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On
19 September 2001, General Pervaiz Musharraf went on TV to
inform the people of
Pakistan that their country would be standing shoulder to
shoulder with the United States in its bombardment of
Afghanistan.
Visibly pale, blinking and sweating, he looked like a man
who had just signed his own death warrant. The installation
of the Taliban regime in Kabul had been the Pakistan Army’s
only foreign-policy success. In 1978, the US had famously
turned to the country’s military dictator General Zia-ul-Haq
when it needed a proxy to manage its jihad against the
radical pro-Soviet regime in Afghanistan. In what followed,
the Pakistan Inter-Services Intelligence became an army
within an army, with much of its budget supplied directly
from Washington. It was the ISI that supervised the
Taliban’s sweep to power during Benazir Bhutto’s premiership
of the mid-nineties; that controlled the infiltration of
skilled saboteurs and assassins into Indian-held Kashmir;
and that maintained a direct connexion with Osama bin Laden.
Zia’s successors could congratulate themselves that their
new province in the north-west almost made up for the
defection of Bangladesh in 1971.
Now it was time to unravel the gains of the victory: the
Taliban protectorate had to be dismantled and bin Laden
captured, ‘dead or alive’. But having played such a
frontline role in installing fundamentalism in Afghanistan,
would the Pakistan Army and the ISI accept the reverse
command from their foreign masters, and put themselves in
the forefront of the brutal attempt to root it out?
Musharraf was clearly nervous but the US Defence
Intelligence Agency had not erred. In the final analysis,
Pakistan’s
generals have always remained loyal to the institution that
produced them—and to its international backers—rather than
to abstract ideas like democracy, Islam or even
Pakistan.
The country’s fifty-five year history has been a series of
lengthy duels between general and politician, with civil
servants acting as seconds for both sides. Statistics reveal
the winner: while elected representatives have run the
country for fifteen years, and unaccountable bureaucrats and
their tame front men for eleven, the Army has been in power
for twenty-nine—leading some to suggest that the
green-and-white national flag might be re-coloured khaki.
[1] It is a dismal record, but the Pakistan high command has
never tolerated interference from civilian politicians for
too long. The last elected leader to believe he had the Army
firmly under his control, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, had to be
disabused of the notion. In 1977, on the orders of General
Zia—an erstwhile favourite whom Bhutto had promoted over the
heads of five, more deserving, superior officers—the prime
minister was removed from power and hanged two years later.
[2]
After Zia’s sudden death in 1988, power alternated between
Benazir Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party (1988–90; 1993–96)
and Nawaz Sharif’s Muslim League (1990–93; 1997–99). By 1998
it looked as if Nawaz Sharif—probably the country’s most
venal politician—was forgetting the lessons of Bhutto’s
fall. The rickety economy was facing collapse as the
Southeast Asian financial crisis swept the region,
exacerbated by US sanctions imposed after the 1998 Indo-Pak
nuclear tests (Clinton later intervened to soften these on
the grounds of US national-security interests). The Chief of
Army Staff, General Karamat, called for a National Security
Council to be set up to take charge of the situation, with
the Army playing a major role. Nawaz Sharif sacked him in
October 1998 and installed Musharraf as COAS instead.
Six months later, under Musharraf’s command, the Pakistan
Army launched its Kargil offensive, capturing strategic
heights in Indian-held Kashmir. Nawaz Sharif came under
immediate
US
pressure and, in July 1999, ordered the troops to
withdraw—snatching diplomatic defeat from the jaws of
military victory, in the eyes of the high command. Nawaz
Sharif, clearly counting on
Washington’s
support, tried to instigate moves against Musharraf within
the Army, while complaining in public that he had not been
consulted about the Kargil move. The following October,
while Musharraf was on a visit to Sri Lanka, Pakistan TV
announced that the COAS had been sacked. Flying home, his
plane was denied permission to land. Either while circling
Pakistan airspace with dwindling fuel supplies, or after his
final touch-down, Musharraf gave the order for Nawaz Sharif
to be put under arrest. Announcing that he had been
‘compelled to act, to prevent the further destabilization of
the military’, Musharraf suspended parliament and the
constitution, appointed himself the country’s ‘Chief
Executive’ and established a governing National Security
Council. (The
Clinton
administration ensured a smoother fate for Nawaz Sharif than
Bhutto had endured, whisking him out of prison to enjoy a
comfortable exile in Saudi Arabia.)
Liberal applause
Initially, there was some rejoicing both at home and abroad
at the Pakistan Army’s fourth coup in as many decades. To
the popular delight at getting rid of Nawaz Sharif was added
the innovation of a military take-over in the face of
apparent White House displeasure. This, coupled with the
pseudo-modernist rhetoric of the new ruler, encouraged a
wave of amnesia. It was as if the institution that had
dominated the country’s political life for so many decades
had ceased to exist—or undergone a miraculous
transformation. Liberal pundits in New York and Lahore lost
their bearings, while in the London Review of Books Anatol
Lieven decribed Musharraf’s administration as being ‘the
most progressive Pakistan has had in a generation’. [3] The
bulk of the citizens were more sceptical—indifferent to the
fate of their politicians, and with few illusions as to the
character or role of the Army.
Like his uniformed predecessors, Musharraf immediately
promised to end corruption, reform the countryside, tax the
middle-classes, eradicate poverty, educate the poor and
restore real democracy. The Pakistani road to absolutism is
always paved with such intentions. Why were so many liberal
commentators deceived? Partially it was sheer desperation.
