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Pakistan After The
Assassination: Interview with Pervez Hoodbhoy
January 6, 2008
Interview with Pervez Hoodbhoy
by Stefania Maurizi of Venerdi of La Repubblica
Q: Let's start with the tragedy of
Bhutto assassination. Today, international media remind us she was the first
woman to become the PM of an Islamic country, she was a democratic leader, etc.
Nonetheless, she was the scion of a feudal family, which was primarily
responsible for making Pakistan an atomic power and she was known for the
authoritarian control of her party. Looking back, how do you judge Benazir
Bhutto?
A: Having first known Benazir Bhutto from high school in Karachi, and then later
in Cambridge (Massachussetts), I am deeply saddened by her assassination. But,
although the international media paint her as someone who could have led
Pakistan into the modern age, the truth is very different. Her two tenures as
prime minister were a nightmare of autocratic government and mis-governance.
Billions disappeared from foreign aid. A Swiss court found her guilty of money
laundering in 2003.
Ms. Bhutto owned mansions and palaces across the world. She even tried to steal
land from my (public) university to feed the rapacious appetite of her party
members.
Even during school days, Benazir thought she had been born to rule. More
importantly, she made not the slightest effort to change the feudal character of
Pakistani politics and society. The Bhuttos own vast tracts of agricultural land
in Sindh that is worked upon by serfs. Although she promised to bring democracy
to Pakistan, after returning to Pakistan, Ms. Bhutto made clear that for a few
table scraps she would be happy to team up with General Musharraf under the
hopelessly absurd US plan to give our military government a civilian face. Her
party, the Pakistan Peoples Party was her fiefdom. She appointed herself as
"chairperson for life".
Reflecting the mindset of a feudal princess, she even named her successors to be
male members from her family: her 19-year son, who is a student at Oxford and
knows nothing about Pakistani culture, as well as her phenomenally corrupt
husband, initially known as Mr Ten Percent and later as Mr. Thirty Percent.
Q: Was Ms. Bhutto a model for Pakistani women?
A: She was courageous and single-minded. And she showed that a woman could be
the head of a conservative Islamic state. Nevertheless, it is hard to see what
she wanted beyond personal power. Although she said that she was fighting for
grand causes, I'm still trying to figure out what they were.
She certainly did nothing for Pakistani women during her two stints in power and
left untouched the horrific Hudood laws, according to which a rape victim needs
to produce 4 witnesses to the act of penetration (else she could be punished for
fornication). Nor did she try to overturn the
Pakistani blasphemy law that prescribes death as the minimum penalty for those
convicted of insulting the prophet of Islam or his companions. As for democracy:
she had been desperate to do a deal with Musharraf who dangled over her head the
many corruption cases that she was charged with.
But he proved too clever for her and she was forced into the opposition.
In foreign policy, she played footsie with the army. It could do whatever it
liked, including making nuclear weapons, sending Islamic militants into Kashmir,
and organizing the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban. In
2002 she regretted having signed the document authorizing funds for the Taliban
forces poised to capture Kandahar. But Ms. Bhutto makes an excellent martyr. In
her death she will doubtlessly play a more positive role than when alive.
Q: Al Qaeda was immediately blamed for Bhutto assassination. However, many
people hated her: Musharraf, the Army, and the infamous ISI, which in 1990
removed Bhutto from power after she had replaced General Hameed Gul, the man who
invented the Taliban. Do you believe that Al Qaeda was really responsible for
killing Benazir Bhutto? Who is going to gain from Bhutto's death?
A: There are different possibilities and much confusion. But some facts are
certain. There definitely were gunshots, and this was followed by a suicide
blast. Now, I do not think that suicide bombers can be bought with any number of
rupees. Only a religious fanatic lured by heavenly rewards
would blow himself up. Therefore Al-Qaida, the Taliban, or other Islamic
jihadist groups are strong possibilities. They always hated Bhutto, but even
more after she announced in Washington that, if elected prime minister, she
would fight them even more vigorously than Musharraf. Of course, rogue elements
of Pakistan's intelligence agencies, who are also
strong Islamists, and who lie deeply hidden within the establishment, could also
have done it. They have a stock of suicide bombers available to them, as
evidenced by the success they have had in organizing suicide attacks upon army
commandos as well as their own colleagues.
