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Washington disappointed by new face of Pak democracy

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Washington disappointed by new face of Pak democracy

Friday, August 01, 2008
By Shaheen Sehbai
WASHINGTON: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani came to Washington and has returned to Islamabad but the decision makers of DC are still confused what to make out of his unofficial ‘official’ visit.

The eagerness at every level to meet and see him was to assess and evaluate the man in terms of his usefulness as a replacement to their long-trusted but fading friend, Gen Pervez Musharraf, and the plain fact is that Washington is disappointed and has decided not to take him seriously.

It is so because the man who represented democracy in Pakistan fell short on many scores. Not that the official Washington did not know but the real Washington needed to have a firsthand look at the man they were being asked to deal with after Gen Musharraf.

This real Washington comprises scores of think tanks, lobbyists, Congressmen, retired diplomats, bureaucrats, generals and media gurus. They did not go home with the perception and confidence that Gilani was the right man who they could instantly start dealing with, trust and depend on.

What they found lacking was the depth of understanding and vision in dealing with complex international and security issues, articulation to comprehend and project Pakistani policies in a clear and candid way, more so on public places than in closed door meetings. They did not find the will and the capacity in the prime minister to grasp the importance of issues, take control of matters and make decisions which he could sustain.

The one issue which damaged Gilani’s credibility as a potentially serious leader and policy-maker was the brutally botched up ISI fiasco. Whoever did this to Gilani actually torpedoed his US visit, which turned into a non-starter the moment the ISI notification was withdrawn. It was beyond Gilani to stand by his order for more than a few hours and Washingtonians got the message that they were dealing with a non-entity and should not take him seriously.

On top of this image, the prime minister personally did not do anything to help himself. Whenever Gilani read from a written script, he was coherent, articulate and looked like a man who knew what he was talking about. But the moment the script was over and he had to answer questions, the level of discourse and understanding came crashing down to earth. The contrast was so stark and embarrassing it discounted both the images Gilani presented and made him look like artificial and someone who was being remote-controlled.

Washington was not ready for such a visit and whoever forced it on Gilani did a great disservice to the man, to the party he represents and to Pakistan’s infant democracy. At a time of great internal political, administrative, security, economic and social turmoil, packing him off to Washington as a showpiece, so early in office, could at best be described as a deep conspiracy of sorts.

The prime minister was not ready for the visit as he has yet to learn the basics of the governance, starting with speaking before the TV prompter to the nation, to determining how to handle big or small issues, how to consolidate power and how to demonstrate it. He is only a beginner.

But his insincere advisers, more interested in their own self-projection, pushed him to fly across the Atlantic for performing the impossible task of exposing himself to the most sophisticated, important and hawk-eyed audience of decision makers to be found anywhere in the world.

I would not blame Mr Gilani as he was not expected to know what he was getting into but his leader Asif Ali Zardari certainly had a very clear idea of what could happen and more importantly Ambassador Husain Haqqani should have been the one to veto the visit at this particular time, knowing both Mr Gilani and Washington inside out.

The PM was subjected to a rigorous schedule, at one time nine important appointments in a day, including two or more major speeches, several critical meetings, media appearances and mostly listening to the US officials full of brutally frank and insulting masterly advice coupled with incriminating evidence of rogue behaviour of Pakistani establishment and agencies.

This was a menu full of vulgarities for a man who was not even in charge of his own office, was surrounded by appointees who received orders from other power centres and reported the results somewhere else. He was mercilessly thrown to the wolves and made into a punching bag in Washington, but, given his Seraiki nature, he did not even complain and took the punches smilingly.

A serious analysis should expose the damage done to Mr Gilani and his party, no matter how high the pedestal on which our ambassador and other diplomats may stand to claim credits, which they are.

The ‘joint statement’ released after the visit was prepared by Husain Haqqani even before the prime minister had touched down on the Andrews Air Force base near Washington. Haqqani was in constant contact with the White House and the State Department and the language of the statement, which was not a ‘Joint Communique’ released after official visits, had been carefully drafted so that it gave away nothing while discussing everything that the two countries needed to talk about.

Even on urgent issues decisions were put into abeyance. Pakistan had purchased American Boeing 777 aircraft at a hugely inflated price because PIA wanted direct non-stop flights from Pakistan to the US cities but this basic right was denied during Musharraf’s days, who never protested. The announcement that the flights were to be resumed was to be made in the PM’s visit but even this was deferred.

