South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no.275

08. 07. 2001

  

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A SKEPTIC'S VIEW OF MUSHARRAF

 by B.Raman

Before Kargil, I had done a piece on Gen.Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's Chief Executive and President, in which I had mentioned that he had never done a training course in the US.

A retired US military officer contacted me to say that Musharraf had, in fact, done a secret commando course with the Green Berets at Fort Bragg and that he had been one of the General's instructors.

In reply to a question, he said: "Musharraf is intelligent, but Zia-ul-Haq was astute".

When I asked him to explain, he replied: "Astuteness is the ability to apply intelligence in practice.  If one took Zia and Musharraf to a cliff and asked them to jump down, Zia would have asked: "Why the hell should I?" But, Musharraf would have jumped, broken his bones and then only asked himself: "Why the hell did I?"

That's what he did in the Kargil heights.  He found them unguarded and inviting; and had them occupied by his troops and the jihadis without carefully thinking about the likely consequences.

Only when the Indian Army fought back ferociously and world opinion came down on Pakistan like a ton of bricks did he come to his senses belatedly.

The commando in him is always to the fore.  Arts of dissimulation, subterfuge, deception and surprise are the qualities ingrained in a commando during the training.  No other military officer in Pakistan uses these qualities more effectively than Musharraf.

Even after taking over as the President on June 20, he has been appearing in his uniform, prominently displaying his badge as a commando, during his meetings with political leaders and newspaper editors on the forthcoming summit.  He believes that in Pakistan the uniform evokes more fear, respect and obedience than the sherwani.  The uniform and the commando badge give him a feeling of security and superiority.

Musharraf is not without good qualities.  He is a charmer and public performer par excellence.  Look at the way he has been everywhere in our media ever since he seized power.  In South India, more people know about Musharraf than they do about some of our own former Prime Ministers.

He is accessible to his colleagues and staff; a good listener who rarely gets irritated.

He is a workaholic.  No other military dictator of Pakistan was as hard-working as Musharraf is.

Despite these qualities, large sections of the people in Pakistan look upon him as untrustworthy.  Not without reason.

After taking over as the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) in October, 1998, he said: "The Army has no place in politics".  Today he says: "There cannot be politics without the army."

After overthrowing Mr.Nawaz Sharif and taking over as the Chief Executive in October, 1999, he told his people:" You would not see uniform except mine".  Today, uniform is everywhere---in the Collectorates, the offices of the Police Superintendents, the provincial and federal secretariats, even in the Foreign Office and the Irrigation Ministry.

After the Supreme Court judgement of last year validating his take-over, he promised genuine democracy by October 2002.  Today, he says that democracy cannot be genuine unless he be at the head.  That too for five years.

His track record as Chief Executive has been poor.  The economic mess is messier.  At least, last year, he could blame Nawaz and the politicians.  Today, he blames Allah and the drought.

Sectarian violence is on the increase.  Karachi is again hotting up with sections of the Sindhis and the Mohajirs joining hands for the first time against Islamabad.  Balochistan's night skies are like Diwali night skies in India, with the Mullahs and their proteges firing rockets at each other during sectarian quarrels.

The Chief Executive of any private firm, with such a record, would have been sacked by now, but Musharraf has promoted himself.

Even with us, how vehemently he denies without batting an eye lid that the jihadis operating in Kashmir are based in Pakistan, though the entire world knows about it.

During the Kargil conflict, Lt.Gen.Mohammed Aziz, then Chief of the General Staff, told Musharraf, who was in Beijing, over phone: "The scruff of their (jihadis') neck is in our hands"

It will be unwise to totally trust such a person unless he proves by his actions that he is trustworthy.

Pathological? Probably I am.  But, it is better to be proved wrong in one's distrust than in one's trust.

In Pakistan, the dividing line between wishful-thinking and objective assessment is very thin.  Strategic miscalculations are more the rule than the exception.

Look at the way they have let themselves be caught in the Afghan blackhole and yet keep thinking they have achieved the long elusive strategic depth.

Look at their miscalculation in Kargil that international opinion would intervene to the detriment of India before it could recover its lost territory.

Look at the way they are using the jihadi hordes without realising that State-sponsored terrorism could turn out to be a boomerang, hurting the wielder more than the target.

The pre-summit debate in Pakistan suggests similar wishful thinking and miscalculation--that there is pressure on our Prime Minister from a battle-fatigued Army eager for a negotiated solution; that our Prime Minister is now looking for an honourable exit�. etc.

These misperceptions need to be countered effectively.  Similarly, one should not give ground for any wishful-thinking that India would be eager to see that he did not return empty-handed lest the jihadis emerge stronger.

One wishes that our Prime Minister takes him to the granaries of Punjab-Haryana, the IITs of Mumbai and New Delhi, the Silicon Valleys of the South and even the vaults of the Reserve Bank of India so that he can see the difference with Pakistan.

India is a growing and respected power not because of its A-bomb, but thanks to its youth power.  Indian youth is surging ahead everywhere -- intelligent, thirsty for knowledge, imaginative, innovative, daring to dream and daring to excel.

Pakistani youth is equally gifted.  But, the flowering of this youth has been stunted by the poisonous combination of its Madrasas, Mullahs and Military.  Unless this combination changes its mindset and lets a hundred flowers bloom which would be possible only if it ends its involvement in Kashmir and Afghanistan, Pakistan will remain a nation inexorably sliding into the past.

Even if that enlightenment dawns on Musharraf, without any formal agreement on any substantive issues, skeptics like me would concede that his visit had been worthwhile.

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail: [email protected])

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