In the face of the appalling performance of elected
politicians during the nineties, they were ready to grasp at
straws. They were also taken in by Musharraf’s rhetoric,
replete with admiring references to Kemal Atatürk, and by
his relatively untypical socio-cultural background. Unlike
most of the military high command, Musharraf was not of
Punjabi stock. He had no links with the traditional landed
elite that has dominated the country, nor was he on the
payroll of a heroin millionaire or close to some tainted
industrialist. His family, educated and secular, had left
Uttar Pradesh during the Partition of 1947 to find shelter
in the Land of the Pure. After her son’s rise to fame, his
mother had casually revealed in the course of a newspaper
interview that, in the fifties, she had been greatly
influenced by progressive intellectuals such as Sajjad
Zaheer and Sibte Hassan. [4] She never said that her views
had been genetically transmitted to her boy, but desperate
people will put their hopes in anything.
Within a few months of Musharraf’s seizure of power,
however, there was already a strong indication that nothing
substantial would change. The Chief Executive had appointed
a friend and colleague, General Amjad, as head of the
National Accountability Bureau, charged with rooting out and
punishing corrupt officials, politicians and businessmen.
Amjad was one of the few senior officers in the Army
rumoured to have unpolluted hands. His reputation for
‘playing by the rules’ had made him a maverick, even as a
junior officer. One story has it that he refused to allow a
general to borrow the mess silver for a private dinner
party, despite insistent requests. His colleagues, taken
aback at his stuffiness, laughed at him in public while
privately according him some grudging respect.
Musharraf’s decision to put him in charge of the NAB had
potentially serious consequences. Within a fortnight, Amjad
had hired the services of a reputable non-establishment
American lawyer, William Pepper, to track down the money
spirited abroad by Benazir Bhutto and husband Asif Zardari.
Simultaneously, Amjad ordered the arrest of industrialists
who had borrowed money from the banks and failed to pay even
the interest on it. A list of politicians who had done the
same was published in every newspaper. The naming and
shaming was punishing psychologically but was insufficient
to deal with the cancer. Amjad reportedly told the Chief
Executive that, to tackle the problem seriously, it would be
necessary to create at least one completely clean
institution in the country; only then would civil servants
and politicians take notice. But any thorough purge of the
Augean stables would have required the arrest of dozens of
serving and former generals, admirals and air marshals, long
rewarded for services to their country by the chance to
engage in large-scale corruption. Musharaf naturally baulked
at any such prospect, fearing it would divide and demoralize
the top brass and could lead to a break-down in discipline.
Once discipline went, the Pakistani military risked becoming
little different from a Middle-Eastern or Latin American
army where any Johnny, regardless of rank, thought he could
seize power. Amjad was quietly shifted sideways, first as a
Corps Commander and then as head of the Fauji Foundation, a
military honey-pot where his own scruples will certainly be
tested. The imprisoned capitalists were released, the shamed
politicians heaved a collective sigh of relief and it was,
in every sense of the phrase, back to business as usual.
A listing economy
If the removal of Amjad had pleased local capitalism, the
appointment of
New York banker Shaukat Aziz as Finance Minister endeared
Musharraf to the IMF. Pakistan’s economy has long been
crippled by exorbitant defence expenditure which, amplified
by inadequate tax revenues, has led to sky-rocketing
debt-service costs. By 2001, debt and defence amounted to
two-thirds of public spending—257bn rupees ($4.2bn) and
149.6bn rupees ($2.5bn) respectively, compared to total tax
revenues of 414.2bn rupees ($6.9bn). In a country with one
of the worst public education systems in Asia—70 per cent of
women, and 41 per cent of men, are officially classified as
illiterate—and with health care virtually non-existent for
over half the population, a mere 105.1bn rupees ($1.75bn)
was left for overall development.
Throughout the nineties, the IMF had scolded civilian
governments for failing to keep their restructuring
promises. Musharraf’s regime, by contrast, won admiring
praise from 1999 onwards for sticking to IMF guidelines
‘despite the hardships imposed on the public by austerity
measures’. [5] Impoverishment and desperation in the
burgeoning city slums and the countryside—still home to 67.5
per cent of the population—were exacerbated further. Some 56
million Pakistanis, nearly 40 per cent of the population,
now live below the poverty line; the number has increased by
15 million since Musharraf seized power. Of Pakistan’s four
provinces the Punjab, with around 60 per cent of the
population, has continued to dominate economically and
politically, with Punjabis filling the upper echelons of the
Army and bureaucracy and channelling what development there
is to local projects. Sind, with 23 per cent of the
population, and
Baluchistan (5 per cent) remain starved of funds,
water and power supplies, while the North West Frontier’s
fortunes have been increasingly tied to the heroin economy.
The problem is structural. The economy rests on a narrow
production base, heavily dependent on the fallible cotton
crop and the low-value-added textile industry; irrigation
supplies are deficient, and soil erosion and salinity
widespread. More damaging still are the crippling social
relations in the countryside. Low productivity in
agriculture can only be reversed through the implementation
of serious land reforms, but the alliance between khaki
state and local landlords makes this virtually impossible.
