Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Pakistan's Plight
by Tariq Ali A multidimensional charade is taking place in Pakistan, and it is not an edifying sight. Pervez Musharraf has discarded his uniform and is trying to cling to power, whatever the cost.
So far it has been high: the dismissal of the Supreme Court judges and their replacement by stooges; police brutality against a strong lawyers' movement protesting the military assault on the judiciary; and the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, who had returned to Pakistan as part of an ill-judged deal brokered by the Bush Administration and its British acolytes.
Add to this the sad spectacle of supposedly reformist, Western-backed politicians assembling like old family retainers at the feudal home of the slain leader and rubber-stamping her political will: Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, has become stopgap supremo till her 19-year-old son, Bilawal, can replace his late mother as chairperson-for-life.
[Republished at PFP with Agence Global permission.]
The Nation
[from the January 21, 2008 issue]
This farcical succession occurred in a party that was born in
1967 out of the mass struggle of disenfranchised students, workers,
professionals and peasants for democracy and, yes, socialism. That is
why it was named the Pakistan People's Party. Its trajectory
encapsulates the crisis of democratic politics in Pakistan: a party is
publicly expropriated and corrupted by a single faction from an old
family; its members are treated like serfs; its weak-kneed leaders told
to either accept their new overlords or find another vehicle for their
ambitions. Where can they go?
The PPP's major rival, the
Pakistan Muslim League, is hardly better. It is in the grip of the
Sharif brothers. Patronized by the military and the state, they became
very rich, which helped them to maintain their party and support. After
Nawaz Sharif fell out with Musharraf and was toppled in the 1999 coup,
he sought the protection of the Saudi royal family. Sporting Wahhabi
headgear, he returned home in November with their support. It's bad
enough having semipermanent military rule, but when the alternatives
are deeply flawed booty politicians, what hope is there for this
benighted land?
The roots of the problem go back to soon after
the founding of the state, when the military-bureaucratic leaders
decided at an early stage (1950) to become a US satrapy: the Dulles
brothers saw to it that the new ally was locked into a network of cold
war alliances. Henceforth, US global priorities determined Pakistan's
foreign and domestic policies. Whenever there was the threat of a
democratic victory by parties pledging to withdraw Pakistan from US
security arrangements, Foggy Bottom would appeal directly to the
Pakistani army. The coups d'état of 1958 and 1977 were greenlighted by
Washington, with disastrous results. Then there was the trial and
execution--privately approved by Washington--of democratically elected
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, Benazir's father, by dictator Muhammad Zia ul-Haq;
the creation of local state-backed jihadi groups to "liberate"
Afghanistan from the Soviets; and the brutalization of the country's
political culture with public floggings and hangings of criminals as
well as activists.
The ultimate consequences of the
anti-Soviet jihad were America's turning a blind eye as General Zia
hurriedly nuclearized the country, the attacks of 9/11 and the NATO
occupation of Afghanistan, with the ensuing instability on Pakistan's
northwest frontier. The post-cold war embargo designed to punish
Pakistan for its possession of nuclear weapons proved ineffective, and
all family tiffs were happily forgotten as the "war on terror"
commenced. The balance sheet is dismal.
The instability in the
border provinces is a direct result of the NATO occupation and war in
Afghanistan, which has created a crisis of conscience inside the army.
There is much unhappiness at being paid to kill fellow Muslims in the
tribal areas that border Afghanistan. The arrogant and humiliating
behavior of NATO soldiers has hardly helped matters in either country,
and sending US troops to train the Pakistani military in
counterinsurgency can only further inflame passions. Long-term
stability in Afghanistan requires a regional agreement involving India,
Russia, Iran and Pakistan and the withdrawal of all NATO troops.
As
for Musharraf, he has failed as an effective US point man in Pakistan.
The elections, now delayed until February 18, are likely to be fixed
and will thus lack legitimacy. The general's failure to protect Benazir
Bhutto has not gone down well in Washington. When Hillary Clinton and
Joseph Biden cast doubt on the government's explanation for her
killing, it's a sure sign that he could be heading for the dustbin.
There
is a Pakistani solution to the current impasse: Musharraf's replacement
by a less contentious figure, an all-party government to prepare for
free elections, removal of all curbs on the media and reinstatement of
the sacked Supreme Court judges so they can investigate Benazir
Bhutto's murder without fear or favor. With the slow death of the PPP,
the country also needs a genuine, radical democratic party that can
respond to the social needs of the underprivileged majority and the
expanding demands of civil society.
For its part, Washington
should accept a self-denying ordinance: it should stop treating the
Pakistani army as contract killers on a turbulent Afghan frontier, and
it should refrain from encouraging military rule. This was never a
panacea for the country's ills, and never can be. And Washington should
encourage regional unity to solve political problems without resorting
to force. Were it to do so, pigs would fly. Pakistan's dark night is
far from over.