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Will
Zia’s legacy prove more powerful than Musharraf? If General Musharraf braves the odds to reach an accord with India, will that too be considered un-Islamic, almost heretical? Why not? There is a spectre haunting General Pervez Musharraf the ghost of the late General Zia ul-Haq. To cement his rule, the former dictator took two crucial decisions. First, he undertook to Talibanise Pakistan. (The term did not exist at the time, but it fits well enough.) Second, General Zia did all he could to support the mujahideen battling the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Well, the chickens have come home to roost, and General Musharraf is in the henhouse. I have just one question: is Pakistans chief executive capable of controlling the forces operating within his country? I am not debating the generals intentions. He may mean well, or he may be just biding his time until the Pakistani economy recovers enough to withstand American pressure. But is he assuming any agreement is possible in a position to deliver what he promises? I think the general is discovering the limits to his powers. Pervez Musharraf began, after kicking out Nawaz Sharif, by confessing his admiration for Kemal Ataturk. That name is anathema to Islamic fundamentalists; the father of modern Turkey was the man who pulled down the Caliphate, did his best to destroy the domination of the ulema, and made his country as secular as possible. To liken oneself to Ataturk is tantamount to blasphemy. Today, you wont find Musharraf making the same mistake! The simple fact is that nobody in Pakistan can afford to earn the tag of opposing Islam. He will be damned by every cleric in the country. I am not sure that even General Musharrafs own soldiers, the younger officers and the enlisted men, would stand for a secular polity. Nor, for that matter, is he permitted much freedom in forging ties with India. Remember that for almost a quarter of a century, there has been a state-sponsored boom in madarsas across Pakistan. The education imparted in these schools is deficient in science, maths, or the liberal arts. But the one subject imparted to, one might say ingrained in, their alumni is a virulent form of Islam. It is these young men, the ones in their late teens and early twenties, who are entering the Pakistan Armys lower rungs. Forget the militants for a minute, can Musharraf control his own young lieutenants if they perceive him as being anti-Islamic? How is anti-Islamic to be defined? Permit me to quote the doyen of the militants, Osama bin-Laden: To kill Americans and their allies, both civil and military, is an individual duty of every Muslim who is able, in any country where this is possible. Append Israelis and Indians to Americans, and you have a fair idea of what is being taught in Pakistans madarsas. If
General Musharraf braves the odds to reach an accord with India, will
that too be considered un-Islamic, almost heretical? Why not? Surely
the fate of President Sadat, the man who made peace with Israel, is
not forgotten? Who are these groups? I can name only some of them. There is Al Qaeda, the outfit founded in 1987 by Osama bin-Laden himself. There is Jaish Muhammad, a Jordanian group that accuses the Hashemite dynasty of being too cosy with Israel and the United States. There is a radical organisation called the G.I.A., which operates in Algeria and possibly some other nations in the Sahara. There are also various outfits in Europe which offer young Muslim men the chance of training for jihad in Afghanistan. The European nations were sufficiently worried to organise a trans-national search. They found one common link: each of the groups in Europe had been placing calls to Pakistan. For at least five years if not more, various law-enforcing agencies in Europe and North America have been amassing evidence against Pakistan. The grim conclusion is that two-thirds of global terrorism and three-quarters of the narcotics trade use Pakistan as a base of operations. (Drugs are a major source of the Talibans income.) Yet
again, I am not sure what, if anything, poor Musharraf can do to halt
all this. Pakistan has been awash in arms from small arms to
anti-aircraft missiles since the days of the conflict in Afghanistan.
I doubt that the Pakistan Army has the firepower to take out the militants
even if it wants to. Dont forget that many of those terrorists
are themselves Pakistanis; two years ago, one intelligence estimate
calculated that at least one quarter of the Talibans officer
corps consisted of Pakistanis. All those young men are now looking
for other avenues. Yet
what is the alternative? Pakistan is bankrupt, and requires loans even
for a hand-to-mouth existence. That money will dry up if the Americans
and the Europeans suspect that he cant rein in the militants and
the drugs trade.
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