So did Islamists of one or the other flavour do it? Maybe, but the waters have
been muddied by the government. First, publicly available photographs and videos
show a modern-looking gunman accompanying the suicide bomber.
He fired three shots, heard by all present, at least one of which hit Bhutto.
Some say that there was a second sharpshooter in a building too.
On the other hand, the government initially insisted she died from concussion
and not a bullet wound - an obvious lie immediately refuted by those in the same
car as Bhutto. Second, in just an hour after the assassination, the police
washed away all the bloody evidence with water hoses. So, it is quite possible
that non-Islamists in the government have
somehow used brainwashed suicide bombers, trained in mosques and madrassas, to
do their dirty job. But, as in the JFK murder, the truth will never be known.
As for the gainers and losers: Islamist groups saw Bhutto as a tool of America
that would be used against them, and a leader who could secularize Pakistan.
Plus, she was a woman and popular. But Musharraf and his political party, the
PML(Q), have also gained because a political rival
has been eliminated. The losers are those Pakistanis who wish for a secular,
modern Pakistan and not one that is run by mullahs. Although she never delivered
on her promises, her followers never lost faith.
Q: There is a lot of concern about the future of Pakistan. How real is the
threat of an Islamic takeover, in your opinion?
A: It has already been taken over! Twenty five years ago the Pakistani state
began pushing Islam on to its people as a matter of policy.
Prayers in government departments were deemed compulsory, punishments were meted
out to those who did not fast in Ramadan, selection for academic posts required
that the candidate demonstrate knowledge of Islamic teachings, and jihad was
propagated through schoolbooks. Today government
intervention is no longer needed because of a spontaneous groundswell of Islamic
zeal. But now the state is realizing that it shot itself in the foot. The
fanatical jihadists it created have turned against it. It is supreme irony that
the Pakistan Army - whose men were recruited under the banner of jihad and which
saw itself as the fighting arm of Islam - is now frequently targeted by suicide
bombers who are fighting a jihad to bring even stricter Islam. It has lost a
thousand or more men fighting Al-Qaida and the Taliban.
The pace of radicalization has quickened. There are almost daily suicide
attacks. This phenomenon was almost unknown in Pakistan before the US invasion
of Iraq in 2003. Now it is common in major cities as well as tribal areas. The
targets have been the Pakistan army, police, incumbent and retired government
leaders, and rival Islamic sects. But this is just the tip of the iceberg; we'll
see much more in years ahead.
Q: Ideally, what do you want to see happen in the next few weeks?
A: I want Musharraf to go - resign or somehow be removed, preferably without
bloodshed. I want the independent judiciary restored, a new neutral caretaker
government installed for overseeing free and fair elections, and then elections
that would decide upon the new parliament and prime minister. This will not
immediately solve Pakistan's fundamental problems - army dominance,
maldistribution of wealth, religious fanaticism, provincial imbalances - but it
would get Pakistan on the track to democracy instead of the self-destruction it
is now racing towards.
Q: People in Washington are increasingly frustrated with Musharraf's
counterterrorism efforts, however they think there are no alternatives to
Musharraf. What do you think about this?
A: The Americans have tunnel vision. They want lackeys like Musharraf who do
their bidding, although here too there is deception at work. They know, but
choose to forget, that Pakistani military leaders, Musharraf included, are the
makers of the jihadist monster. In 1999, after Musharraf launched the secret
Kargil operation in Kashmir, the United Jihad Council celebrated him as a true
fighter for Islam. After 911 such praises disappeared, but under his leadership
the army still covertly supported jihadist groups and the Taliban in Kashmir and
Afghanistan.
