Author Topic: Al-Qaedastan?  (Read 1204 times)

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sirs

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Al-Qaedastan?
« on: November 05, 2007, 08:48:52 PM »
Al-Qaedastan
Grim possibilities for Pakistan.

By Stanley Kurtz


What is to become of Pakistan? In the wake of President Musharraf?s declaration of a state of emergency, any number of grim scenarios are imaginable. Before spinning some of them out, consider this true and timely confession from Stephen P. Cohen, one of America?s top Pakistan experts: ?I don?t know what?s going to happen....I don?t think any Pakistan expert knows what will happen even tomorrow.?

Civil War
Cohen nails it. Yet granting the inevitable uncertainties, let me nonetheless venture a guess. I think we face the real possibility of civil war, in the form of a significantly expanded conflict between Musharraf?s army and Pakistan?s Islamist radicals (meaning al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and a variety of local Islamist groups and parties). An extended nation-wide war between the army and the Islamists could theoretically play out even as pro-democracy forces take to the streets to bring Musharraf down. Yet I think a serious battle between the army and the jihadists would likely force Benazir Bhutto and her allies into quiescence.

Rather than ending conclusively, a civil war between the army and the Islamists would most likely drag out indefinitely, or end in a draw around roughly the same battle lines we see today (i.e. with the northwest in the hands of the jihadists). More extreme outcomes are possible ? anything from a military victory over the Islamists (perhaps aided by U.S. forces) to an Islamist takeover of a nuclear-armed Pakistan.

Democratic Revolt
Media analysis so far has tended to underplay, or even openly challenge, the jihadist angle. Consider this piece in The Christian Science Monitor, which claims that, despite Musharraf?s assertions to the contrary, the emergency has little to do with terrorism. Says the Monitor, ?The extremists in Pakistan?s border region are not a threat to the solvency of the state, nor is emergency rule likely to change the Army?s fortunes in fighting them.? According to the authorities quoted by the Monitor, rather than adding to the strength of Musharraf?s forces on the ground, all the emergency does is enable him to circumvent Pakistan?s Supreme Court (which was about to declare his reelection invalid). The Monitor calls the emergency an ?eerie echo of decades past,? i.e. of the many previous coups that short-circuited Pakistani democracy. And the key question, according to the Monitor, is whether Benazir Bhutto and liberal lawyers can marshal significant public opposition to Musharraf, in which case Pakistan?s army will be compelled, as often before, to remove a discredited dictator and restore at least a modicum of democracy.

Well, things certainly could play out along these lines, but the Monitor here is buying the analysis of Musharraf?s opponents, and something about that analysis doesn?t quite ring true. According to the critics, puffing up the terrorist threat is just Musharraf?s way of duping gullible Americans into supporting him. The truth, these critics say, is that, to the extent that terrorism is a problem, this is a function of the lack of democracy. Give the people a peaceful outlet to vent their grievances, and they will turn away from violence. Musharraf?s opponents insist that the way to staunch the spread of Islamism is to take power away from the army and hand it to a secular middle class capable of transmitting modern and liberal mores to the country as a whole.

Was Musharraf Right?
Unfortunately, there are reasons to doubt all this. Granted, Musharraf?s emergency does replay a long-standing Pakistani pattern of anti-democratic military coups. And massive public opposition could, as before, prompt the military to (partially) restore democracy. Yet this well-practiced Pakistani pattern is now playing out in a decidedly novel environment. Pakistan?s government has never faced armed, independent, organized, and territorially based Islamist opposition on today?s scale. That is likely to give Pakistan?s recurring political history a radical new twist. In calmer circumstances, a stable democracy guided by a secular middle-class might have headed off the specter of Islamist radicalism. Today, however, given the size and strength of the Islamist threat, and given the unique social role of Pakistan?s army, a military government may be the only real bulwark against the potential disaster of a nuclear-armed al-Qaedastan.

