TRAITORS MUSHARRAF AND BHUTTO COMPETE FOR DAJJAL BUSH'S APPROVAL

As Musharraf's woes grow, enter an old rival, again
By Somini Sengupta
International Herald Tribune
Friday, April 6, 2007
http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=5170824

NEW DELHI: As the Pakistani president, General Pervez Musharraf,
wrestles with swelling public disaffection over his rule, one of his
key political rivals, Benazir Bhutto, has embarked on an international
campaign to revive her political standing.

In recent weeks, Bhutto, 53, a former prime minister and the leader of
the Pakistan People's Party who has lived in exile since 1999, has
stepped up her criticism of the Taliban who operate in the remote
regions of the country. She has sought to marginalize Islamist
political parties from an opposition party alliance that has emerged
in anticipation of elections later this year.

Seeking to assure Washington that she would be a staunch ally, she has
suggested that as an elected leader, she would be more credible in
selling antiterrorism efforts to the public than Musharraf, who has
been criticized by Washington for a mixed record in combating the
Taliban and Al Qaeda within Pakistan's borders. She has even brought
her campaign here, to the capital of her nation's archrival: India.

"I don't think our present regime has been able to dissociate my
country's name with terrorism, and I believe a popular democratic
government can," she said at a dinner attended by members of the
Indian political and corporate elite here in the India's capital on a
Saturday night in late March.

In Washington, Bhutto has hired a lobbying firm to help sell that same
message. In March, she wrote an opinion piece for The Washington Post
directed at the Washington establishment. In February, she spoke to
the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

Bhutto has lived in self-imposed exile as a result of a long litany of
corruption charges that still hound her. Today she divides her time
between London and Dubai, and appears ever more intent on preparing
the ground for a return to Pakistan, though many obstacles remain.

"Her strategy seems to be to try and persuade the international
community that changes in the way Pakistan is governed — changes that
would eventually favor her — are also good for the war against
terror," said Husain Haqqani, a former adviser to Bhutto who is now
director of the Center for International Relations at Boston University.

For now at least, it seems unlikely that the Bush administration will
heed Bhutto's argument. The White House remains committed to
Musharraf, even through the latest protests against his administration
— protests that began ostensibly against his suspension of the chief
justice, but have since come to represent growing frustration against
military rule.

Analysts in Washington and Islamabad point out that the White House
remains skeptical of Bhutto's capacity, questioning her authority over
Pakistan's military and intelligence services and troubled by charges
that she and her husband illegally gained millions of dollars in deals
with people who did business with the government when she was in
power. (She successfully fought two money laundering cases in
Pakistan, though she continues to face charges in a separate case in a
court in Switzerland.)

"I'm not sure if there's any amount of charm or orchestration on
Benazir's part that will change this," Craig Cohen, deputy chief of
staff at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington, said in an e-mail message. "Something major would have to
happen in Pakistan for the Bush administration to give up on Musharraf."

More to the point, Cohen said, there is little reason to believe that
having Bhutto at the helm would fundamentally alter the hold of the
military and the intelligence services on the state machinery. "Even
after free elections, the military will still call the shots on
national security issues," he said. "Firing the manager only gets you
so far."

How the Democrats in Washington will respond to Musharraf in the
coming months is also uncertain. One hint came in early March, when
four members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, including its
chairman, Joseph Biden Jr., Democrat of Delaware and a candidate for
president, wrote to the general, warning that without the return of
the two key opposition leaders, Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, "it will be
difficult for the international community to regard the 2007 elections
as a true expression of democracy."

Sharif's government was ousted by Musharraf during a coup in 1999. He
was eventually pardoned and exiled to Saudi Arabia. Neither he nor
Bhutto was permitted to take part in the last elections, in 2002.

On occasion, Musharraf has said that Bhutto could return, if she were
willing to face corruption charges. In a step that added to
speculation that a deal on her return might be in the works, the
government said Wednesday that it was abolishing the federal division
that had been investigating the foreign assets and offshore bank
accounts of some politicians, including her.

Still, Musharraf has given no word, publicly at least, that he is in a
mood to bargain. "There are no back-channel negotiations," he said in
an interview with Karachi-based HUM TV in February. "The parties,
which are here, will take part in the elections. But those who are
abroad would remain there. This is the reality, and there is no deal,
no change."

Bhutto's latest approach has been as notable for what she has chosen
to say as for what she has left unsaid. Her criticism of Musharraf in
recent weeks, when he has faced daunting public protests, has been
appreciably mild. Her party has not turned out its supporters in huge
numbers in the latest protests.

But Bhutto's hunger to return to political life could not have been
more obvious at a dinner here last month. She wooed that audience with
paeans to democracy and promises of peace. Let there be a summit
meeting, she proposed, of Indian and Pakistani leaders on Aug. 15, the
anniversary of their bloody births, for an accord that brings
"permanent stability and prosperity."

"I believe Indo-Pakistan relations can be creatively reinvented," she
said.

Familial ties, and particularly familial sacrifice, play extremely
well in this part of the world, and Aroon Purie, the editor of the
newsweekly India Today, which sponsored the dinner, deployed them
frothily in Bhutto's favor. Born into Pakistan's ruling dynasty,
Bhutto's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was executed by Pakistan's last
military government. Bhutto served two terms as prime minister,
becoming the first woman to lead a Muslim country.

Purie introduced her as a woman born into a family of martyrs,
describing her as "now all set for a democratic homecoming."

http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=5170824

Reply via email to