Musharraf is extremely unpopular now and the Americans will have to dump him at
some point. It is hard to find a pro-Musharraf person anywhere in the country
except in the top business circles and the top army leadership. Until recently
he ran both the army and the government himself, with the connivance of a
rubber-stamp Parliament put in place through rigged elections. When the courts
were about to rule that he could not legally be president, Musharraf chose to
suspend the constitution and impose emergency rule. He dismissed the Supreme
Court and arrested the judges, replacing them with judges who obey his every
command. He blocked all independent television channels, and punished the news
media for disparaging him or the army. His police arrested thousands of lawyers
and pro-democracy activists. He ordered that civilians be tried in closed
military courts. This was necessary, he said, to save Pakistan from a
rapidly growing Islamist insurgency. But he released 25 Islamic extremists on
the day that the judges were arrested. In spite of all this, George W. Bush
called Musharraf "a democrat at heart". It makes you sick.
The Americans have shot themselves in the foot by supporting the army
consistently for decades. They have lost credibility and respect among
Pakistanis. Everybody laughs when they hear that America wants democracy for
Pakistan. In this situation, even if Musharraf goes and Gen. Kayani (the new
army chief) takes over, the best that American can hope for is for the status
quo. This is sad, because America is a great country with many virtues. If only
they could get over their hangup of wanting to run the world! It's an impossible
task anyway.
Q: In Pakistan what is the man on the street thinking?
A: Almost everyone holds the government responsible for the assassination.
Tragically, suicide bombings are not condemned with any particular vigor. There
is no strong reaction against the mullahs, madrassas, and jihadis. Perhaps
people are afraid to criticize them because this might be seen as a criticism of
Islam. Interestingly, in all the street demonstrations I have gone to after the
Bhutto assassinations, there was no call for cracking down on extremists.
Yesterday I met the lone taxidriver who
thought the Islamists did it.
Q: What could be an effective way to fight Al Qaeda and the Taleban in Pakistan?
A: To fight and win this war, Pakistan will need to mobilize both its people and
the state. The notion of a power-sharing agreement between the state and Taliban
is a non-starter; the spectacular failures of earlier agreements should be a
lesson. Instead the government should help create public consensus through open
forum discussions, proceed faster on
infrastructure development in the tribal areas, and make judicious use of
military force - troops only, no air power. This should become every Pakistani's
war, not just the army's, and it will have to be fought even if America packs up
and goes away. But, as long as Musharraf is president,
it will be impossible to get popular support for the war. If presented with a
choice between Musharraf and the Taliban, the overwhelming majority of
Pakistanis would want the latter - although I am sure they would regret it
later.
Q: Let's talk about Pakistan's nukes. There a lot of concern about the
possibility that nuclear weapons could end up into the hands of Islamic
fundamentalists. Early in December the Washington Post revealed that a small
group of U.S. military experts and intelligence analysts convened in Washington
for exploring strategies to secure Pakistani nukes if the
Pakistani regime falls apart. Their conclusions were very scaring, as, - there
are no palatable ways to forcibly ensure the security of Pakistan's nuclear
weapons. What do you think about this?
A: The government says there is absolutely no danger of loose nukes.
Pakistan has been sending serving officers of the Strategic Plans Division,
which is the agency responsible for handling nuclear weapons, to the United
States for training in safety measures (PAL's locking devices, storing
procedures, etc). But there's no way of telling if this will be effective.
Extremists have already penetrated deep into the army and the intelligence
agencies. We now see repeated evidence: for example, last month an unmarked bus
carrying employees of the Inter Services Intelligence [Pakistan's secret
intelligence], was collecting employees early in the morning. It was boarded by
a suicide bomber who blew himself
up killing 25. It was an inside job.
And now there are many other such examples, such as that of an army man killing
16 Special Services Group commandos in a suicide attack at Ghazi Barotha. A part
of the establishment is clearly at war with another part.
There are also scientists, as well as military people, who are radical
Islamists. Many questions come to mind: can there be collusion between different
field-level commanders, resulting in the hijacking of a nuclear weapon? Could
outsider groups develop links with insiders? Given the
absence of accurate records of fissile material production, can one be certain
that small quantities of highly enriched uranium or weapons grade plutonium have
already not been diverted? I do not know the answers.
Nobody does.
Najeeb Kazmi
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