Musharraf suspended Pakistan's Chief Justice Iftikhar
Mohammad Chaudhry in March, falsely accused him of "misconduct and
misuse of authority," and used that excuse to remove a key official
likely to block his plan for another five year term as President while
illegally remaining chief of army staff (COAS) where the real power
lies.
The response was outrage from opposition parties,
lawyers organizations and human rights groups. They called the action
unconstitutional and publicly rallied against it.
On October
6, Musharraf held a bogus election like all others in a country where
democracy is a joke. It was stage-managed by the military, clearly
unconstitutional, and Musharraf won all but five parliamentary votes
and swept the Provincial Assembly balloting.
Afterwards,
Pakistan's Supreme Court said no winner could be declared until it
ruled if Musharraf could run for office in his joint COAS capacity.
Constitutionally, he can't, protests erupted, the country has been in
turmoil since, and Musharraf lost all credibility;
That was
Bhutto's chance to return, again serve in the post she twice before
held, and she thought her Washington allies arranged it. Maybe yes or
maybe not. It didn't matter that she was being used - to be a
democratic face and fig leaf adjunct to Musharraf's dictatorship, but
whatever was then clearly changed by December 27 without Bhutto's
knowledge. Now she's gone, and Musharraf nominally transferred his army
chief post to close ally General Ashfaq Kayani last November. He also
lifted a six week long state of emergency in mid-December ahead of the
scheduled January 8 elections, now postponed after Bhutto's
assassination until February 18 as of this writing.
Today, she's
bigger in death than life, spoken of reverentially as a populist, and
her 19 year old son, Bilawal (in school at Oxford), now heads the PPP
as its figurehead leader and third generation family dynasty
standard-bearer with his father, Asif Zardari, co-party chairman and de
facto chief. More on him below.
Who Was Benazir Bhutto and Why Is She Important
Who
was this woman, why the worldwide attention, and why another article
with so many written and more likely coming? Bhutto was an aristocrat,
privileged in every respect, and raised in opulence as the Harvard and
Oxford-educated daughter of a wealthy landowning father who founded
Pakistan's main opposition party (Pakistan Peoples Party - PPP) that
Bhutto headed after his death.
While in office, she was no democrat in a military-run nation since its
artificial creation in 1947. Elections, when held, are rigged, and the
army runs things for Washington as a vassal state in a nation called a
military with a country, not a country with a military. Its Army
strength is 550,000, its Air Force and Navy 70,000, and 510,000
reservists back them with plenty of US-supplied weapons for the "Global
War on Terrorism."
Today, FBI agents freely roam the streets, the Pentagon operates
out of Pakistan military bases, and it has de facto control of its air
space as part of the Bush administration's permanent state of war "that
will not end in our lifetime." Pakistan is a client state, but what
choice does it have. Post-9/11, Deputy Secretary of State Armitage
warned Musharraf to comply or be declared a hostile power and "bombed
back to the stone age." He got the message and a multi-billion dollar
reward as well.
Bhutto knows the game, too, and the New York
Times explained that she "always understood Washington more than
Washington understood her" in a feature December 30 article called "How
Bhutto Won Washington." Her relationship began in the spring of 1984 on
her first "important trip" to the Capitol. At the time, she tried to
persuade the Reagan administration it would be better served with her
in power, but to do it she had to overcome her father's anti-western
reputation. With considerable help she succeeded by assuring
congressional members she was on board and supported Washington's proxy
war on the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.
Faults aside, she had
her attributes, and The Times called her "completely charming," very
beautiful, and a woman "who could flatter the senators," understand
their concerns, and better serve US interests than the man who hanged
her father, General Zia-ul-Haq. At the same time, she began working
with the Democratic National Committee's Executive Director, Mark
Siegel, who later lobbied for her government when she was Prime
Minister. Early on, he walked her through the halls of Congress, helped
her develop relationships, and made her understand that to get along
she had to go along.
She caught on fast, and it made her Prime
Minister in December, 1988 after she ran for the post, won a plurality
but not a majority, and got Reagan administration officials to arrange
with Pakistan's acting President to have her form a government.
According to a Washington insider, it was the "direct result of her
networking, of her being able to persuade the Washington establishment,
the foreign policy community, the press, the think tanks, that she was
a democrat," a moderate, and that she backed the US Afghanistan agenda
against the Soviets. Public rhetoric aside, she was on board ever
since, but she paid with her life by not understanding how Washington
operates: like other rogue states - using leaders and aspiring ones,
then discarding them.