As a recent Economist Intelligence Unit report on
Pakistan
noted:
Change is hindered not least because the status quo suits
the wealthy landowners who dominate the sector, as well as
federal and provincial parliaments. Large landowners own 40
per cent of the arable land and control most of the
irrigation system. Yet assessments by independent agencies,
including the World Bank, show them to be less productive
than smallholders. They are also poor taxpayers, heavy
borrowers and bad debtors. [6]
The weak economy has been further skewed for decades now by
Pakistan’s vast military apparatus. For ‘security reasons’,
its costs are never itemized in official statements: a
single line records the overall sum. In Pakistan, the power
of any elected body to probe into military affairs has
always been strictly curtailed. The citizenry remains
unaware of how the annual $2.5bn is distributed between the
Army (550,000-strong, with two-thousand-plus tanks and two
armoured divisions); the Air Force (ten fighter squadrons of
forty combat planes each, as well as French and US-made
missile systems); and the Navy (ten submarines, eight
frigates); let alone what is spent on nuclear weapons and
delivery systems.
Military Keynesianism
This lack of transparency is extended to the maze of
loss-making business enterprises run by the Army. The oldest
of these is the Fauji Foundation, established as a charity
for retired military personnel in 1889. It has since become
a giant conglomerate in its own right with controlling
shares in sugar mills, energy, fertilizer, cereals, cement
and other industries—combined assets worth 9.8bn rupees. The
Army Welfare Trust, set up in 1977 under General Zia’s
dictatorship, controls real estate, rice mills, stud farms,
pharmaceutical industries, travel agencies, fish farms, six
different housing schemes, insurance companies, an aviation
outfit and the highly accommodating Askari Commercial Bank,
many of whose senior functionaries had earlier served at the
discredited Bank of Credit and Commerce International; the
AWT’s assets have been valued at 17bn rupees. The Air Force
and Navy chiefs also have their own troughs: the Shaheen and
Bahria Foundations.
Many of these enterprises have been engaged in corruption,
although scandals usually erupt only when civilian
businessmen have become too greedy in exploiting the
opportunities they offer, or where the fall of a government
has exposed its shady deals. Benazir Bhutto’s spouse Asif
Zardari was implicated, via an intermediary, in
short-changing the Air Force’s Shaheen Foundation in a
dubious media venture. In another case, it emerged that a
private businessman had bribed senior naval personnel in the
process of defrauding the Bahria Foundation over a
land-development deal. A lawyer petitioned the Supreme Court
to outlaw all use of Army, Navy and Air Force insignia in
private enterprise. He demonstrated how the foundations were
contravening the Companies Ordinance of 1984, accused them
and their partners of collusion and corruption, and pleaded
with the Court to outlaw all commercial activities by the
armed services. Unable to contest his arguments, the judges
dismissed the case on a technicality—thereby revealing their
own subordination to the colour khaki.
Contrary to the widely propagated myth that the Army can at
least run things efficiently (‘probably the only successful
modern institution Pakistan possesses’, according to an
admirer in the London Review of Books), a detailed
investigation by Ayesha Siddiqa-Agha has recently revealed
that most of these businesses are run at a loss, with the
generals siphoning off funds from the bloated defence budget
to make up the difference. [7] The military are also
entirely innocent of modern accounting systems: their books
tend to ignore such factors as personnel and utilities
costs, and in any case government auditors are warned not to
examine them too closely. Meanwhile, their stranglehold over
many areas of the economy stifles normal development. In the
construction and transport sectors especially, the ability
of Army-run companies such as the National Logistics Cell
and the Frontier Works Organization to monopolize government
contracts, whether under civilian or military regimes,
forces smaller companies out of business.
Musharraf’s war on terror
By 2001, as a result of skewed spending, stagnating
agricultural and industrial sectors and grotesque military
mismanagement, the country was groaning under a burden of a
$27bn external public debt. Then came September 11.
Mercifully for
Washington, the Army was already in power in
Pakistan.
The Pentagon and the CIA were spared the time and energy
needed to organize a new military coup. At such a moment of
tension, institutional continuity must have been reassuring.
[8] As the B52s roared into the newly won bases in
Kyrgyzstan, and secret sites along the Baluchistan border
were reactivated for Special Service use, the IMF approved a
three-year poverty-reduction loan of $1.3bn and helped
reschedule over $12bn in debt—resulting in massive budgetary
relief for Pakistan, and allowing its State Bank to build
unprecedented foreign-exchange reserves (some $7bn by July
2002). By this time, the IMF had also disbursed soft loans
totalling around $400m.
Overnight, Musharraf had become halal in the West and was
being fêted by Bush and Blair in the same venues in which
Reagan and Thatcher had welcomed Zia and Osama’s friends.
For its part, the Army high command was united in the view
that the born-again alliance with
Washington
was a severe blow against the Indian enemy. Pakistan’s
civilian elite, too, was in jubilant mood. Now at least they
were no longer pariahs. A new imperial war, with their very
own Army as the principal proxy and the whole country as a
base of operations, meant they were needed once again. The
more liberal wing of the elite dreamt of a permanent
Pentagon–Musharraf axis that would destroy the hold of
Pakistan’s dreaded Islamists forever. Overlooking how many
times their illusions had been betrayed in the past, its
representatives now travelled to Washington to plead that
the region never be left unprotected again. For their part,
emissaries from the disgraced politicians Nawaz Sharif and
Benazir Bhutto became familiar if pathetic figures at Foggy
Bottom, pleading endlessly with junior functionaries of the
State Department not to trust the Army.
The exact role of the ISI during this period remains
unclear. In his 19 September broadcast, Musharraf had hinted
that his loyalty to Washington’s war on terror would be
rewarded not just with cash but with an American wink at
Pakistan’s nuclear and Kashmiri aspirations—‘our critical
concerns’, as he put it. [9] As early as November 2001,
India was protesting at increased Pakistani-backed
infiltration into Kashmir. On 13 December, armed gunmen
allegedly linked to the ISI-funded Jaish-e-Mohammad attacked
the Indian parliament building in Delhi, killing nine
people. With tension rapidly escalating, the two countries
mobilized close to a million troops along their common
border—a mass militarization that served retrograde
political interests on both sides.
