MANIPAL, India, March 18 (UPI) -- Regular readers of this column will not have been surprised at recent developments in Pakistan, in which army chief Ashfaq Kayani enforced the surrender of the Pakistan Peoples Party-led government to the demands of the Pakistan Muslim League-N chief, Nawaz Sharif.
The core purpose of Kayani's institution
is to ensure the continued supremacy of Wahhabi Punjabis over all other groups
in Pakistan, a mission that it has fulfilled thus far.
Uppity non-Punjabis, such as assassinated
former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, were shown their place for daring to talk
of a genuinely federal structure for the country. Now it is the turn of her
husband, President Asif Ali Zardari,
to be at the business end of Kayani's swagger stick.
The "honest" former -- and soon
to be reinstated -- chief justice of Pakistan, Iftikhar Chaudhry, has been a
member in good standing of the Punjabi supremacist brigade since his years as a
lawyer. He detests Zardari and has only kind words about his champion and
fellow Punjabi, Nawaz Sharif. This despite the fact that the Sharif family has
acquired an asset base of close to $2 billion, entirely because of its
proximity to the military and other levers of patronage in Pakistan.
The Sharifs are far wealthier than the
Zardaris, in a culture where wealth comes less from initiative or from
enterprise than from muscle power. The difference is that the Sharif family is
Wahhabi, and has been active in funding the Jamaat-i-Islami (Pakistan) since
its early days in business four decades back, while the Zardaris are Sufi, a
philosophy that places them in opposition to the military-backed Wahhabi
network in Pakistan.
Sharif ally Prime Minister Yousaf Raza
Gilani, who from the start has sought to ensure the elimination of his nominal
superior Zardari, also has Jamaat links, having been an early backer of the
founder of Wahhabism in Pakistan, Gen. Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq.
According to individuals in the PML-N,
the humiliating climb-down by Zardari came as a result of the silent backing
given to the plans of Kayani by Barack Obama adviser Colin Powell and U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, both of whom backed the reinstatement of
Chaudhry and the return to power in Punjab province of the Sharif brothers.
What Powell and Clinton perhaps failed to
take serious note of was the fact that the street uprising orchestrated by
Kayani and Sharif had the support of the Jamaat-i-Islami (Pakistan), an
organization that believes in the feasibility of establishing a Wahhabi
caliphate throughout the world, and certainly in India, a country ruled for
more than six centuries by Mughal dynasties.
It is the Jamaat that has been
orchestrating the opposition to Pakistan's participation in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization's attempted war against the Taliban, and seeks a total Allied
pullout from Afghanistan and Pakistan. Jamaat leaders have been in regular
contact with the Sharif brothers and army headquarters since Zardari took
office less than a year ago, working in tandem with Gilani to force the
president's removal.
Zardari is the individual who backed an
unpopular policy of bringing to account the perpetrators of last November's
attacks in Mumbai, and gave tacit backing to U.S. efforts to take out the
Taliban leadership through the use of airpower. Both these policies were sabotaged
covertly by the Pakistani army, a fact not unknown to NATO commanders and to
the incoming U.S. envoy to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry.
By helping to reward what was essentially
a mob masquerading as an expression of "democratic" sentiment,
Clinton has opened the door to a future series of orchestrated street protests,
this time by the Taliban and elements friendly to it. This, according to
individuals within Pakistan tracking such developments, will
"spontaneously" erupt should NATO come anywhere close to taking out
the Taliban's capabilities.
The Sharif brothers, with the blessing of
the military, today control the streets. Tomorrow it will be the Taliban's
turn.
Zardari, aware of the financial
vulnerability of the Sharif brothers, was confident that a show of strength
would have brought them to heel, and that the military would not, in the
present international climate, have dared to intervene the way it did in 1999
against Nawaz Sharif.
Ironically, it was those international
forces who daily repeat the mantra of a "moderate" Pakistan that
sided with the allies of the Jamaat-i-Islami (Pakistan), which -- unlike its
Indian counterpart, which is moderate and has issued a fatwa against terrorism
-- regards the Taliban as an associate entity. In Bangladesh,
"democratic" protests similarly orchestrated by the men in uniform
ensured the paralysis of civil authority and a steady expansion of the
influence of jihadists.
Zardari represented an alternative that
seems now to have been all but snuffed out. The next stage in the Kayani-Sharif
drama is the stripping of presidential powers from Zardari, followed by more
"spontaneous" demonstrations. These would lead to a fresh election,
in which the Punjabis would return to center stage through the victory of Nawaz
Sharif.
By then, Gilani will have understood the
dangers of supping with a very short spoon, but it will be too late. The
reality is that the PPP can survive the present assault only through unity,
which the army seems determined to prevent.
However, it would be premature to write
the epitaph of Asif Ali Zardari. Should the Pakistani president deem it
necessary, he would be able to mobilize in huge numbers Sindhis, Pashtuns,
Baloch and other groups that have been under the heel of the Wahhabi Punjabis
since the1970s. Should he press for genuine federalism, and for a more
equitable representation of disadvantaged communities within the Pakistani
military, such steps would resonate among a people chafing under supremacists.
During the 1960s, what was then West Pakistan
ran the eastern part of the country as a colony, using Bengalis in the military
to help them in this task. After the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971, India's
Indira Gandhi made the mistake of refusing Bangladeshi hero Sheik Mujibur
Rahman's request that at least a few officers of the Pakistani army -- 93,000
of whom were prisoners of war -- be tried for genocide.
She also left alone the Bengali component
of the army, which subsequently regenerated itself as the Bangladeshi army, and
from the start adopted the longstanding policy of subservience to the dictates
of the men in uniform in Pakistan.
Gandhi had fallen under the spell of the
charming Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the perfume-loving father of Benazir Bhutto, and
lost in negotiations at Simla in 1972 all that her military had gained on the
battlefield.
Nearly four decades after the Bangladesh
debacle, the Bourbons in the Pakistani army evidently have learned nothing.
Once the country was vivisected, the western part itself was partitioned into
Baloch, Pashtun, Sindhi and Punjabi components, with the latter dominating the
other three much as the West Pakistanis had ruled over the East during the two
decades prior to the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971.
As this column has emphasized, what is
taking place in Pakistan is not a "war on corruption" headed by a
fearless judge. Chaudhry's backers, the Sharif brothers, would not survive the
Obama vetting process even for a few hours.
It is not a "battle for
democracy" either. Zardari and his party were elected to power, and
paralyzing a country is not -- except perhaps in the view of the U.S. State
Department -- the prescribed method in a genuine democracy of resolving
differences of opinion.
What has taken place is the assertion of
Wahhabi Punjabi supremacy over the country, a victory that will have immediate
consequences not only on NATO's operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but
also on the unity of Pakistan.
-(Professor M.D. Nalapat is vice chair of
the Manipal Advanced Research Group, UNESCO peace chair, and professor of
geopolitics at Manipal University. Copyright M.D. Nalapat.)
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