Pakistan’s Dictator
June 11, 2007
If Gen. Pervez Musharraf were the democratic leader he indignantly
insists he is, he would not be so busy threatening independent news
outlets, arresting hundreds of opposition politicians and berating
parliamentary leaders and ministers from his own party for insufficient
loyalty to his arbitrary and widely unpopular policies.
But nobody takes General Musharraf’s democratic claims seriously
anymore, except for the Bush administration, which has put itself in the
embarrassing position of propping up the Muslim world’s most powerful
military dictator as an essential ally in its half-baked campaign to
promote democracy throughout the Muslim world. Washington needs to
disentangle America, quickly, from the general’s damaging embrace.
Ever since his high-handed dismissal of the country’s independent-minded
chief justice in March, the general has been busily digging himself into
an ever deeper political hole.
Last week, he issued a decree giving himself increased powers to shut
down independent television channels, but under mounting pressure he
withdrew it over the weekend. More than 300 local political leaders in
Punjab were arrested in an effort to head off protests against the
decree. Still, thousands of lawyers, journalists and political activists
gathered to protest the firing, the censorship and the general’s
continued rule. Pakistan seems to be rapidly approaching a critical
turning point, with a choice between intensified repression and
instability or an orderly transition back to democratic rule.
Were Washington now to begin distancing itself from the general, it
would greatly encourage civic-minded Pakistanis to step up the pressure
for free national elections. That’s a process the chief justice was
trying to make possible when he was fired. And that is what Pakistan’s
last two democratically elected leaders — Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz
Sharif — are both campaigning for from abroad. The United States should
be supporting these efforts, not continuing to make excuses for General
Musharraf.
Pakistan has its share of violent Islamic extremists, military and
civilian. But they are clearly in the minority. The best hope for
diluting their political, and geopolitical, influence lies not in
heating the pressure cooker of repression, but in promoting the earliest
possible democratic elections.