Khaki democracy
By this stage, Musharraf’s own popularity had begun to list
asymmetrically: the more he was appreciated by the State
Department the less inclined he felt to undertake any
serious measures at home—leave alone implementing the ‘true
democracy’ he had promised. Instead, like Generals Ayub and
Zia before him, the Chief Executive now attempted to make
himself impregnable. Temporarily discarding his uniform, he
dressed up in native gear, complete with a particularly
stupid turban, and launched his political career at a
‘public’ rally, consisting of peasant-serfs bussed into a
large field by a friendly landlord in
Sind. The referendum is a time-honoured weapon of dictators in
search of legitimacy; Musharraf’s decision to rig the April
2002 plebiscite in his favour disillusioned even his most
ardent liberal supporters. The majority of the electorate
stayed at home while government employees, soldiers and
serfs trooped to the polls and transformed the CE into the
country’s elected President.
The next step was equally predictable. The one thing every
dictator needs in order to provide his regime with a
civilian façade is a political party. Not a problem,
Musharraf’s sycophants assured him: a handy instrument could
easily be fashioned from the debris of the past. Like an
out-of-work courtesan, the Muslim League—the country’s
foundational party—was given a shower, dusted with powder
and provided with a new wig, before being displayed to the
growing queue of potential suitors. Ayub’s pet name for his
party was the Convention Muslim League; Zia preferred the
Pakistan Muslim League, and allowed the Sharif family to
manage it on his behalf. Musharraf, having ditched the
Sharifs, needed a new name. A timeserver suggested the
Quaid-i-Azam Muslim League and so it came about that this
old-new entity entered the lists as the General’s Party, in
the General’s Election of October 2002. [10] Its personnel
were hardly unfamiliar, consisting of bandwagon careerists
of every stripe. In the countryside, these were still the
old landed gentry, eager to please the new ruler; in the
towns, local notables who had accrued vast sums of money,
often through illegal means, and become procurers of power
and influence. Where in the past a father or uncle had
supported Ayub or Zia, now the son or son-in-law was eager
to act as a prop for Musharraf. In the face of mass apathy
the bureaucracy, past masters in the art of electoral
manipulation, set about ensuring the required outcome.
The results of the October election were much closer than
anticipated. Despite the low turnout—under 20 per cent,
according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan—and
skilful ballot-rigging, the official Muslim League (Q)
failed to secure an overall majority in the National
Assembly, winning 115 seats out of 324, mainly in its
traditional bastion of the Punjab. Benazir Bhutto’s Pakistan
People’s Party secured eighty seats—again, largely in their
Sindhi heartland—and the rump of the Muslim League that had
remained loyal to Nawaz Sharif took nineteen. It was the
Islamists who scored a really big hit. With 66 seats, their
united front Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA—Unified Action
Conference) gained the highest ever complement that Islamist
parliamentarians had ever achieved in the history of this
Islamic Republic, sweeping the Pashto-speaking regions along
the Afghan border. Their colourful turbans and long beards
literally changed the complexion of the National Assembly.
True, they were helped by the first-past-the-post system
inherited from the mother of parliaments; but Thatcher and
Blair had both benefited from this without too many
complaints. The MMA also emerged as the largest political
force at provincial level in the North West Frontier, and a
dominant influence in Baluchistan: the provincial
Governments in
Peshawar
and Quetta are currently presided over by Islamist Chief
Ministers.
Power brokers acting on Musharraf’s behalf finally managed
to confect a federal coalition that would exclude the MMA. A
block of PPP members was detached from the parent
organization with the inducement of senior cabinet posts. A
Baluch landlord and hockey enthusiast, Mir Zafarullah Khan
Jamali, who had been responsible for the brutal repression
of peasants in 1977—ten were killed in clashes with the
police—was anointed as Musharraf’s new Prime Minister. Two
decades before, Jamali had slaved to achieve the same
position under General Zia, but the latter was not keen on
hockey and preferred to employ the cricket-loving Nawaz
Sharif as his factotum. Given that 70 per cent of
Musharraf’s new Cabinet, including Jamali, had featured
prominently on General Amjad’s list of corrupt politicians,
the widespread public cynicism was hardly a surprise. Far
from regenerating democracy, the khaki election has bared
the sordid reality of Pakistani politics; a large majority
feels both disenfranchised and alienated from those who
govern on its behalf.
The election campaign itself had been largely lacklustre, if
not totally apolitical. The mainstream parties had no
differences on ideological or policy grounds, either on the
domestic or the international level. The People’s Party had
long abandoned its populism. Benazir Bhutto, wanted in
Pakistan on charges of corruption, attempted to rule from
her base in Dubai via her chosen proxy, Makhdoom Amin Fahim,
a Pir-cum-landlord from Sind. Politician and religious
divine rolled into one, Fahim is hardly a social liberal.
Uniquely, even for
Pakistan,
all his four brothers-in-law are the Koran. [11] Like the
different Muslim Leagues on offer, the PPP was concerned
with power solely as a means to offer patronage and enlarge
its clientele.
