Issue No 66, Nov 9-15, 2003 | ISSN:1684-2057 | satribune.com


Opinion

 

How Musharraf Has Divided the Military in Pakistan?

By Tarique Niazi

SINCE THE DAWN of Pakistan, its military has never fired off missives of protest to opposition leaders whom each government branded as “enemies of Pakistan.” Fifty five years after, the restive rank and file of Pakistan Army, disgusted by their “warlord,” Gen. Pervez Musharraf, took a deep breath and decided to cross that taboo.

This year they began a letter-writing campaign, enlisting the support of the country’s largest-ever movement for democracy, the Alliance for Restoration of Democracy (ARD), to rid the country of Gen. Musharraf. The letter-writers made two-fold demands: First, a thorough probe should be conducted into the 1999 Kargil war between Pakistan and India, whose ultimate outcome was five more years in power for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of India and its fired prime minister, AB Vajpayee; while Pakistan Army was paraded around the world as a “bunch of rogues,” and Pakistan itself was since condemned to live under dictatorship.

Second, the cabal of army generals who committed the lethal violation of the Constitution of Pakistan should be unmasked by an investigation into the October 12, 1999 coup.

Interestingly, the letter-writers did not address the democratic opposition as “opposition.” They instead addressed it with the honorific of “Qaumi Qiadat” (National Leadership), which is represented by Prime Ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, and their respective parties – Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and Pakistan Muslim League (PML).

These leaders and their parties present a sharp contrast to Gen. Musharraf’s cabinet of water-carriers, dressed up as ministers and prime minister to front his military dictatorship. None of his cabinet members, who are slave to their personal and parochial interests, has any stake in Pakistan.

Over the past four years, Gen. Musharraf has systematically undertaken the destruction of national politics and national leadership by promoting personalism and parochialism all across the country. As a result, “Pakistan” is today left for only two parties to own it: “Pakistan” People’s Party (PPP) and “Pakistan” Muslim League (PML). There is no other mentionable political outfit in any of the country’s four provinces to prefix or suffix the word “Pakistan” to its name. Not an unremarkable feat just in four years!

This rapid decline in national integration has raised the red flags for the military that turned to the national leadership to help reverse it. The letter-writers used Pakistan Army’s stationery, embossed with the General Headquarters’ (GHQ) monogram, for their letters to lend due authenticity to their contents.

Having received these letters for months, it finally fell to the bravest of the brave Javed Hashmi, who presides over the ARD, to make these letters and their contents public. As soon as he did that, Gen. Musharraf let loose his hounds to have him kidnapped on October 29 from his official residence in Islamabad. He had since been kept incommunicado.

Mr. Hashmi’s guilt is not yet firm in the mind of his captors. Now it is sedition; now it is treason. Sedition implies to “divide the military” (against Gen. Musharraf!); while treason means to bring physical harm to Pakistan. Does “division in the military” make news? I would suspect the patriotism of the military if it is not divided against its abuser-in-chief, Gen. Musharraf, and his treacherous ways to build himself up and build Pakistan down. How could not the military divide against him when he used its raw force to dismantle one institution of the country after another to keep him in power? Bureaucracy. Constitution. Judiciary. Police. Parliament. And now military.

In January 2001 he had the Chief Justice of Pakistan house-arrested? Then, he went on to fire five of his brother judges on the bench, who were suspected of standing up to him for defense of the Constitution. Undeterred still, he again shouldered himself onto the military to invent the farce of April 2002 referendum to elect himself president? He kick started his fraudulent election campaign in military uniform (wearing a look of clown) with his corps commanders in attendance (no past military dictator in Pakistan went that far in his perverse ambitions to prostitute the military for political gains).

All across the country, his rallies were swelled with troops bused in from nearby military encampments. In August 2002, he disemboweled the Constitution with a knife of 29 self-serving amendments, a.k.a., Legal Framework Order (LFO). Yet he stopped the members of the superior judiciary from pledging allegiance to Pakistan and its constitution. Instead, he bribed his way to the judges with a three-year extension in their service on the bench in flagrant violation of the constitution.

He did not limit bribery to the judiciary alone, however; he extended it to the military also. He used bribe and corruption as the glue to firm up what he calls the “unity of command” (read: Pakistan Army). Tens of thousands of military personnel were bought off with lucrative civilian sector employment to quieten down the rumblings in their ranks.

Until December 2001, as many as 20,000 military personnel were posted all across Pakistan to serve as the eyes and ears of Gen. Musharraf’s dictatorship by “monitoring” civil bureaucrats in their respective district headquarters. According to press reports in Pakistan, many of the “monitors” minted millions from their earful and eye-filling work. They would have been making hay to this day, had India not mobilized in December 2001 hundreds of thousands of its troops to amass along the Line of Control (LOC) in Kashmir.

The 20,000 monitors were then called up to do what they were paid for: Defend Pakistan. Gen. Musharraf’s attempts to corrupt the military had since stirred deep resentment that seeped down to the ranks. It was no coincidence that he was target of an assassination plot thought up and executed exclusively by non-commissioned officers (NCOs), a first-ever example of its kind in the military history of Pakistan!