In the end, it didn't matter that she
twice survived dismissal from office on corruption charges or that she
managed to co-exist with her country's military and intelligence
service (ISI) that deeply mistrusted her. Until her luck ran out, she
maintained ties to Washington and key members of the press. She
politicked well and "understood the nature of political life, which is
to stay in touch with (key) people whether you're in or out of office"
and let them know you back them.
Like others of her stature, she
also relied on a PR firm to arrange meetings with the powerful and had
plenty of resources to do it. She "kept up her networking," but she
paid with her life. She tried to convince Washington that Musharraf's
"war on terrorism" failed, she could do it better as a loyal ally, and
she would eliminate extremist elements (meaning the Taliban and
Al-Queda) by a determined effort to maintain pressure.
It
sounded good but was risky and dangerous. Pakistan's army opposes it,
especially in the ranks; a stepped-up effort assures a huge public
outcry; disrupting the Taliban benefits India; and trying and failing
might embolden their forces as the US occupation learned in
Afghanistan. In the end, Washington and Pakistan's ISI may have
concluded Bhutto was more a liability than an asset and had to go.
Things came to a head on December 27, she's now a martyr, and larger
than life dead than alive.
It wasn't that way as Prime Minister,
however, when her tenure was marked by nepotism, opportunism, scheming,
corruption, poor governance and selling out to the West. Her early
popularity faded, especially when word got out about her businessman
husband's dealings. Asif Zardari was known as "Mr. Ten Percent" (by
some as "Mr. Thirty Percent") because he demanded a cut from deals as
the Prime Minister's spouse and in some cases wanted more.
He
was also reportedly into drugs trafficking and was investigated for it.
With his wife in power, he amassed billions including what he stole in
public funds that was even excessive by Pakistan standards and enough
to get the country's President to sack Bhutto after 20 months in
office. Whether personally culpable or not didn't matter. As Prime
Minister, she made her husband a cabinet minister, gave him free rein
to dispense favors in return for kick-backs, had to know about them,
there was no evidence she objected, and she enjoyed the riches in
office and thereafter.
In spite of it, Bhutto got a second
chance. She returned as Prime Minister in 1993 for another three years,
but was again dispatched on even greater corruption and incompetence
charges than in her first term - this time by President Farooq Leghari,
a member of the PPP and someone she thought was an ally. He certainly
had cause as the amount stolen earlier was prologue for the fortune she
and her husband (as Minister of Investment) amassed in her second term.
It was enough to get Transparency International, an independent
watchdog group, to name Pakistan the second most corrupt country in the
world in 1996 (Bhutto's last year in office). It also got her convicted
in Switzerland of money laundering and bribe-taking and made her a
fugitive with charges pending in Spain, Britain and her native
Pakistan. That was until Musharaff signed a US-brokered "reconciliation
ordinance," absolved her of all outstanding offenses, and allowed her
to run for Prime Minister a third time as part of a power-sharing deal
with her as number two.
Bhutto's earlier tenure had another
notable feature as well. It was when Pakistan's military and ISI
established the Taliban with covert CIA help. The link still exists,
and at a September, 2006 Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing,
General James Jones, former NATO Supreme Commander (who oversaw US-NATO
Afghanistan operations), testified that it was "generally accepted"
that Taliban leaders operated out Quetta, Pakistan, the capital of
Baluchistan province bordering Afghanistan and Iran.
Musharraf
and other Pakistani officials deny it, but there's no hiding the facts
or that nothing of consequence happens in Pakistan without Washington's
knowledge and/or consent. It's also no secret that Pakistan's ISI is a
CIA branch, and their regional activities are closely linked. Bhutto
was on board, but what choice did she have.
All along, she was a
daughter of privilege, acted like one, and enjoyed the good life the
way billions allow. Today, the major media lionize her, but omit her
dark side: as Prime Minister, she lusted for power, was arrogant and
contemptuous, ignored the poor and Pakistani women, allowed outrageous
laws to be enforced, gave the Army free reign including over nuclear
weapons, and considered Pakistan her personal fiefdom. Her home was a
$50 million mansion on 110 acres, and she ruled like a feudal overlord.
The family still owns a 350 acre UK estate complete with helipad and
polo pony stables, a mansion in Dubai, two Texas properties, six in
Florida, more homes in France and large bank accounts strategically
stashed around the world, including in the US and France.
>From
the time of her father's death to her own, Bhutto had close ties to
Washington, the CIA, Pakistan's military, its ISI, as well as to the
Taliban (established in her second term), "militant Islam" and Big Oil
interests. She was a servant of power and pocketed billions for her
efforts. In the end, she lost out and paid with her life on December 27.