Maulana Diesel
The Islamist alliance, for its part, had no disagreements
with the other parties on the IMF prescriptions for the
economy—there is, after all, a neoliberal reading of the
Koran—but campaigned vigorously in defence of Islamic laws
and against the US presence in the region. There was hardly
a day without a newspaper headline highlighting MMA leader
Maulana Fazl ur Rehman’s hostility to the American troops:
‘Fazl Demands Expulsion of US Commandos from Tribal Areas’,
‘West Bent on Initiating Civilizations Clash: Fazl’, ‘Fazl
Says Sovereignty Mortgaged to US’, ‘Fazl Demands Halt to US
Army Operations’, ‘Fazl Urges US Troops Withdrawal’, ‘MMA
Vows to Block Hunt for al-Qaeda’, etc. [12] Much of this was
pure bluster, but it proved helpful electorally. The Maulana
himself admitted that it was not religion that won him new
support, but his foreign-policy stance. In discussions with
Musharraf, he declared his willingness to establish a
coalition with himself as prime minister. When the General
pointed out that his anti-Americanism posed a serious
problem, the cleric is reported to have replied: ‘Don’t
worry about that now. We’ve worked with the Americans in the
past. Make me Prime Minister and I’ll sort everything out.’
The offer was declined.
The MMA is a six-party alliance, with the Jamaat-Ulema-Islam—Party
of Islamic Scholars—and the Jamaat-i-Islami, or Islamist
Party, its two main pillars. Both JUI and JI have been
active for decades, mainly in the frontier regions of the
NWFP and Baluchistan. Traditionally, the JUI considered
itself anti-imperialist and was involved in coalition
governments with radical secular parties during the
seventies, under the leadership of Maulana Mufti Mahmood,
Fazl’s father. It had always been hostile to the JI—regarding
it as an instrument of the US and Saudi Embassies in
Islamabad—and had opposed the military
dictatorships of both Ayub and Zia; Mufti Mahmood had
attended Peace Conferences in both
Moscow
and Beijing. His own death came just a few years before the
collapse of the Communist world, and his son inherited the
party. As a student Fazl had dabbled in poetry, writing
verses in both Pashto and Urdu, and publicly declaring that
the leftist Faiz Ahmed Faiz was his favourite poet. After
his father’s death he continued the old man’s policies,
working closely with Benazir Bhutto’s government in the
mid-nineties. But whereas the farthest old Mufti had gone
was to collect his dollar per diems at international
conferences, the son, as befitted the new times, was more
market-oriented. In return for his active support for Ms
Bhutto he succeeded in procuring a lucrative diesel
franchise, which covered large parts of the country—and,
after the Pak-Taliban victory, most of Afghanistan as well;
it earned him the sobriquet of Maulana Diesel.
The bearded, rotund Diesel soon became a great favourite of
Benazir’s Interior Minister General Naseerullah Babar,
architect of the Taliban triumph in Kabul. Fazl’s political,
ideological and commercial links with the Taliban leadership
always remained strong, enabling him to outflank his local
JI rivals, whose pawn Gulbuddin Hekmatyar—much fêted by
Reagan and Thatcher in the eighties—had been effectively
sidelined by the new student clerics in Kabul. After the US
assault on Afghanistan, the bulk of the Taliban melted into
the hills along the Pakistani border. There many of the
returnees swelled the ranks of the JUI and other Islamist
parties, and the JUI took the lead in organizing mass
rallies against the ‘foreign occupiers’. It was Fazl who
realized that, given the first-past-the-post system, the
Islamists could be wiped out electorally if they remained
divided. The Alliance was his initiative and he was duly
elected its Secretary-General even though, at 49, he is
fifteen years younger than his main coalition rival, Qazi
Hussain Ahmed.
Zia’s orphans
Qazi Hussain’s election as Amir of the Jamaat-i-Islami
marked a generational shift in an organization that had
remained under the control of its founder Maulana Maudoodi
and his deputy, Mian Tufail, since its origin in 1941. [13]
Where the JUI was populist, had support in the villages and
collaborated with the Left, the JI was built on the
Leninist-cadre model. Its recruits were literate and
carefully vetted, most of them students from urban
petty-bourgeois backgrounds. Many had been tested in the
campus struggles of the sixties and seventies. During the
semi-insurrection of 1968–69 that had toppled the Ayub
dictatorship, the Left had dominated the action committees
that led the fight. To support the JI in those days required
a real commitment to the cause. Its motto: religion is our
politics and politics our religion.
Qazi Hussain, a leader of the JI student faction at Islamia
College in Peshawar, spent his formative years in
battles—some of them physical—against the Left. He joined
the parent body in 1970, when the JI’s branch in
East Pakistan
collaborated fully with the Army in its attempt to destroy
the Bengali nation. Their cadres in Dhaka, Chittagong and
Sylhet compiled lists of ‘undesirables’ for military
intelligence, which were then used to eliminate the
opposition. ‘Chairman Mao supports us, not you’, was a taunt
they regularly hurled at the Bengali Left of the time. China
and the US both supported the Pakistan Army’s brutal assault
on its own people, aimed at nullifying the dramatic 1970
election victory by the Bengali-nationalist Awami League.
The Army’s onslaught backfired badly. Bangladesh is the
direct outcome of a military refusal to recognize the will
of the electorate. In the circumstances, the Army’s
self-image as the only institution that holds the country
together is somewhat grotesque.