It doesn’t mean that general officers (brigadiers and above) were hesitant in venting their grumbles and growls at the daily abuse of their institution by a power-mad dictator. They were repulsed, too, and their repulsion was forcefully expressed by the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Gen. Abdul Aziz, who publicly rebuffed Gen. Musharraf for his insistence to double as Army chief and president. Within days, Gen. Musharraf had to face even worse humiliation at the hands of his corps commanders who ruthlessly grilled him for his “patriotic failings.”

He emerged so deeply scarred from that grilling that he let out a public scream of self-pity: “I shall be traitor to Pakistan if I compromise Pakistan’s interests.” Traitor! Exactly, it was the “T” word with which his commanders shot him in their supersecret sessions held in the depths of their GHQ.

The rank and file of the military has since been kept solidly behind Gen. Musharraf by the force of media-manufactured fibs: That the nation has unwavering faith in their super patriotism, and is willing to swallow “anything in uniform” (including Gen. Musharraf). The bubble of these fibs popped up on three occasions to bare the contrary ugly reality: First, when 20,000 military monitors left their civilian posts to face down Indian troops in December 2001, their civilian victims were widely reported in Pakistan to have breathed a collective sigh of relief with their heartfelt thanks reserved for the terrorists that shot up Indian Parliament and enraged enough India’s prime minister to cast the attack into an “Indian 9/11” (as if it was a badge of honor to show off!).

Second, the farce of April 2002 referendum disgusted the nation so much that the “giants” of the Pakistani press stood on the shoulders of the “gnats” of Pakistani politics to anticipate a “war” between Pakistan and India as “the only way out of Gen. Musharraf’s dictatorship.” If these signals were garbled for the military to read, a police constable’s daring in Lahore to flag a general officer’s car for its tinted windows was too unmistakable a sign of the nation’s loss of faith in the military to miss. The incident painfully showed that Pakistan has run out of patience with its military dictator. Popular outrage impaled the military as an institution across the windscreen of the errant general’s car and in the blood-soaked face of the constable, who was beaten to the pulp. The groundswell of mass support for the constable that flooded from every nook and corner of Pakistan was, however, a “false positive:” It was the pretend hurrah for the constable that masked the tearful outrage against every member of the armed forces.

The masses’ resentment against the military, as evidenced in the above incidents, broke through the lies spun by the media, and had every patriotic soldier thinking hard and long. The letter-writers who have kept their identity secret are the newly awakened members of the armed forces. Mr. Hashmi took upon himself to warn the nation of their concerns and the divisions that run along such concerns. If ignored, these concerns can set off the bloodiest-ever civil war. The guilty party here is not the one who is warning the nation of the danger of divisions in the military, or the divisions themselves, but the Divider-in-Chief – Gen. Musharraf, whose day in court is not far off, if he had not fled the country.

The second charge against Javed Hashmi is that of treason! Gen. Musharraf had all his front men badmouthed Mr Hashmi for “playing into the hands of RAW” (Indian military’s Research and Analysis Wing). I do not suspect Gen. Musharraf’s or his cronies’ “intentions” on Pakistan. It is their “actions” that make me suspect their patriotism. If Gen. Musharraf continues down the path he has followed for the past four years, Pakistan will not need India or RAW to finish it.

Gen. Musharraf already has done to Pakistan what India could not have done in the past 55 years. The only reason for Pakistan to continue to exist is Mr. Hashmi and the millions of its daughters and sons like Mr. Hashmi. A hundred million Musharrafs (that will be 20 billion pounds of garbage) are not worth the ground that Mr Hashmi walks. He is a stake in the heart of the dictator and his dictatorship, which makes him so “dangerous.” But when it comes to patriotism, Mr. Hashmi is the North Star of it to which every member of the armed forces and every citizen of Pakistan looks to soak up its light. Patriotism is defined by his courage and a tale of his endless sacrifices for Pakistan. The difference between Mr Hashmi and Gen. Musharraf is that Mr Hashmi bled for Pakistan, while Gen. Musharraf bled Pakistan for himself.

This contrast brings me to my long overdue advice to the democratic opposition. First, stop second-guessing the divisions in the military. They are real, and do something about them before they begin to be acted out in blood (i.e., get rid of Gen. Musharraf). Second, keep your outrage directed at the Divider-in-Chief, Gen. Musharraf who, like autotroph, is now cutting into the bough he is nesting on – military.

Do not play into his hands by quibbling over Hudood Ordinance, which could be settled after Pakistan is rid of dictatorship, the supremacy of the constitution is upheld, and a democratically elected government is put in place. Third, craft a unified demand for Gen. Musharraf to step down in a given timeline, and call for free and fair elections under a caretaker government. Fourth, if he refuses to step down, resign from national and provincial legislatures and give a nation-wide call to overthrow the dictator and his dictatorship. Anything less than that will be a lease on life for Gen. Musharraf and death knell for the democratic opposition.

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