It would have been better if the power-sharing deal between Musharraf and Bhutto had held. If such a deal can still be rescued and genuinely made to work, that would certainly be welcome. Yet contrary to the claim that terrorism was just an excuse, I fear that Musharraf?s invocation of the state?s critical vulnerability was all too valid.

The Threat
Consider the nature and scale of the Islamist threat. Pakistan?s central government has never exercised direct control over its unruly northwestern tribal regions. As in colonial times, that part of the country has been ruled by tribal law. Even so, following British colonial practice, the tribal regions have been supervised by representatives of the central government (backed by elite military forces) who?ve worked with pliable tribal elders to keep rebellion in check. Today even that system of indirect rule is defunct. Not only have the central government?s agents been expelled from the tribal regions, most traditional tribal elders have been eliminated by a systematic Taliban campaign of assassination. And now jihadist control has pushed beyond the core tribal regions into historically more pliant agricultural districts, and to some extent even into urban areas. There is no precedent for a successful Islamist rebellion on this scale.

Traditionally, religious, tribal, or ethnic rebellions in Pakistan?s northwest have been put down by military incursions. Today, however, Pakistan?s vaunted military is in crisis. Having taken heavy casualties over years of humiliatingly unsuccessful fighting against their own countrymen, Pakistan?s soldiers are beginning to desert or surrender to the Islamists in large numbers. Some commit suicide. Since the army was ordered to clear out the Islamist Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) in July, the jihadists have retaliated with a series of deadly terrorist bombings targeting elite military compounds, including General Musharraf?s own ultra-secure compound. Military morale is at its nadir. And although Pakistan has suffered defeats in war, there is no historical precedent for this sort of collapse of morale and discipline.

Military and More
To fully appreciate the ?criticality? (Musharraf?s word) of the situation, we need to know something about the unique role of Pakistan?s military. (See ?After Musharraf.?)

Unfortunately, the military is just about the only Pakistani state institution that actually works. A classic Muslim social pattern saw cohesive and heavily militarized tribes lead to weak central states, which weakness created a social vacuum that could only be filled by tribes. The modern version of this traditional causal circle features a powerful military bureaucracy, which weakens, and therefore gradually substitutes for, other state institutions.

The obvious example is the Pakistani military?s usurpation of political power. But that?s just the beginning. Pakistan?s military is an almost totally free-standing institution ? a sort of state within a state. The military largely controls its own appointments, and even has independent sources of revenue which limit its reliance on public taxation ? especially for its generous pensions and benefits system. At first, this amounted to, say, the Pakistani air force operating the nation?s air line industry. But under Musharraf, the military, both directly, and through its retired officers (who often leave service in their 40's), now controls vast sections of Pakistan?s state apparatus and economy ? everything from universities, to the post office, to companies that make cement, soap, and even breakfast cereal.

More than ten million Pakistanis directly or indirectly derive their incomes from this vast military-dominated apparatus. And while retired military officers may not know everything they ought to about running a business, in comparison to widespread civilian corruption and incompetence, Pakistan?s military is an efficiently-functioning meritocracy. Military education is extensive, serious, and liberal ? teaching the classics of Western and Islamic philosophy and literature, and nowadays even incorporating classes in economics and business management. As members of the most disciplined, merit-based, and effective sector of society, military men have both esprit de corps and contempt for civilians. And again, in a vicious circle, the military increasingly replaces, and therefore further undercuts, poorly functioning sectors of the state, making added military expansion all the more necessary.

In one sense, much as in Turkey, Pakistan?s military is an outpost of secular and liberal modernity. Yet who can blame Pakistan?s civilian liberals for bemoaning this oddly militarized misfiring of the conventional democratic path? Even so, the army?s domination of Pakistan?s institutional life means that Musharraf?s rationale for imposing an emergency may be something more than smoke and mirrors.