The JI’s role in the 1971 break up of Pakistan had the
effect of drawing it closer to the intelligence apparatuses
of the rump state. When Zia seized power six years later and
joined the US jihad in Afghanistan, the JI became the main
ideological prop of the military regime. Qazi Hussain
defended the new turn; his skills were noted and he began
his rise through the JI apparatus. A former geography
lecturer, he now abandoned the low-paid chores of the
academy to open a Popular Medical Store in Peshawar’s
Soekarno Square. The shop was not just an informal meeting
place for local JI cadres but a successful commercial
operation, soon to be joined by a Popular Medical Laboratory
and a Popular X-Ray Clinic. [14] It now became clear that he
also aspired to a more popular Jamaat-i-Islami. Hussein knew
that it was not easy for a vanguard party that had always
prided itself on its elite character to re-brand and market
itself in a more accessible style; in politics, as in
business, there is always an element of risk when you decide
to expand. His decision to join the 2002 Islamist alliance
must have been as carefully calculated as the trim of his
pure-white regulation beard (in marked contrast to the
wilder salt-and-pepper variety sported by Maulana Diesel).
A rhetorical shift?
Incapable of serious opposition to either Musharraf or his
Washington backers, the MMA concentrates its fire against
women. It has declared its intention to ban cable-TV
channels and co-education, and to institute the shari‘a in
the provinces under its control. Given the disaster that
befell a more extreme version of this programme in
Afghanistan, this could be mere rhetoric designed to keep
their followers inebriated while embarrassing the occupant
of President’s House. The MMA’s triumph may or may not have
been aided by some independent campaigning from sections of
the ISI but it has undoubtedly put pressure on the regime to
release more of the Islamist militants imprisoned when
Musharraf joined the ‘war on terror’; some of the diehard
Sunni terrorists responsible for appalling atrocities
against minority Shia and Christian communities had already
been freed before the election.
More striking was the MMA’s success, in November 2002, in
dragooning virtually the entire National Assembly—there were
two exceptions—to observe a minute’s silence in memory of
the ‘martyred Aimal Kansi’, whose body had been returned to
Pakistan after his execution in a US Federal penitentiary
for the murder of two CIA officials in Langley, Virginia in
1993. [15] Earlier, some 70,000 people had attended Kansi’s
funeral prayers in
Quetta,
also organized by the MMA. Why did the National Assembly
agree to mourn him? Pakistan has not outlawed capital
punishment, so it could hardly be seen as a liberal protest.
The simple answer is that the MMA’s success has worried its
opponents and they are hoping to defeat the Islamists on
their own ground. Bhutto père made a similar error in the
seventies and paid the price.
Rural intifada
A striking example of the political parties’ unwillingness
to defend even the most elementary needs of the population
can be seen in their reaction to the two-year struggle that
has been waged by tenants working on state farms leased to
the Army. Rarely has an event spotlighted the bankruptcy of
traditional politics in
Pakistan
so vividly. The British colonial administration had first
leased what were then known as ‘Crown lands’ in 1908,
setting up military farms to produce subsidized grain and
dairy products for the British Indian Army. After Partition,
management of the farms—scattered around
Lahore,
Okara, Sahiwal, Khanewal,
Sargodha
and Multan, mainly in the Southern Punjab—passed to the
Ministry of Defence and the provincial government. The Army
controlled 26,274 acres, the remaining 32,000 acres were
leased to the Punjab Seed Corporation. The tenant families
who work the farms are the direct descendants of those first
taken there in 1908. Forty per cent of them are Christians:
mosques and churches function side by side. The religious
parties have failed miserably in these regions and the
peasants have, since the seventies, tended to vote for the
People’s Party. No longer.
The de facto merger of Army and state on virtually every
level has meant that the generals act here as a collective
landlord, the largest in the country, determining the living
conditions of just under a million tenants. The
functionaries of the khaki state regularly bullied and
cheated their tenants: they were denied permission to build
brick homes; the women were molested; and management
approval had to be obtained—and paid for—to get
electrification for the villages or build schools and roads.
Bribery was institutionalized, and the tenants suffered
growing debt burdens. The unconcealed purpose of this
ruthless exploitation was to drive the tenants off the land
so it could be divided into private landholdings for serving
and retired generals and brigadiers. The rationale of the
prospective new owners was that, when the time came, they
would re-employ the evicted tenants as farm-serfs: it would
be better for everyone. The aim of such ‘modernization’—in
Okara and Sargodha as in Rio Grande do Sul—was, of course,
deregulation, privatization and the destruction of tenant
solidarity.
The authorities, khaki and civilian, had been attempting to
loosen the grip of the tenants over the land by offering
short-term contracts and replacing battai—share-cropping
arrangements that allowed tenants to keep half of what they
produce—by cash-rents. Till now, the colonial
administration’s Punjab Tenancy Act of 1887 has safeguarded
their rights: male tenants and their direct descendants who
had cultivated the land for more than two generations had
the right of permanent occupancy. It was illegal to eject
them from the land. Despite the misery inflicted on their
families, the tenants defied all attempts to divide them
along religious lines and remained united in a single body:
the Anjuman-i-Muzaireen
Punjab, or Punjab Tenants Organization, set up in
1996.
In June 2000, without any consultations, the khaki landlords
announced the conversion from a system of shared-produce to
cash-rents. The tenants were outraged. Every evening there
were informal assemblies to discuss the resistance,
involving the entire village—women and children were to play
a leading role in this rural intifada. Angered by the daily
harassment, the tenants refused merely to defend the status
quo and retaliated by demanding complete ownership of the
land that their families had worked for decades. Their
slogan, Malkiyat ya Maut—‘Ownership or Death’—echoed that of
similar struggles in other continents. The first public
protest took place on 7 October 2000: a four-hour sit-in on the lawn in front of the Deputy
Commissioner’s office in Okara—the second most-powerful
post-colonial bureaucrat in the city—by a thousand tenants
protesting against the new scheme. Two days later, the
Deputy Director of the military farms rang the local police
chief and informed him that the tenants were threatening
violence and had, in some villages, prevented the managers
from removing (i.e. pilfering) wood. The Frontier
Constabulary and Elite Force Rangers—their main function to
prevent smuggling over the Indian border—arrived in the
village and began roughing up the tenants. As women and
children saw their fathers, brothers and husbands abused and
kicked, they poured out of their homes to hurl stones at the
police. A number of tenant activists were arrested.