The joint statement buried this issue in the following diplomatic words: “The US and Pakistan will work together toward a goal of establishing direct non-stop flights between the two countries before the end of 2008, expanding people-to-people ties and improving the investment climate to the benefit of the people of both countries.” Instead of announcing the flights, the two sides will now “work together toward a goal of establishing direct non-stop flights before end of 2008.” This practically means the issue is dead for the time being.

Likewise on the much publicised ROZs in FATA, the latest pronouncement is that: “The two leaders renewed a joint commitment to pursue steps to establish Reconstruction Opportunity Zones that will expand trade opportunities in parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan.” In simple words, the previous commitment was not enough and the needed steps are nowhere in sight.

The 1,200 plus words of the joint statement is all verbosity and diplomatese, highly sounding phrases meaning nothing, such as: “The president and the prime minister reaffirmed their commitment to the long-term strategic partnership between the US and Pakistan, which was based on shared values and held immense potential for the enduring peace, security, stability, freedom, and prosperity of Pakistan and of the region.” Some smart diplomat thinks this sentence had solved all the existing problems between the two countries, notwithstanding the merciless bombings and missile strikes by US drones inside Pakistan while these high sounding words were being written in Washington.

The only dollar figures given in the joint statement refer to $115 million in food security assistance of which only $42.5 million will be available in the next nine months. So while Mr Husain Haqqani has extorted a solid commitment of $42 million, the price paid is that food has also become a security issue for Pakistan and now Pakistan and the US will also have a ‘strategic dialogue’ on agricultural cooperation.

The much-touted $15 billion aid for next 10 years is not mentioned in the joint statement but it does say that the two leaders welcomed recent efforts in the US Congress to extend the US assistance commitment to Pakistan and the president will continue to work with Congress to ensure the continued US support to Pakistan over the long-term. Who will benefit from this long-term aid is for everyone to guess as Mr Bush would certainly not be there and whether Mr Gilani can claim to be there is a moot question.

In the critical defence cooperation area, now we have another subject added to the already dreaded ‘war on terror’. The joint statement says cooperation will be expanded between the US and the Frontier Corps and other Pakistani security forces on the front lines in the ‘fight against violent extremism’, which will be rooted out from the Pak-Afghan border areas, including the NWFP, FATA and Balochistan.’ This means a large number of new battlefronts in every sensitive part of Pakistan are about to be opened.

The only mention of late Benazir Bhutto, who must be turning in her grave at the Gilani visit and how Haqqani handled it, was: “This is not Charlie Wilson’s war, it is Benazir’s war.” What the PM meant by it was never explained but an old Pakistan watcher and expert, Steve Cohen, aptly summed up Gilani’s visit in these words: “This is the best government we could ever hope to get in Pakistan. I just don’t know if it’s enough.”
 
Friday, August 01, 2008
Urges Washington for bilateral efforts to do more; terms US visit a success
By Muhammad Saleh Zaafir
ON BOARD PM SPECIAL PLANE:
Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that all the issues with PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif would be sorted out, keeping in view the Charter of Democracy (CoD) which the latter had inked with late Benazir Bhutto in London.

He said that the issue of judges would be resolved by the leaders of the ruling coalition partners. “We will certainly find some solution to the issue,” he said. Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said this while talking to newsmen onboard his special plane while returning home from his three-day US visit on Thursday.

He said that he had made it clear to the US that instead of pressing Pakistan to do more, it was better that both the US and Pakistan should do more in the war against militancy and extremism.

“We have made it clear to the United States that terrorism is a common problem and instead of entering into blame games, we must sort it out with unified efforts. Asking us to do more is no solution, but we both should do more,” Gilani said.

The prime minister, who was upbeat about his three-day official visit to the United States, said that the United States had assured its support for the sovereignty of Pakistan unequivocally. Pakistan did agitate the question with regard to its sovereignty during the talks in Washington. He said that he had clarified to the US leadership that the Pakistan Army was highly professional and was playing its role in the best possible manner to maintain peace and it was fully supporting the democratic dispensation. “The Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) is fighting against terrorism the way no other organisation is fighting. The Americans had long experience of working with them and they know each other’s working well,” he said.

To a question, Prime Minister Gilani said that the confusion pertained to the ISI and the Intelligence Bureau (IB) was uncalled for since both the outfits were working under the prime minister. “If I opt to keep the Interior Ministry portfolio with me, the two organisations are supposed to report to me and their control cannot be taken away from the chief executive of the country by the head of the ministry,” he remarked.

The prime minister was of the view that the enemies of Pakistan were spreading such rumours to create misunderstandings. The government was fully alive to such things and the enemies of the country would have to bite the dust.