Undoubtedly, Musharraf acted to head off a Supreme Court decision negating his election. And surely the military is selfishly worried that sharing power with Bhutto might put a halt to the expansion of its domestic economic empire. Yet, for that very reason, the power-sharing arrangement with Bhutto might have split the military into warring factions ? at a moment when the military itself is on the verge of being broken by its conflict with the Taliban. And if Pakistan?s all-pervasive military actually did collapse from a combination of exhaustion, terror, and internal factional conflict, the way truly would be open to an Islamist takeover ? or at least a chaotic civil war that would put control of Pakistan?s nuclear arsenal at risk.

Islamist Coup
Even if Musharraf?s declaration of an emergency headed off a potentially deadly split within the military over the power-sharing agreement with Bhutto, the danger remains grave. Why wouldn?t the jihadists take advantage of Musharraf?s weakness? After all, the civil war has already begun, not only in the Taliban?s ever-expanding zone of control in the northwest, but in an aggressive nation-wide campaign of terror attacks. With Musharraf?s legitimacy now in doubt, and with the army busy suppressing opposition rallies, this would be the logical moment for Osama and his allies to mount a vastly more aggressive series of terror attacks aimed at toppling the state. It?s hard to believe that the Islamist war on Pakistan?s army isn?t about to explode into a brand new phase. Yet if this doesn?t happen, that in itself would give a revealing glimpse into the limits of jihadist power.

An Islamist coup is possible, then. Yet for all the army?s problems, it is in many ways well-placed to resist a nation-wide jihadi onslaught. In Pakistan, ethnic and regional loyalties overlay and complicate conflicts over Islam. Although the Islamists are exercising unprecedented power throughout northwest Pakistan, their area of control is still largely limited to the ethnically Pashtun tribal region. But Punjab and the Sind are the demographic and cultural heartland of Pakistan, and Pashtun tribal Islamists (like the Taliban) are seen as outsiders there. Independent Islamist groups in Punjab and Sind are subject to rivalry and ethnic divisions, all of which makes a truly national Islamist military assault and/or terror campaign difficult to coordinate. And whether military or civilian, the educated elite in charge of Pakistan?s bureaucracy and businesses agree that a regime run by Osama and his cohorts would be a disaster for Pakistan, alienating foreign allies, driving out investment, and in general bringing modernization to a halt. Clearly, there are serious barriers to an Islamist takeover of Pakistan.

So on the one hand, Pakistan?s military is at a low-point, and extremely vulnerable to further Islamist attacks. It would be surprising (and instructive) if a serious intensification of the incipient civil war between the military and the jihadists did not materialize at this point. And that, it seems to me, would likely quiet down Benazir Bhutto and her supporters, since Musharraf and his army in effect protects them from the jihadists. This protective role is precisely what Musharraf keeps claiming ? and precisely what the his opponents insist on pooh-poohing. Sadly, we may be about to get more proof than we?d like that Musharraf was right.

The Army Strikes Back
On the other hand, while the jihadists may greatly escalate their attacks, they will be hard-pressed to actually capture the state. Too many powerful forces stand in their way. Given that, could Musharraf?s military now regroup and successfully take the fight back to al-Qaeda? It?s certainly possible. Who knows, the emergency might actually revitalize the military and stiffen its morale. But it seems equally likely that a terrifying Islamist offensive and further military setbacks might overcome the Pakistani public?s resistance to American military help in clearing out Osama?s mountain sanctuary. The prospect of a vastly more serious civil war with radical Islamists is truly frightening. Yet for that very reason, it may be the very thing that brings the American cavalry to the rescue.

So can we confidently dispose of the possibility of a successful Islamist coup and a nuclear-armed Talibanistan? Not quite. It is extremely difficult to gauge the potential extent of Islamist sympathy in Pakistan. On the one hand, shockingly large majorities of the public express a willingness to move toward some version of rule by Islamic law (the Taliban?s platform). Public support for Osama bin Laden is also shockingly high. Yet Islamist parties in Pakistan have rarely done well, and it?s difficult to say whether lip service to sharia law in an opinion survey equates to support for Islamist rule.

