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Favorable Confusion Might Keep Pakistan Out Of Civil War

India hails Pakistan polls, hopes for regional peace
India on Wednesday welcomed elections in Pakistan and said it hoped to see fresh talks as part of the slow-moving peace process with its nuclear-armed South Asian rival. "The government of India welcome the fact that the people of Pakistan have been able to express themselves clearly and in a democratic manner on their own future," foreign ministry spokesman Navtaj Sarna said in New Delhi. "India wishes to see Pakistan develop and prosper within a stable democratic order," he told reporters. On the peace process launched in 2004, the spokesman said: "India stands ready to resume the composite dialogue process as soon as a duly constituted government is in place in Pakistan." "It remains our hope that we will be able to resolve outstanding issues and build a mutually beneficial relationship with Pakistan in an atmosphere free of violence and terrorism," he added. India accuses Islamabad of fomenting a revolt in disputed Kashmir, the cause of two of the three wars it has fought with Pakistan since 1947.
by Arnaud De Borchgrave
Washington (UPI) Feb 20, 2008
Free elections in Pakistan Feb. 18 were to be the first step in bringing a dysfunctional nuclear power back to democratic stability. The preliminary first step was a deal with the pro-al-Qaida Taliban chief in the tribal areas. The new Pakistani army chief of staff, Gen.

Ashfaq Parvez Kiyani, and the "amir" of Tehrik-e-Taliban-Pakistan, Baitullah Mehsud, agreed to a cease-fire, as well as the withdrawal of the Pakistani army from South Waziristan, one of the seven tribal agencies along the Afghan border (known as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas).

As a result, to mark election day there was "only" one political assassination in Lahore, 24 terrorist incidents in the rest of the country, including two deadly attacks on election rallies in the Northwest Frontier province, the ambush of a Pakistani army convoy withdrawing from North Waziristan in which a major was killed -- all done by extremist groups that are not part of Mehsud's Taliban organization.

The election results, as expected, produced enough votes for the two largest parties -- the late Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party and Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League (PMLN) -- to form a coalition.

Only one small problem: Neither one was willing to work with President Pervez Musharraf, who got himself re-elected by the outgoing National Assembly, which had been rigged originally in his favor. Musharraf said he planned to serve out his term until 2012.

Democratic stability took a turn for the worse as Asif Zardari, Bhutto's widower, and Sharif conferred on how they could bring about the impeachment of Musharraf without a parliamentary majority. Sharif, who had been deposed by Musharraf in 1999 and exiled to Saudi Arabia for 10 years, now let it be known he favored A.Q. Khan, the notorious nuclear black marketer, as Musharraf's successor.

As the father of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, Khan is arguably Pakistan's most popular idol since the foundation of the republic 61 years ago.

After U.S. intelligence produced the proof of how Khan had sold nuclear know-how to America's enemies -- notably North Korea and Iran -- Musharraf administered Khan a slight tap on the wrist: a public confession in English on television and confined to house arrest, but allowed to keep the loot. He is now confined to Pakistan and not allowed to travel abroad.

Even more disconcerting for the Bush administration -- and its successor -- Sharif does not endorse the U.S. "war on terror." He is committed to restoring the old judiciary fired by Musharraf for its interference in "Bush's war on terror." The dismissed chief justice kept pushing Musharraf to get information from Washington on missing prisoners who had been sent to Guantanamo and other secret detention locations.

Throughout the election campaign, Sharif hammered at the theme of missing Pakistani prisoners in U.S. hands. Musharraf was always at a loss to explain where they were. Sharif enjoys a majority in Punjab and can easily form a regional coalition with Zardari's PPP. On the other hand, the PPP can do the same with Sharif's party and put together a centrist coalition at the national level.

Cynics now say the Saudis have the remote control. It was at Saudi insistence that Musharraf allowed Sharif to return from exile in Saudi Arabia last fall. But Musharraf evidently has other plans that would neutralize Sharif -- and force him to wave his true colors. The new coalition Musharraf has in mind would consist of his own party -- Pakistan Muslim League (Q) -- with Zardari's PPP, but without PML(N), thus marginalizing Sharif.

Sharif is the man who kept Musharraf's plane circling over Karachi in 1999 until it almost ran out of fuel. The army removed oil drums along the runway just in time for the C-130 to land with less than five minutes of fuel in its tanks. Sharif was promptly deposed and arrested -- and the army took over for the fourth time since Pakistan independence in 1947.

Now hovering in the background as a potential prime minister in waiting is former President Farooq Leghari, the man who fired Benazir Bhutto during her second stint as prime minister. One of the plans now bruited is for Leghari to succeed Chaudry Shujaat Hussain, president of the pro-Musharraf PML (Q).

Leghari, in turn, with U.S. and Musharraf's support, would attract second-tier leaders who would split from PPP and PML(N) to create a broad coalition committed to (1) the war on terror and (2) economic progress with continued U.S. aid.