Who Killed Bhutto and Why
Bhutto's now dead, shot in the back of the head by one or more
assassins at close range, plus the effects of a suicide bombing that
killed two dozen or more and wounded many others tightly packed around
her. It happened in Rawalpindi, "no ordinary city" as Michel
Chossudovsky explains. It's the home of Pakistan's military, its
CIA-linked ISI, and is the country's de facto seat of power.
Chossudovsky adds: "Ironically Bhutto was assassinated in an urban area
tightly controlled and guarded by the military police and the country's
elite forces."
Rawalpindi and the country's capital,
Islamabad, are sister cities, nine miles apart. They swarm with
intelligence operatives including from CIA, and Chussodovsky stresses
that Bhutto's assassination "was (no) haphazard event." Blaming
Al-Queda misses the point, but that's how these schemes work. They're
also clearer when convincing video is broadcast as UK's Channel 4 did
on December 30. It debunked the official story and exposed Musharraf as
a liar - that Bhutto died from a fractured skull "when she was thrown
by the force of the (explosion's) shock wave (and) one of the levers of
(her car's) sunroof hit her."
The video contradicts this. It
shows a clean-shaven man in sunglasses watching close by with a
concealed gun and the suspected suicide bomber behind him dressed in
white. The gunman then approaches Bhutto's car and at point blank range
fires three shots. Immediately after, the suicide bomber detonates his
device, killing and wounding dozens nearby.
The question then is
- not who killed her, but who ordered her killed and who profits from
it? Musharraf quickly named the usual suspect - Al-Queda but ignored
what William Engdahl observed in his January 4 Global Research article
called "Bhutto's Assassination: Who Gains?" He notes how well protected
political leaders are so it's no simple task killing them. "It requires
agencies of professional intelligence training to insure the job is
done" right, and no one can reveal who ordered it or the motive.
Engdahl
also states that naming Al-Queda serves Musharraf and Washington. It
increases public fear, revs up the "war on terror," and provides
justification for it to continue. It also reinforces the Al-Queda myth
as well as "enemy number one" bin Laden, and ignores the evidence that
the CIA created both in the 1980s for the war against the Soviets in
Afghanistan. It's just as silent on the possibility bin Laden is dead,
killed (as Bhutto told David Frost last fall) by Omar Sheikh whom the
London Sunday Times called "no ordinary terrorist but a man who has
connections that reach high into Pakistan's military and intelligence
elite and into the innermost circles" of bin Laden and Al-Queda.
If
true, a dead bin Laden disrupts Washington's national security doctrine
that needs enemies to scare the public, eliminates "enemy number one"
as the main one, and exposes strategically released bin Laden tapes as
made-in-Washington frauds. Today, we're told that bin Laden-led Islamic
terrorists endanger the West, but at the same time we use them for
imperial gain as we did against the Soviets, in the Balkans and now do
in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and elsewhere. If Al-Queda operatives killed
Bhutto, it means Pakistan's ISI and CIA were involved, and what's more
likely than that. Forget a lone gunman theory, a lose cannon terrorist
or a sole anti-Bhutto assassin. Consider "Cui bono," examine the
evidence, and it points to Washington and Islamabad.
Today in
Pakistan, intrigue abounds, and the country is destabilized as Michel
Chossudovsky observes in his December 30 Global Research article called
"The Destabilization of Pakistan." Assassinating Bhutto contributes to
it, and Chossudovsky sees a US-sponsored "regime change" ahead.
Musharraf is so weak and discredited "continuity under military rule is
no long the main thrust of US foreign policy." Musharraf's regime
"cannot prevail," and Washington's scheme is "to actively promote the
political fragmentation and balkanization of Pakistan as a nation."
From it, a new political leadership will emerge that will be
"compliant," have "no commitment to (Pakistan's) national interest,"
and will be subservient to "US imperial interests, while
concurrently....weakening....the central government (and fracturing)
Pakistan's fragile federal structure."
It makes perfect sense as part of Washington's broader Middle
East-Central Asia agenda. Pakistan is a key frontline state, a
"geopolitical hub," with a central role to play in the "Global War on
Terrorism." It includes "balkanizing" the country Yugoslavia-style the
way it's planned for Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran - a simple divide and
conquer strategy. Chossudovsky adds: "Continuity, characterized by the
dominant role of the Pakistani military and intelligence (that worked
up to now) has been scrapped in favor of political breakup and
balkanization." The scheme is to foment "social, ethnic and factional
divisions and political fragmentation, including the territorial
breakup" of the country.