Coup Again
The danger is that varying shades of Islamist opinion in all sectors of society will coalesce. Zia ul Haq who, like Musharraf, once ruled Pakistan militarily for years, was himself an Islamist sympathizer. Zia infused the army with Islamism, and although his followers no longer dominate there, some retired officers still wait on the sidelines for an Islamist resurgence. Musharraf?s generation of officers is secular and pro-American, yet we know next to nothing about the younger generation of military officers. Might they have latent Islamist sympathies? Pakistan?s military takes most of its recruits from Punjab, but also from the Pashtun northwest (that is, from tribal areas now controlled by the Taliban). And we know that some military deserters and retired soldiers have been signing up to fight with the Taliban. If a nationwide Islamist assault awakes a sleeping giant of pro-sharia sentiment in Pakistan?s heartland, and also splits the army, the resulting chaos could put an Islamist state ? or at least a nuclear bomb or two ? within Osama?s reach.

Smart Move
If none of this happens ? if the jihadists fail to use the emergency as an opportunity to widen the incipient civil war ? that in itself will tell us something important about their limitations. On the other hand, holding back from a major offensive while Musharraf is preoccupied with his democratic opposition might actually allow Osama to consolidate a permanent sanctuary in the tribal regions. Come to think of it, that could be the cagiest move of all.

No one really knows what?s about to happen in Pakistan. The possibilities are many, and laying out scenarios is more likely to help us make sense of what eventually does happen than to precisely predict it. Yet I fear we may soon be looking at something more than a replay of Pakistani politics past. The real jihad may be just about to begin.


Is Musharraf right?
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #1 on: November 06, 2007, 08:03:41 AM »
Of course Mushariff's not right. Neither are the fundamentalists. But Pakistanis should be given the right to peacefully choose what they want for a government.

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sirs

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #2 on: November 06, 2007, 10:54:25 PM »
Of course Mushariff's not right. Neither are the fundamentalists. But Pakistanis should be given the right to peacefully choose what they want for a government.

So interesting to note how complexity and nuance never seem to play a part when it doesn't serve the left's purpose.  It's a tad more complicated than you apparently are willing to admit Xo.  EVERYONE wants to see Pakistan resume PEACEFUL elections ASAP.  Musharraf is definately between a rock and a hard place.  The Taliban is trying to do to him, what AlQeada was able to do in Spain, but failed to do in Great Britain
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Stray Pooch

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #3 on: November 06, 2007, 11:24:25 PM »
Sirs, thanks for posting this.  This is an excellent and informative analysis.  I've been pondering these very questions since the emergency was declared.  Obviously, Mushariff's actions are reprehensible.  They are clearly designed to keep him in power and circumvent (if not totally eliminate) the judiciary.  Yet there is a real danger here of Islamist coup - a thought that has been on my mind ever since Pakistan went nuclear.  Whether or not the US should get involved - indeed whether we have the military wherewithal to do so just now - is a more perplexing question than Iraq was - and that was a CF from the get-go in terms of to invade or not. 

Objectively - and that is admittedly a pretty sketchy claim to make at this point - it would be better to have a military dictator in charge of Pakistan than the Islamists - whatever the people may want.  We have here again that age-old dilemma the US faces as a superpower:  Should we support the strongman for security regardless of the effect on the people, or should we back Democratic principles and let the chips fall where they may?  Idealists have simple answers to that question, but pragmatists could go either way.  Many of our Founders would have a cow over this issue.  Few would - from their vantage point in history - support the idea of withholding freedom from another nation in favor of a military despot.  But the world - and the nation - has changed a lot since 1776.  Jefferson never dreamed of nuclear terror. 