The best election news was the defeat of the MMA coalition of six politico-religious extremist parties that now must abandon the regional governments they control in Baluchistan and the Northwest Frontier province. This clean sweep also makes U.S. clandestine operations in FATA a lot easier for the United States.

The backing and filling and deal-making behind the scenes seemed to be of little interest to the populace. Food prices had shot skyward and most people were afraid of Election Day violence.

Many of the polling stations were almost empty until noon. In all previous elections, the all-powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency tampered with the results to adjust numbers up or down. A political leader considered a threat to the powers that be was given a smaller victory than the one he or she had achieved at the ballot box.

This time, ISI clearly was determined to block the two-thirds majority in the National Assembly for the PPP and PML(N) together that would have paved the way for Musharraf's impeachment.

The United States, United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia were determined to prevent Musharraf's humiliation in a manner that would have been interpreted by jihadis as punishment for his cooperation with the United States against al-Qaida.

The United States took advantage of pre-election confusion to "terminate with maximum prejudice" senior al-Qaida leader Abu Laith al-Libi. Good, real-time CIA intelligence from North Waziristan flagged a convoy of vehicles transporting seven al-Qaida operatives, including one that appeared to be of high rank.

An unmanned Predator was quickly launched and circled over a walled compound where the convoy had stopped. It was the home of a Taliban commander. CIA

and Air Force operators at a base in Nevada tracked the Predator and its target on a giant screen, as did supervisors at CIA's Langley HQ in Virginia. Two Hellfire missiles vaporized the compound, killing 13, including the Libyan-born al-Libi, No. 5 in al-Qaida's chain of command.

Musharraf has banned U.S. personnel on the ground in FATA. But there isn't much he can do to prevent Afghan agents working for the CIA and Hellfire missiles from drones controlled from Nevada.

earlier related report
Pakistan's Musharraf rejects opposition calls to quit
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf rejected demands to quit Wednesday and called for a "harmonious coalition" as victorious opposition parties mulled a grouping that could force the key US ally from power.

Musharraf was making his first official comments since Monday's crucial parliamentary vote, which left him fighting for his political life after his allies suffered a heavy defeat.

"The President emphasised the need for harmonious coalition in the interest of peaceful governance, development and progress of Pakistan," a foreign ministry statement said after Musharraf met a visiting US congressman.

"The elections have strengthened the moderate forces in the country," it quoted Musharraf as saying.

Nawaz Sharif, the man Musharraf removed from office in a 1999 coup, and the widower of assassinated former premier Benazir Bhutto both said they wanted to work with other opposition groups after the polls.

Sharif urged Musharraf to quit, while Asif Ali Zardari said he would not work with anyone associated with the party that backed Musharraf in the last parliament.

A statement from Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) on Wednesday "recalled General Musharraf's recent statements that if the parties supporting him were defeated in the elections, then he would resign from his office."

Despite the intensifying pressure on Musharraf, he told an American newspaper that he has no plans to resign.

Asked by the Wall Street Journal whether he would resign or retire, Musharraf said: "No, not yet. We have to move forward in a way that we bring about a stable democratic government to Pakistan."

US President George W. Bush embraced the elections as "a significant victory" for democracy and said he hoped the new government would "be friends of the United States."

Meanwhile US senator and poll monitor John Kerry told reporters in India that Musharraf displayed "a kind of grace in accepting" the defeat of his allies.

Zardari might meet with Sharif on Thursday for their first encounter since the election, said Farhatullah Babar, spokesman for Bhutto's party.

A firebrand lawyer detained by Musharraf since November, Aitzaz Ahsan, called on Tuesday for the president to resign.

Opinion polls before the election showed that up to three-quarters of Pakistanis questioned said it was time for him to go.

Bangladesh's foreign minister, Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, said he hoped the election "will usher in a new dawn of stability and prosperity in Pakistan." Bangladesh won independence from Pakistan after a war in 1971.

China said it was pleased that elections in its long-time ally went calmly and urged the nation to maintain political stability.

With votes counted in 258 out of 272 constituencies, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and Sharif's party had a combined total of 153 seats, the election commission said. The former ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Q and its allies together had 58.

Results also showed a near total defeat for hardline Islamic parties that under the previous administration ruled Pakistan's North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan.

A hostile parliament threatens the political survival of Musharraf, who could theoretically face impeachment if the opposition gets a two-thirds majority.

Analysts said Musharraf's most likely strategy would be to woo Bhutto's party and split it from Sharif's by preying on the one-time rift between the ex-prime ministers.

Bhutto was killed in a December gun and suicide attack on a campaign rally.

Musharraf, who shed his dual role as army chief late last year, had already been weakened by a bruising months-long stand-off with the country's deposed chief justice and deepening unpopularity.

To bolster his position he has relied on backing from the United States -- and financial aid of 10 billion dollars, mainly military, since he joined the Washington-led 'war on terror' in 2001.

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Afghanistan plays down Taliban threat
Kabul (AFP) Feb 11, 2008
Afghanistan's defence ministry said Monday the threat from the Taliban-led insurgency was "not as serious" as it was being portrayed outside the country.







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