M.D. Nalapat
Manipal, India — Although it would be a tad
unfair to compare him to a confidence trickster, Pakistan's army-appointed
President Pervez Musharraf has survived by convincing a series of patrons to
back him, only to let them down later.
After the dour but straightforward Jehangir
Karamat was sacked as the army's chief of staff by former Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif for publicly asserting that the military had the decisive say in matters
of national security, Musharraf' convinced Sharif that he would be a pliant
replacement for the sacked general. This was an important consideration at a
time when both Sharif and his brother Shahbaz were reported to be examining the
military's links to the immensely lucrative narcotics trade.
For decades, ever since the Afghan jihad
began in 1980, opium and its derivatives have been leveraged by elements in
uniform in Pakistan to generate cash, not just to send their children abroad to
study, but also to fund such "black" operations as the jihad against
Indian rule in Kashmir. Politicians in Pakistan, not known for abstemious
behavior, watched with envy the flow of profits from the illegal trade -- the
primary reason the military wanted to retain control of Afghanistan through the
Taliban -- and looked for an opportunity to muscle in.
With the assumption of office by the
"spineless" Musharraf, that moment appeared to have arrived. It
vanished in a cloud of dust, however, when U.S.-supplied tanks buttressed a
coup in 1999 that once again put the military in the driver's seat. Less than a
year later, the four army generals who had launched the coup that placed
Musharraf in power were themselves edged out by a "chief executive"
(later president) of Pakistan eager to show who was boss.
Since then, Musharraf has placed no fewer
than 37 presumed loyalists into top command positions within the military. He
has given their men -- being a Wahabbi state, the women of Pakistan are not
considered good enough to command -- hundreds of well-paying (in both salary
and bribes) jobs in the Pakistan state sector.