself
from the very forces it helped to create -- which are violently
resisting the regime's attempts to don new political garb. In the
eyes of the Pakistani population, the Pakistani military leadership
is simply trying to rehabilitate itself, just as it needed to work
its way out of another major crisis of legitimacy in 1971.
TALE OF
TWO BHUTTOS
After embroiling
the country in a brutal civil war, in December of 1971 the Pakistani
army surrendered to Indian forces in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. As
a result of the subsequent division of the country, the disgraced
military finally handed over power to the civilian administration
of Zulfikhar Ali Bhutto after 13 years of governance. Musharraf
has drawn an analogy between that national turmoil and the present
crisis in the region. In so doing, he has underscored the relevance
of 1971 for Pakistan's more recent history. The Pakistani military
has again brought the country to a political crisis due to its failed
adventures in neighboring states.
Perhaps the
post-September 11 political crisis reminded Musharraf of 1971 because
of the scenario in which former president Benazir Bhutto would follow
in her father's footsteps to lead Pakistan again. Musharraf may
have thought this possibility could become a reality if the US and
European states remained jittery about Pakistan's nuclear warheads
falling into the wrong hands, as they remained suspicious of Pakistan's
security agencies' strong ties to radical Islamist groups. If Bhutto
played her cards well, she could become the consensus choice for
the West. Moreover, her unqualified support for the military's post-September
11 policies assured some within the military that she was not a
threat to its political authority, social influence and budgetary
demands. She could, like her father who re-established and reaffirmed
the military's authority, become the civilian face for behind-the-scenes
military influence. Musharraf's embrace of secularism has enabled
him, at least for the time being, to outfox Bhutto in her attempts
to regain power. In the international arena, he is now considered
trustworthy, as evidenced by his invitation to the White House in
February.
But Musharraf's
analogy to the 1971 crisis is limited. In 1971 the threat to the
state structure emanated primarily from the left. The long rule
of the military, with its deep links to industrial and feudal interests,
had led to a popular mobilization that demanded democratic reform,
economic redistribution, social justice and rights for ethnic minorities.
Now the threat to the governing junta comes from the more militant
Islamist forces -- themselves the product of a longer legacy of
military rule in Pakistan, ironically enough.
AFGHANISTAN
AND PAKISTANI POLITICS
Since Pakistan's
independence in 1947, relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan
had been strained due to boundary disputes and the feared spillage
of ethnic Pashtun nationalism across the common border. Afghan rulers
disputed the nineteenth-century division of Pashtun-dominated areas
by the British colonial authorities. The Durand Line, the boundary
between colonial India and Afghanistan, was inherited by Pakistan
as its own border with the neighboring state. Successive Afghan
governments were supportive of nationalist Pashtun movements that
called for regional autonomy or independence from Pakistan. These
struggles were a source of anxiety to the centralizing Pakistani
state. With openly hostile India on their eastern flank, Pakistani
military strategists had regarded their not-so-friendly western
neighbor with suspicion. Tensions were aggravated by the communist-led
coup in Afghanistan in 1978, and the subsequent Soviet invasion
of that country in 1979. The US-backed resistance to the pro-Soviet
Afghan regime guaranteed, at least in the minds of the Pakistani
military leaders, a somewhat concrete resolution of their Afghan
problem.
How the North
West Frontier Province (NWFP), the area bordering Afghanistan and
having a majority Pashtun population, went from being a hub of nationalist
and leftist politics to a region now identified with radical Islamic
movements is still an unwritten part of Pakistani history. Pakistan's
support for Pashtun groups may partly be a result of geography,
since Pashtun areas in southern Afghanistan are contiguous with
the Pakistani border and kinship ties cross the boundary. The Pakistani
security agencies, charged with running a covert war against the
Soviet presence in Afghanistan, were successful in turning these
ethnic bonds into bonds of Islamic resistance. In the last two decades,
the Pakistani state has used Islamic symbols and political discourse
successfully to diffuse a progressive, nationalistic and at times
separatist movement within its borders.
The present
incursion of Pakistani regulars, along with US Special Forces, into
the tribal belt of northwestern Pakistan is an unprecedented twist.