It's a common US strategy with covert
intelligence support, and consider The New York Times article on
January 6 called "US Considers New Covert Push Within Pakistan" to
exploit Bhutto's death. It states that senior national security
advisers (including Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice and Joint Chiefs
Chairman Admiral Michael Mullen) may "expand the authority of the CIA
and the military to conduct far more aggressive covert operations in
the tribal areas of Pakistan" against Al-Queda and the Taliban to
counteract their efforts and "destabilize the Pakistani government."
The
article states that Musharraf and the military are on board, gives the
usual boiler plate reasons, but omits what's really at stake even as it
admits Musharraf is unpopular and a US intervention could "prompt a
powerful popular backlash against" both countries.
Chussodovsky
fills in the blanks and explains that US strategy aims to trigger
"ethnic and religious strife," abet and finance "secessionist movements
while also weakening" Musharraf's government. "The broader objective is
to fracture the Nation State....redraw the borders of Iraq, Iran,
Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan" and replace Musharraf in the process.
He's unpopular, damaged goods and has to go.
Bhutto was an
unwitting part of the scheme but not the way she planned. She thought
Washington needed here, and she was right - not as Prime Minister but
as a martyr to destabilize the country and break it up if the plan
works. It may as internal secessionist elements are strong, especially
in energy rich (mostly gas) Balochistan province, and "indications" are
they're supported by "Britain and the US." The idea is a "Greater
Balochistan" by integrating Baloch areas with those in Iran and
southern Afghanistan.
Chossudovsky explains that it was not
"accidental that the 2005 National Intelligence Council-CIA report
predicted a 'Yugoslav-like fate' for Pakistan" through internally and
externally manufactured "economic mismanagment." Remember also that the
country split before in 1971 when East Pakistan became Bangladesh
following months of civil war and against India that took a million or
more lives. Pakistanis may face that prospect again as US plans unfold.
Future Outlook Remains Uncertain
Big questions remain, and key ones are will breakup plans work,
who'll emerge with enough popular support to lead it, and will the
public go along. They've got no incentive to do it once anger over
Bhutto's death subsides, and recent polling data show overwhelming
public opposition to US or other foreign intervention that's very much
part of the scheme. In the end, their views don't count, and it may
happen anyway through political intrigue and Washington-led brute force.
Reports
prior to Bhutto's assassination point that way. They suggest US Special
and other forces already operate in Pakistan, and head of US Special
Operations Command, Admiral Eric Olson, arranged with Musharraf and
Pakistan's military last summer and fall to substantially increase
their numbers early this year. Involved as well is what The New York
Times reported in November that the "US Hopes to Use Pakistani Tribes
Against Al Queda" in the country's "frontier areas."
The
scheme is similar to the effort in Iraq's al-Anbar province with bribes
and weapons to seal a deal apparently now finalized. US Central Command
Commander Admiral William Fallon alluded to it in a recent Voice of
America interview by saying we're ready to provide "training,
assistance and mentoring based on our experience with insurgencies,"
but he left out the bribing part that's part of these deals.
Where
this will lead is speculation, but consider a feature Wall Street
Journal January 8 article. It's headlined "Bhutto Killing Roils
Province, Spurring Calls to Quit Pakistan" and calls Bhutto's native
Sindh province (second largest of Pakistan's four provinces) the
"Latest Fault Line In a Fractured Country; Like Occupied Territory."
Mourners
filed past Bhutto's grave chanting "We don't want Pakistan," and in the
wake of her death "Sindh has been swept by nationalist rage." Many in
the province are "calling for outright independence," and support for
separation has grown among rank and file PPP members. There's even talk
of an "armed insurgency" as anger is directed against neighboring
Punjab, the largest province, and home of the military, ISI and
government.
The Journal quotes Qadir Magsi, head of the
nationalist Sindh Taraqi Passand movement saying...."Bhutto was the
last hope (for unity). Now this Pakistan must be broken up." The
article continues saying what's happening in Sindh is already in play
in the Northwest Frontier province where central government authority
withered in recent years. In addition, Pakistan's Army has been
embroiled in Baluchistan's insurgency for the past few years adding to
overall instability. The theme of the Journal article is that calls for
unity are falling on deaf ears, and one PPP veteran sums it up: "What
we need is separation."
That suits Bush administration officials
fine, they're likely stoking it, and one thing is clear. US forces are
in the region to stay, and Washington under any administration
(Democrat or Republican) intends to dominate this vital part of the
world with its vast energy reserves. The strategy appears similar to
the divide and conquer one in Yugoslavia. There it worked, but the
Middle East and Central Asia aren't so simple. Stay tuned as events
will likely accelerate, the media will highlight them, and it looks
like stepped up conflict (and its fallout) is part of the plan.
Stephen
Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com.