This is a bad time to have our hands tied by the looming election season.  It's now a year away from that election, which promises to be historic in many ways.  We'll spend that time wrangling for position and everyone will be scared to death to speak the truth or discuss hard options because of the potential fallout. (Look what happened to Obama when he tried.)  That self-induced political paralysis almost makes Mushariff's strongarm tactics look inviting - but only almost.  In the end, there are no easy answers - and very likely no completely correct ones either.
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hnumpah

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #4 on: November 06, 2007, 11:49:23 PM »
Quote
I think we face the real possibility of civil war, in the form of a significantly expanded conflict between Musharraf?s army and Pakistan?s Islamist radicals (meaning al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and a variety of local Islamist groups and parties).

Al Qaeda? Taliban? Weren't those the folks we were fighting in Afghanistan, and probably would have eradicated by now, had we not gotten sidetracked into our misadventure in Iraq?

Ahhhh, missed opportunities. Six years on, and bin Laden is still sitting up in those mountains somewhere.
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Michael Tee

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #5 on: November 07, 2007, 12:58:48 AM »
The curious phenomenon of right-wing institutional propagandists (in this case, National Review On-Line) spinning a ludicrous web of speculation piled upon more speculation and declaring - - in the face of the most obvious facts imaginable - - the the seizure of power and declaration of emergency by an army officer whose claim to the country's highest political office was just declared illegal and unconstitutional by the highest court in the land, is really (as claimed by the dictator) necessitated by an "Islamist threat."  Despite the fact that the most vehement opposition to the seizure of power comes from the Pakistani Bar, a decidedly non-Islamist institution, which, like the rest of the opposition to the dictator, claims that the so-called "Islamist threat" is just a bogeyman used by the dictator to justify his grab at power.

Effectively, the press and the bar have assessed the degree of "Islamist threat" and found it to be, basically, bogus.  Whereas, National Review On-Line and/or Stanley Kurtz have assessed the degree of Islamist threat better than Pakistan's bar and press have been able to do.  The long-standing anarchy of the North-West suddenly threatens the stability of the central government because of some alleged (but never quantified) increase in political assassinations in remote areas.  Or because this "might be a good time" for al Qaeda to double or triple its assassinations (with no evidence whatsoever as to their capability to do so, or what difference it would make to the central government's stability if they could do so.)   What total bullshit.

This is definitely one of the silliest articles I've read recently.

Lanya

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #6 on: November 07, 2007, 04:23:12 AM »
http://www.juancole.com/

Interesting reading there on Pakistan, the last few days.  Lots of links and summaries.

For instance:

Geo News TV Posts Video Urging Pakistani People To Defend Their Rights

OSC observed on 6 November that private television station Geo News TV posted a video to its website urging the Pakistani people to stand up for their rights. The TV station is also running this video as an advertisement on its television broadcasts.

The video begins by showing clips of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan, and then lists several basic human rights given to the people through the constitution, including freedom of speech and the right to assemble.

The video then shows an out-of-balance scale, and the narrator states that these rights are being removed under the current state of emergency in Pakistan. It proceeds to illustrate the government restrictions under the state of emergency, addressing the viewers and informing them that the Pakistan Government can: Video snapshot of an unbalanced scale

Place restrictions on your freedom of expression
Place restrictions on where you live
Send you to jail for assembling
Ban unions and associations
Close your business for no reason
Confiscate your property

The video points out that these rights were not given to the Pakistani people as charity, but that their ancestors fought to procure these rights. It concludes with the following statement: "Recognize your rights; protect those rights, Geo...with principles." Video snapshot illustrating the right to assemble. '
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Henny

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Re: Al-Qaedastan?
« Reply #7 on: November 07, 2007, 09:35:47 PM »
Of course Mushariff's not right. Neither are the fundamentalists. But Pakistanis should be given the right to peacefully choose what they want for a government.



Here's to hoping that Bhutto can snatch power back.

Of course, given the short history of the country, there will be another coup in just a bit anyway.