As news of the confrontation spread to neighbouring
villages, the protests began to grow. Attempts by the
authorities to divide or buy off tenants were a failure. In
the spring of 2002 the Rangers opened fire on protesting
tenants: some were killed. Organizers were arrested and
beaten up in full view of their families. Women—Christian
and Muslim—marched to Okara, carrying the wooden bats they
use to beat the clothes as they wash them in the river, and
surrounded the police station. Nothing like this had been
seen before. The Army realized that, short of a massacre,
this could be a protracted struggle. Ironically, the large
presence of Christians excluded a blood-bath; it might annoy
their co-religionist in the White House. On 9 June 2002, a thousand armed police and rangers surrounded the
village of Pirowal. The siege lasted for seven hours, but
the police failed to capture the organizers, despite threats
to burn the entire cotton crop of the village. They had
underestimated the power of peasant solidarity.
In a sharply worded editorial the
Karachi
daily, Dawn, commented on 24 June 2002:
To win back the confidence of the restive and distraught
farmers, the police force sent to harass and terrorize them
should be withdrawn immediately and any ill-conceived notion
of teaching them a ‘lesson’ must be abandoned. Cases should
be registered against government and farm management
officials who ordered the police action that led to deaths .
. . Once these confidence-building measures have been taken,
the government should sit down and negotiate with the
tenants, perhaps through the Punjab Tenants Organization, on
how to grant the ownership rights due to them.
The generals ignored the advice of a newspaper that has
usually been sympathetic to their needs. Instead,
Musharraf’s new status as the trusted ally of the West was
used against the PTO, and its non-violent leaders charged
under the new ‘anti-terrorist’ legislation—just as the real
terrorists, most of whom have, at one time or another, been
on the payroll of the military intelligence services, were
being released. Despite the fact that Pakistan has been a
regular port of call for Western media pundits over the last
year—the New York Times’s Thomas Friedman preening himself
on his intimate knowledge of frontier conditions—none of the
visiting journalists deemed this struggle worthy of
attention. It distracted from the only story they wanted to
tell: fundamentalism. In fact, of course, mullahs are most
effectively marginalized when people see them as irrelevant
to their real needs—as the PTO farmers have shown. During
the campaign of the last two years, church and mosque have
alternated as their meeting places. In a discussion with two
of their leaders—Dr Christopher John, the PTO senior
vice-president, and Younis Iqbal, general secretary—in
Lahore in December 2002, both stressed that religious
divisions had played no part whatsoever in their conflict
with the state. At their meetings, Iqbal said, ‘You couldn’t
tell the Muslims and the Christians apart’.
Heroin economy
The only serious breach in the wall dividing an
English-educated civilian and military elite—with access to
Western universities, medical schools and military
academies—from the rest of the population, illiterate or
semi-literate (largely, but not exclusively, the product of
the madrassahs), has been the one made by the ‘black
economy’. Over the last two decades, the cultivation of
poppy orchards in
Afghanistan
and the NWFP has produced a fine crop of heroin
millionaires. Many are of peasant or urban petty-bourgeois
stock, but their money has funded every political party and
thoroughly penetrated the armed forces: cash, kalashnikovs
and Pajeros—Japanese Range Rovers—have been distributed in
all directions. In return, the humble heroin merchants have
been loaded with honours and public displays of affection.
As good fathers, they made sure their children were properly
educated and became part of the elite. The upward mobility
of this layer has slightly altered the composition of the
property-owning fraction, without changing much else. Money
remains the great leveller in the upper reaches of society,
while the price of urban land has reached astronomical
heights: the price of an apartment in the Defence Colony of
Karachi or the fashionable Parade Ground in
Lahore
does not compare badly with
New York
or Berlin.
During the nineties, heroin had been despatched to Europe
and North America via two routes. The first led along the
Grand Trunk Road from Peshawar down to Karachi and thence in
container ships to Mediterranean ports. The second, policed
by the Russian mafia, went from
Afghanistan
via Central Asia and Russia to the Balkans, and then to the
capitals of the West. The defeat of the Taliban after 9.11
has brought about the virtual collapse of the Pakistani
heroin networks. The Northern Alliance now monopolizes the
trade and it is their old Russian friends who prosper, while
Kosovo has become the main distribution point for most of
the world. [16] The Pakistani economy has only withstood the
blow because of the cash that has smoothed the path of the
American troops.
Since the country’s foundation in 1947, the Pakistan Army
has been the spinal chord of the state apparatus. The
weakness of political institutions as the state emerged from
British rule, the absence of a bourgeoisie and domination by
a rural elite—a parasitical excrescence of the worst
sort—led to an over-reliance on the civilian bureaucracy and
the Army. Since there was no real consent for landlord rule,
force—both direct and indirect—had to be brought into play.
Both institutions had been created by the colonial power,
which formed them in its mold. [17] Whereas the civil
service was soon mired in corruption, the Army held out for
a little longer. The impression was created that, while
individual officers might be susceptible to bribes—they
were, after all, human—the institution itself was clean.
Two long periods of martial law destroyed that image.
