PAKISTAN
Pakistan: Washington considers military intervention
Doug Lorimer
27 July 2007
In weighing how to deal with the al Qaeda threat in Pakistan, American officials have been meeting in recent weeks to discuss what some said was emerging as an aggressive new strategy, one that would include both public and covert elements, the July 18 New York Times reported following the release the previous day of the public version of a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Islamist terrorist threats to the US.
The NIE, a report compiled by the CIA and 15 other US spy agencies, argued that Saudi Arabian millionaire Osama bin Ladens al Qaeda terrorist group has regenerated key elements of its attack capability on the US homeland in the Pakistan Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) along the Afghanistan border.
In a July 22 interview with Fox News Sunday, Frances Townsend, US President George Bushs homeland security adviser, acknowledged that Washington was already engaged in covert military operations in Pakistan. Just because we dont speak about things publicly doesnt mean were not doing things you talk about, she said when asked if Washington was using special operations forces against al Qaedas safe haven in Pakistan.
The aggressive new strategy being considered in Washington thus involves going beyond such covert operations to public military operations. Townsend hinted at this, saying: The presidents committed to the most effective action that we can possibly take in the FATA to deny them the safe haven.
At the July 17 media conference releasing the NIE, Richard Boucher, the assistant US secretary of state, said that al Qaeda had prospered due to a September 2006 ceasefire accord between Pakistani President Pervez Musharrafs military dictatorship and tribal leaders in the North Waziristan district of the FATA.
Boucher said that as a result of the accord, al Qaeda was able to operate, meet, plan, recruit, and obtain financing in more comfort in the tribal areas than previously.
The July 18 Wall Street Journal reported that US policy makers, under pressure to eradicate this haven with or without the cooperation of Islamabad, describe a vexing dilemma. Any major unilateral effort by the Pentagon inside Pakistan, say US officials, could spark a local backlash strong enough to topple President Pervez Musharraf, a leader President Bush has called Washingtons strongest ally in the fight against al Qaeda.
The new NIE was released as the Musharraf regime, which has been provided with large amounts of US military and economic aid under the pretext of fighting Islamic terrorists, found itself more politically isolated within Pakistan than ever before.
On July 20, following weeks of public protests by the Pakistans legal profession, the Supreme Court ruled that Musharrafs attempt to sack Pakistans top judge was illegal.
Associated Press reported that the Supreme Court ruling to reinstate Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry is probably the biggest challenge to Gen. Musharrafs dominance since he seized power in a coup in 1999. It could further complicate his bid to win a new five-year presidential term this fall and comes at a time when Islamic militants are on the offensive.
Writing in the July 20 Christian Science Monitor (CSM), Vali Nasr, a professor at the US Naval Postgraduate School and an adjunct senior fellow at the US political establishments Council on Foreign Relations think tank, noted that since 9/11, Washington has looked to President Musharraf to uproot Islamic extremism in South Asia. Nearly six years later, however, Pakistan is still a nuclear-armed crucible of jihadi culture, exporting terrorists and destabilizing its neighbors.
Nasr went on to argue that this is because Musharraf finds them useful in convincing Washington and Pakistans middle classes that the military is all that protects the country from a Taliban-like Islamic state. It is not a coincidence that the governments recent battle against extremists associated within the Red Mosque came on the heels of nationwide antigovernment protests following Musharrafs summary dismissal of the countrys chief justice. Musharraf hopes that the crisis will persuade secular-minded Pakistanis to abandon the barricades and align behind him.
However, according to Pakistani political and defence analyst Dr Hasan-Askari Rizvi, writing the July 22 Lahore Daily Times, Musharrafs failed attempt to remove Chaudhry has generated unprecedented hostility toward his military regime among liberal middle-class Pakistanis, while the bloody military assault on the Islamic fundamentalists in Islamabads Red Mosque have turned Musharrafs Islamist allies against him.
The intensity of anti-army feeling and the frequency of its expression are unprecedented in post-1971 Pakistan, Rizvi wrote. The slogans and banners of the lawyers protest movement demanded time and again the top commanders of the army return to the barracks. Some protesters were seen burning General Pervez Musharrafs effigy in army uniform
Anti-army sentiments are also conspicuous in the latest wave of suicide-bombings, targeting army and paramilitary personnel and police
The army is criticised and its personnel attacked by suicide bombers because it is viewed as the mainstay of the Musharraf government, whose recent policies have totally alienated Islamic and other groups.
This poses a serious problem for Musharraf and his masters in Washington because, as Rizvi noted, there are many in Musharrafs government, particularly with the officer corps of the army, who view the Islamists as friends because they counteract the mainstream and centrist political forces that openly challenge the legitimacy of the Musharraf government.
In his CSM article, Nasr dismissed the idea that the armys assault on the Islamic fundamentalists in the Red Mosque represented a turn by Musharraf against the Islamists.
The government, Nasr noted, was fully aware of what went on in the Red Mosque, just a mile from the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence [military intelligence ISI] headquarters. Yet Musharraf chose to ignore the extremists between January and June, even as they sought to impose Islamic law on the capital city. It was not until he sensed public anger at his dithering, and confronted a diplomatic crisis when the extremists abducted Chinese nationals, that he stormed the mosque.
In an ominous sign for Musharraf, the major Islamist political parties refused to condemn the suicide bomb attacks on his regime. Reuters reported on July 19 that even moderate Islamist clerics were warning that Pakistan could descend into civil war. I think this situation could blow up in an all-out civil war, Mufti Muhammad Naeem, the cleric who heads Karachis largest Islamic school, told Reuters.
The next day, Time magazine quoted Hamid Gul, a former head of Pakistans powerful ISI warning that the Pakistani army could split, with many of lower-ranking officers and soldiers becoming Islamist fighters. The officer cadres are liberal, secular, they come from the elite classes. But the rank and file of the army were never secular, they were always religious, Gul told Time.
If there is a face-off between the army and the people, the leadership may lose control of the army. The army does not feel happy. They are from the same streets, the same villages, the same bazaars of the lower and middle classes, and they want the same thing [Islamic law] for their country, Gul added.
The Bush administrationss canvassing of the idea of public US military intervention into Pakistan, under the pretext countering a resurgent al Qaeda threat, needs to be viewed in this context. What is really being canvassed in Washington is the prospect of public US military action to save Musharrafs regime.
However, as the July 23 CSM reported, if Washington presses Musharraf too hard for swift action against the Islamist strongholds especially as he faces the toughest political pressures of his eight-year rule then he could fall.
From the White Houses perspective, that would create a nightmare for the US-led war on terror. For the moment, were stuck, says Bruce Riedel, a former national security adviser on counterterrorism and South Asian issues. We have a policy that looks increasingly bankrupt, but I dont see the administration prepared as yet to move away from it or the military dictator who stands at its core.
Riedel said the Pentagon simply doesnt have the forces for large-scale military operations in Pakistan, especially after the surge of troops to Iraq.