It was not his decision that lead to the deaths of 50,000 Pakistanis, rather the war in Afghanistan. Lets understand the basic premise for the war that is being waged by the TTP against our people. The TTP would have targeted civilians or Musharraf, dictator or elected government because they are diametrically opposed to anything that differs from their point of view. Pakistan could not stop the American invasion, once the invasion happened, people from Pakistan started supporting the resistance. Now any government in Pakistan would have had to respond to this because the US action was given cover by the UN and even if a democratically elected government had made this choice, the TTP would have hit us as they continue to do so disregarding an existing democratically elected government's mandate.
Lets keep the internal NRO issue out of this because that is one of domestic politics.
The death of 50,000 Pakistanis is also a result of the extremism that has been slowly but surely building up in Pakistan and we are essentially in the same situation as Egypt and Algeria in the early 90s. We are coming to a head with these elements and no amount of ***** footing around these chaps will let you get off without getting our citizens killed.
Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the so called champion of the TTP, himself will become a target of this TTP menace so this issue is not one of a single man's making. Our religious extremists are out and about to dominate and they will pick a fight with you whether you are a secular, sufi, ahle-hadith, shia or what not. Its assimilation and if not, then its suicide bombings to weaken your resolve.
Again, that premise that the WoT would have happened anyway is acceptable. But to theorize that no matter what , it would have gone in exactly the same pattern seems far fetched. After all, it means giving guarantees that ALL other stakeholders in the WoT would have continued to do exactly what they did and NO more and NO less.
The TTP did not exist as the cohesive unit in the WoT, and even if they did and joining the WoT was inevitable. Then the actions taken up in the months immediately following the WoT held the key for reducing the rise and spread of extremism within Pakistan.
To say that Musharraf took the only or best decisions within those times is to imply that regardless of countless studies and evaluations by commentators from diverse fields all over the world(past and present alike) on how decisions should/could have been made that would have improved the outcome, those lessons are irrelevant today.
Then the presumption becomes that Musharraf took the best decisions(since he was the only one there and only one with authority) due to the hand of destiny. And given the Choice to go back, he would still make the same decisions. That he is infact capable of no better.
In that case(considering that he took those decisions under those conditions then), we can hypothesize his decisions now as well.
such as
He improved the economy through promotion of consumerism by handing it over to seasoned technocrats, he may do the same.
or
He compromised on principles with corrupt politicians then, he may do so now.
or
He refused to cede in the ego to another egoistic man in the Chief Justice, he may do the same again.
I believe the question lies then in how much he has learnt from his mistakes, and how much of his arrogance still lives on.
To brand him as the best then, when compared to say the unknown in IK is unfair. Because he has a track record we can predict and know where he will make crucial mistakes and where he may be successful.
In essence, to support Musharraf is to support the known lesser devil than the unknown whatever.
But in my case, I have a problem with the very class known as "devils".