General Ayub Khan’s family became extremely wealthy during
his rule from 1958 to 1969, as did some of his
collaborators. And between 1977 and 1989, at least two of
General Zia’s Corps Commanders were centrally involved in
the heroin trade and gun-running. Corruption on a lesser
scale spread through the junior ranks. The failure to crack
down on these practices was hardly accidental. The generals
adopted a materialist approach to the problem, seeing it as
an easy way to preserve the unity of the Army. The loot
could not be shared equally since that might promote
egalitarian tendencies among the colonels and majors; but at
the same time, the subalterns could not be denied some
protection money for their crucial role in ‘protecting’
Pakistan.
Military threat?
Does
Pakistan
really need such a large defence establishment? The khaki
ideologues insist that ever since Partition there has been a
permanent military threat from India. The notion, as I have
argued elsewhere, is ludicrous. [18] On all three occasions
on which the two countries have gone to war—twice over
Kashmir, and Bangladesh—the initiative was taken by
Pakistan.
The Indian Army could have taken
West Pakistan in 1971, but was not allowed to cross
the international border by its political leaders. Today,
with both countries in possession of nuclear delivery
systems, it is obvious that neither the
Kashmir issue nor any other dispute can be resolved through
war. Even an India dominated by Hindu chauvinism and saffron
demagogues is hardly likely to attempt a conquest of
Pakistan. Who would it benefit? It might be different if
Pakistan had limitless quantities of oil lying just beneath
the surface. In fact, there is no rationale behind the fear
of India. It serves only one purpose: the maintenance of the
huge military-industrial complex that sprawls across the
country and sustains khaki hegemony.
In truth, the threat to the Army’s predominance has always
come from its own people. The only time the old
Pakistan
was genuinely united was during the 1969 uprising from below
that saw students and workers in Dhaka and Karachi,
Chittagong and Lahore, topple the dictatorship of Field
Marshal Ayub Khan. The Army never forgave its Bengali
citizens this act of treachery, and embarked on a bloodbath
when they proceeded to elect the leaders of their choice. It
is worth stressing the point, glossed over in so many recent
accounts, that the Army which demands such vast sums to
preserve the state actually provoked its break-up in 1971.
The Army is now the only ruling institution; its domination
of the country is complete. How long can this be sustained?
Till now it has managed to preserve the command structure
inherited from the British: Pakistani generals often boast
of its inviolability when compared to the
Middle East
or Latin America. But a great deal has changed since the
sixties. The officer corps is no longer the exclusive domain
of the landed gentry—a majority of officers come from urban
backgrounds and are subject to the same influences and
pressures as their civilian peers. Privileges have kept them
loyal, but the processes that destroy politicians are
already at work. Whereas in the recent past it was Nawaz
Sharif and his brother, or Benazir Bhutto and her husband,
who demanded kickbacks before making deals, it is now
General Musharraf’s office that sanctions key projects.
Of course, high—even stratospheric—levels of corruption are
no bar to longevity, if a military regime has sufficiently
intimidated its population and enjoys solid enough support
in
Washington,
as the Suharto regime in
Indonesia
testifies. Can Musharraf look forward to this sort of reign?
The fate of his dictatorship is likely to depend on the
interaction of three main forces. First will be the degree
of internal cohesion of the Army itself. Historically, it
has never split—vertically or horizontally—and its
discipline in following a 180-degree turn in policy towards
Afghanistan, whatever the sweeteners that have accompanied
it, has so far been impressive. It is not impossible that
one day some patriotic officer might deliver the country of
its latest tyrant, as Zia was once mysteriously sent on his
way to Gehenna; but for the minute, such an ending appears
improbable. Having weathered the humiliation of its
abandonment of the Taliban, the high command looks capable
of brazening out any further acts of obeisance to orders
from the Pentagon.
What of parliamentary opposition to military rule? Vexing
though the upshot of October’s election, for all its fraud,
proved to be for Musharraf, the parties that dominate the
political landscape in Pakistan offer little hope of
rebellion against him. The cringing opportunism of the
Bhutto and Sharif clans knows few limits. The Islamist front
ensconced in Peshawar and Quetta is noisier, but not more
principled—cash and perquisites quickly stilling most of its
protests. Popular discontent remains massive, but lacks any
effective channels of national expression. It would be good
to think that their performances in office had discredited
the PPP and Sharif’s clique forever, but experience suggests
that should the regime at any point start to crack, there is
little to prevent these phoenixes of sleaze from arising
once more, in the absence of any more progressive
alternatives.
Finally, there is the American overlord itself. The Musharraf
regime cannot aspire to play the same role as regional
satrap that Zia once enjoyed.
Pakistan
has been ousted as imperial instrument in Afghanistan, and
checked from compensating with renewed incursions in
Kashmir. But if Islamabad has been forced into a more
passive posture along its northern borders, its strategic
importance for the
US
has, if anything, increased. For Washington has now made a
huge political investment in the creation of a puppet regime
in Kabul, to be guarded by US troops ‘for years to come’, in
the words of General Tommy Franks—not to speak of its
continuing hunt for Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants.
Pakistan is a vital flank in the pursuit of both objectives,
and its top brass can look forward to the kind of lavish
emoluments, public and private, that the Thai military
received for their decades of collusion with the American
war in Indochina. Still, Washington is pragmatic and knows
that Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif were just as
serviceable agents of its designs in
Kabul
as Zia himself. Should he falter domestically, Musharraf
will be ditched without sentiment by the suzerain. The Pax
Americana can wage war with any number of proxies. It will
take an uprising on the scale of 1969 to shake Pakistan free
of them. |