Under the pretext of pursuing fleeing al-Qaeda and Taliban forces,
the Pakistani state is able to assert direct authority over a space
that previously it governed through intermediaries and the consent
of the tribal leadership. Since the long Afghan war in the 1980s,
these areas have also been a conduit for the drug trade and covert
arms deals. As much as the Pakistani military and bureaucratic elite
has benefited from the drug and arms trade, today the Pakistani
state -- under immense pressure from the US -- finds itself in direct
confrontation with the semi-autonomous ruling cliques of the NWFP.
Pakistanis may be subjected to more random acts of violence, like
the Karachi car bombing, that may be a direct result of the military's
incursions into the tribal belt.
DANGEROUS
GAME
In addition
to its intervention to nurture a Pakistan-friendly regime in Afghanistan,
the Pakistani military has long encouraged armed resistance against
India in Kashmir. These interlinked policies guaranteed the military's
high demands on the national budget, and provided the ideological
justification for the growth and consolidation of the army's role
in Pakistan's social and political life.
Even after
its about-face on the Taliban after September 11, the Pakistani
military continued to think it could intervene in Kashmir. However,
the December 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament may drastically
limit Pakistan's support for Kashmiri separatists. India, with or
without proof of official Pakistani involvement, pointed to the
pattern of support that the Pakistani military had offered to armed
groups which targeted civilians. Pakistan failed initially to understand
the emerging atmosphere of zero tolerance toward any form of terrorist
activity after September 11. In contrast, the Indian government,
taking its cue from the US, pushed hard to win the international
public relations war, if not the hearts and minds of Kashmiri Muslims.
India has threatened
Pakistan with dire consequences for the attack on Parliament. It
is the return of 1971, this time in reverse. The neighbors, now
armed with nuclear arsenals, remain involved in a game of dangerous
brinkmanship.
Pakistani civilian
governments in the last decade have been unable to influence the
policy on Kashmir (or on Afghanistan). That has been the purview
of the military, which has periodically sabotaged any movement toward
a negotiated settlement. Yet civilian governments, along with their
rampant corruption, have neglected issues of democratic governance,
economic distribution and social needs. Within this context, the
military has portrayed itself as the stable social institution that
can save Pakistan from its corrupt and inept civilian representatives.
Yet the peculiar impasse that Pakistan faces over both homegrown
Islamist militants and Kashmir is entirely the military's responsibility.
A PAKISTANI
ATATURK
The Pakistani
military understands this charge at a fundamental level. Musharraf's
speech in January was intended to reduce international pressure
on his government, and to polish the tarnished image of the Pakistani
military among Pakistanis themselves. The military remains the largest
and most organized political group in Pakistani society. As much
as it nurtures its constituency through sophisticated use of the
national media, it is also cognizant of the social, economic and
political implications of its long-term policies. To continue to
rule, the army knows, it needs to recast the recent past as an aberration
in popular memory, and play the liberal secular card. The liberal
intelligentsia in Pakistan has heaved a sigh of relief at this turn
of events. Long the target of Islamist attacks, sometimes instigated
by the state security apparatus itself, liberals are now circling
their wagons around Musharraf, seeing him as the savior who will
release the country from the Islamists' grip. In their unrestrained
enthusiasm they perhaps forget the military's capability to manipulate
history. Musharraf is willing to hold elections for Parliament in
October, but the referendum has ensured that he will be head of
state for another five years. The military will not risk civilian
scrutiny until it can guarantee the continuation of its own entrenched
power in Pakistani society.
The Pakistani
liberal media has compared Musharraf's answer to the post-September
11 crisis to Kemal Ataturk's transformation of Turkey into a "secular"
state in the 1920s. While selectively remembering the secularizing
impulse of Kemalism, these assertions tend to forget that the Turkish
experiment in nation-building has been fraught with draconian laws,
centralized power, oppression of ethnic minorities and extreme brutality
visited upon the population by a police state. As in Turkey, those
Pakistanis affected by such a nation-building process will resist
its imposition. If the social and political framework within the
country does not fundamentally change, the territorial integrity
of Pakistan may dissolve. The geostrategic location of Pakistan,
along with its nuclear capacity, should make the international community
think seriously about this possible outcome of its support for the
continued rule of Gen. Musharraf and his colleagues.
|