Sunday, June 03, 2007
Pentagon views military as chief bulwark of âstable Pakistanâ
By Khalid Hasan
WASHINGTON: The Pentagon has enjoyed an intimate partnership with Pakistanâs military since the early 1950s and Washingtonâs political establishment, for almost as long, has held the military to be the chief bulwark of a âstable Pakistanâ, according to a commentary on Pakistan published by the World Socialist website (WSWS), a multilingual Europe-based leftist opinion outlet.
The commentary noted that despite rising criticism against its Pakistan policy, the Bush administration has not just acquiesced to military rule in Pakistan, but lavished praise and âgobs of moneyâ on the Musharraf regime, declaring Pakistan a âmajor non-NATO allyâ of the US, repeatedly hailing the general as a pivotal leader in the war on terror, and proclaiming the various maneuvers he has taken to perpetuate military rule and run roughshod over the countryâs constitution as steps on the road to âfull democracyâ.
Till now, WSWS said, the US media has essentially peddled the administrationâs line. And there has been no chorus of media voices pointing out the incongruity and downright absurdity of the Bush administrationâs claims to have restored democracy in Afghanistan by entrenching military rule in Pakistan.
The commentary pointed out that if sections of the American press have now âdiscoveredâ that Musharraf is a despot, it is because they fear that the general is losing his grip and are anxious about the consequences for US interests and influence in Pakistan, as well as for the USâs larger strategic ambitions in South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East.
WSWS accused the president of having âunleashed murderous violence on the streets of Karachiâ on May 12 and May 13. âMore than 40 people were killed in two days of violence orchestrated by the thugs of the pro-Musharraf MQM in connivance with the authorities of Karachi and Sindh province. This bloodbath has only served to underscore the popular feeling that the Musharraf regime has become intolerable.
The commentary noted that the Bush administration, meanwhile, has remained steadfast in its support for the general-president, issuing not a word of criticism of the Pakistani government in the wake of the violence in Karachi. None of the editorials in three major US newspapers calls for the US to repudiate Musharraf, let alone cut off relations with his government. They merely counsel Washington to broker a deal between the military and the principal bourgeois opposition parties, warning that otherwise a regime hostile to the US may ultimately come to power in Pakistan. In fact, the Bush administration has signalled that it would like Musharraf to reach a deal with Benazir Bhutto. But such a deal has floundered over the division of the prerogatives and spoils of office, and the Bush administration fears that without the iron fist of military rule Pakistan could become embroiled in class and ethnic conflicts menacing to US interests.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\06\03\story_3-6-2007_pg1_7
Pentagon views military as chief bulwark of âstable Pakistanâ
By Khalid Hasan
WASHINGTON: The Pentagon has enjoyed an intimate partnership with Pakistanâs military since the early 1950s and Washingtonâs political establishment, for almost as long, has held the military to be the chief bulwark of a âstable Pakistanâ, according to a commentary on Pakistan published by the World Socialist website (WSWS), a multilingual Europe-based leftist opinion outlet.
The commentary noted that despite rising criticism against its Pakistan policy, the Bush administration has not just acquiesced to military rule in Pakistan, but lavished praise and âgobs of moneyâ on the Musharraf regime, declaring Pakistan a âmajor non-NATO allyâ of the US, repeatedly hailing the general as a pivotal leader in the war on terror, and proclaiming the various maneuvers he has taken to perpetuate military rule and run roughshod over the countryâs constitution as steps on the road to âfull democracyâ.
Till now, WSWS said, the US media has essentially peddled the administrationâs line. And there has been no chorus of media voices pointing out the incongruity and downright absurdity of the Bush administrationâs claims to have restored democracy in Afghanistan by entrenching military rule in Pakistan.
The commentary pointed out that if sections of the American press have now âdiscoveredâ that Musharraf is a despot, it is because they fear that the general is losing his grip and are anxious about the consequences for US interests and influence in Pakistan, as well as for the USâs larger strategic ambitions in South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East.
WSWS accused the president of having âunleashed murderous violence on the streets of Karachiâ on May 12 and May 13. âMore than 40 people were killed in two days of violence orchestrated by the thugs of the pro-Musharraf MQM in connivance with the authorities of Karachi and Sindh province. This bloodbath has only served to underscore the popular feeling that the Musharraf regime has become intolerable.
The commentary noted that the Bush administration, meanwhile, has remained steadfast in its support for the general-president, issuing not a word of criticism of the Pakistani government in the wake of the violence in Karachi. None of the editorials in three major US newspapers calls for the US to repudiate Musharraf, let alone cut off relations with his government. They merely counsel Washington to broker a deal between the military and the principal bourgeois opposition parties, warning that otherwise a regime hostile to the US may ultimately come to power in Pakistan. In fact, the Bush administration has signalled that it would like Musharraf to reach a deal with Benazir Bhutto. But such a deal has floundered over the division of the prerogatives and spoils of office, and the Bush administration fears that without the iron fist of military rule Pakistan could become embroiled in class and ethnic conflicts menacing to US interests.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\06\03\story_3-6-2007_pg1_7