To a question about his meetings with various leaders during his stay in Washington including presidential aspirants of the two major parties, Barrack Obama and John McCain, the prime minister said that the two major parties had expressed their understanding about Pakistan’s problems and assured their unflinching support for Pakistan and its democracy.

Referring to his meetings with economic experts and businessmen of the United States, Gilani said that the World Bank and other financial institutions were working on a formula to provide financial help to Pakistan, so that it could come out of the current economic crunch. He was hopeful that Pakistan would soon overcome its economic difficulties and the economic situation would improve considerably.

The prime minister continued to discuss different subjects on national interest and international importance with the media for more than an hour candidly. Federal Information and Broadcasting Minister Sherry Rehman, Adviser on Interior Rehman Malik and his press secretary Zahid Basheer were also present on the occasion.

Prime Minister Gilani revealed that he did not seek the visit to the United States and the invitation and the dates came from the US president just like in the case of Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz. The leaders of both the countries invited him without a request from Islamabad.

He said that Pakistan had asked the United States that it should focus more on social development while providing fiscal assistance along with the aid being provided for defence purposes, he said.

“Pakistan believes that its friends will never see it facing economic or any other crisis. Pakistan is in dire need of financial support and China, the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, some friends in the Gulf and others are providing help in this regard,” he maintained.

He was cheerful about the goodwill shown by the US elected houses towards him and his government and said that the members of the US Congress played an important role in supporting the restoration of democracy in Pakistan. The US Senate had demonstrated it by adopting bipartisan approach on the financial assistance of $15 billion for Pakistan spread over 10 years. The US institutions respected Pakistan’s democratic institutions, the prime minister said.

Turning to national politics, Prime Minister Gilani said that the opponents of the present government, smelling the success of the government in dealing with the people’s problems, had accelerated their onslaught. “We have inherited the problems and now we are tackling each of them one-by-one. The government has come into power for five years and nobody should try to destabilise it under different pretexts. We are determined to complete our tenure to serve the people,” he said.

He announced that the federal cabinet would be expanded on his return from Colombo next week and the ministries allotted to the PML-N would not be touched instead ministers of state would be appointed in respective ministries. The PML-N has assured the PPP to take part in the election of different standing committees of the National Assembly. The election would take place shortly and heavyweights would be brought on the top of the committees. The PML-N ministers would come back to their respective ministries once the judges’ issue was resolved, a confident Gilani said.

Prime Minister Gilani said that his government would provide subsidiary to the agriculture sector and the poorest. The subsidiary given to agriculture would definitely help the poor, he said.

The prime minister announced that the relief package for the poor classes would be announced towards the end of the next month, including Benazir Bhutto food support programme, which would be given for two months in advance in first installment in the wake of the Ramadan in the following month.

Prime Minister Gilani listed a long list of achievements of his government. He said democracy would strengthen with each passing day as the government believed in operating through parliament. “The decisions taken through parliament always command tremendous respect all over,” the prime minister added.
 
Friday, August 01, 2008
By Asim Yasin
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League (PML-Q) has described Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani's visit to the United States as total failure and demanded that the PPP-led coalition should stop ignoring or bypassing parliament on matters of national importance.

PML-Q Secretary-General Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed, while issuing a fact sheet on the prime minister's visit to the United States during a press conference here on Thursday, demanded that on return, the prime minister should take parliament into confidence regarding his Washington visit.

PML-Q Information Secretary Senator Tariq Azeem was also present on the occasion. "The prime minister's visit to the United State was the most mismanaged and poorly-organised foreign tour of a Pakistani prime minister marked by lack of coordination between information and foreign ministries reinforced by administrative incompetence at every step," he said.

Mushahid Hussain Sayed further said the poor management during the prime minister's visit had embarrassed everyone and it seemed that ineptitude had become the hallmark of the PPP regime, recently evidenced from the fiasco over the prime minister's address to the nation on July 20.

Senator Mushahid Hussain, who is also the chairman of the Senate's Foreign Relations Committee, said the fact that the prime minister chose to go to the United States without a mandate from parliament on the crucial issue of counterterrorism had also weakened him. He further said that the notification on the ISI overshadowed the prime minister's visit to the United States.

"Moreover, on the day the prime minister arrived in Washington, the coalition forces' missile attack left six Pakistanis dead." Mushahid regretted that despite a clear violation by the coalition forces of Pakistan's territory, the prime minister did not take up the matter with the US President George W Bush as no one including any minister or the prime minister had moral courage to condemn the US strikes in Pakistan territory.

Senator Mushahid said the PPP-regime had an apologetic and defensive attitude on handling relations with the United States. "All they do is repeating American allegations without rebutting them," he added.
 
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