SADDAM HUSSEIN & PERVEZ MUSHARRAF
An Open Letter To American Friends
B. Raman
Dear friends of the USA,
1. The US has successfully overthrown
President Saddam Hussein of Iraq. Before and during the war, President George
Bush repeatedly emphasised that this was not a war against Iraq and the Iraqi
people, but against the dictatorial regime of Saddam for harbouring
international terrorists, for acquiring weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and
for destroying democracy and suppressing his people.
2. Addressing a joint press conference in
September last year, President Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair of the UK
referred to the dangers of the leakage of Iraq's WMD into the hands of
terrorists and said that his removal and the seizure of his WMD stocks were,
therefore, necessary in the interest of international peace and security.
3. Now that Saddam is gone, let us examine the
track record of Pakistan and its military dictator, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, under
all the three heads used against Saddam, namely, support to terrorists,
proliferation of WMD to rogue States and terrorist groups and suppression of
democracy.
4. Let us take support to terrorism first. The
following facts speak for themselves:
* In March,2003, the Lahore police filed a
case in the High Court against a doctor accused of collaborating with Al Qaeda.
The High Court ruled the charge inadmissible even at the preliminary stage. It
pointed out that Al Qaeda had not been banned in Pakistan as a terrorist
organisation under the Anti-Terrorism Act and hence belonging to it or
collaborating with it was not an offence. The Government said that by
oversight it had not banned Al Qaeda and promised to do so immediately. It is
yet to be done.
* According to a report dated April 11,2003,
of the Associated Press of Pakistan, a Government-owned news agency, during a
visit to Peshawar in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) the previous day,
Musharraf was asked about the activities of Al Qaeda in Pakistani territory.
He replied (to quote the APP):"I do not know any Al Qaeda. " That is exactly
what Saddam had said when Gen. Colin Powell, the US Secretary of State, during
one of his interventions in the UN Security Council, accused him of complicity
with Al Qaeda.
* In the beginning of 2002, bin Laden and
other leaders and members of Al Qaeda moved into Pakistan from Afghanistan to
escape capture by the American special forces searching for them in the
mountains and caves of Afghanistan. Initially they took shelter in the
mosques and madrasas (religious schools) of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP)
and the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan adjoining the
Afghan border. They then spread to the interior towns and cities of Pakistan,
away from the border as they were afraid that the US special forces operating
in Afghan territory might cross into Pakistani territory and arrest them.
* Musharraf denied that they had crossed over
into Pakistani territory and taken shelter in its towns and cities. Despite
this, officers of the USA's Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) established
the presence of Abu Zubaidah, the then No. 3 of Al Qaeda, in Faislabad, a big
town in the Punjab province of Pakistan, in March,2002; of Ramzi Binalshibh,
another top leader of Al Qaeda at Karachi, Pakistan's biggest and most
important city, in September,2002; and of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, described by
US and French counter-terrorism experts as bin Laden's operations chief and as
the man who orchestrated the terrorist strikes of 9/11 at Rawalpindi in March,
2003. Rawalpindi is called the twin city of Islamabad, Pakistan's capital. It
is where the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Pakistan Army are located. It
is where Musharraf has his house as the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS). It is
where many retired and serving officers of Pakistan's Army and Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI) live. When confronted by the FBI with evidence of their
presence in these cities, Musharraf had no other alternative but to arrest
them and hand them over. Apart from these three instances, there is not a
single case since 9/11 in which Musharraf's police and intelligence agencies,
on their own without pressure from the FBI, had established the presence of
the absconding leaders of Al Qaeda and taken the initiative in arresting them
and handing them over to the US.
* Abu Zubaidah was living in the house of a
leader of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), a Pakistani terrorist organisation, with
its headquarters at Muridke, near Lahore, which has a mosque and a guest house
constructed by bin Laden. bin Laden used to stay in this guest house and pray
in this mosque during his visits to Pakistan in the 1990s. All the
terrorists, who participated in the 9/11 terrorist incidents, had stayed in
this guest house on their way to Al Qaeda's training camps in Afghan territory
and on their way back to the US for carrying out their terrorist attacks. The
LET is a member of bin Laden's International Islamic Front (IIF). Along with
Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM), another member of the IIF, it had organised an attack
on the Indian Parliament in December, 2001. After this incident, the US State
Department designated the LET and the JEM as Foreign Terrorist Organisations
under a 1996 law. Under US pressure, Musharraf too declared them as terrorist
organisations and banned them on January 15,2002, and arrested their leaders
and cadres. But, he did not extend the ban on their activities to
Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK), the Northern Areas (Gilgit and Baltistan) and
the FATA. The POK and the Northern Areas are adjoining the Indian border. It
is from there that the ISI organises terrorist operations in Indian territory,
using these and other Pakistani terrorist organisations, which are members of
the IIF. The FATA is adjoining the Afghan border. It is from there that the
remnants of Al Qaeda, the Taliban and Gulbuddin Heckmatyar's Hizbe Islami
organise attacks on the US forces operating in Afghan territory. After some
weeks, Musharraf released the arrested leaders and cadres of the LET and the
JEM on the ground that there was no evidence of their involvement in
terrorism. These organisations started operating openly again under new names
and played an active role in the various anti-US demonstrations in different
Pakistani cities during the war in Iraq. Prof.Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed, the
leader of the LET, visited Rawalpindi and participated in an anti-US
demonstration there and made a speech calling for a jihad against the US. He
has since claimed that some of his men had been "martyred" in the jihad
against the US forces in Iraq and buried there and promised financial
assistance to their families. The annual conventions of the LET are attended
by many serving and retired officers of the Pakistani military and its nuclear
and missile establishment.
* Ramzi Binalshibh was found living in a flat
in Karachi belonging to a local member of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JEL) of
Pakistan. Khalid Sheikh Mohammad was arrested from the house of a women's
wing leader of the JEI in Rawalpindi. The JEI is the most important and active
Islamic fundamentalist party of Pakistan, which is virulently anti-US and
fiercely pro-Taliban and pro-Al Qaeda since 9/11. It is very close to
Pakistan's military and intelligence agencies. Lt.Gen.(retd) Hamid Gul,
former Director-General of the ISI in the 1980s, is an active member of the
JEI. In the 1990s, he used to be the head of the Pasban, a militant wing of
the JEI. Since 9/11, he and the JEI leaders have been alleging that the 9/11
terrorist strikes in the US were carried out not by Al Qaeda, but by Mossad,
the Israeli intelligence agency, to defame Islam and provoke the US into
attacking Islamic countries. As proof of this, Gul has been alleging that
none of the Jewish persons working in any of the establishments in New York's
World Trade Centre attended office on 9/11 on secret instructions from Mossad
and that, as a result, no Jewish person was killed. In a media briefing at
the ISI headquarters after the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
Maj.Gen.Rashid Quereshi, the media spokesman of Musharraf, strongly defended
the JEI against allegations of its involvement with Al Qaeda. He claimed that
the involvement of some members of the JEI in sheltering some Al Qaeda leaders
did not mean that the JEI as an organisation was involved. The JEI is the
leading member of the six-party fundamentalist coalition called the
Muttahida-Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) which came to power in the NWFP after the
elections of October, 2002. In Balochistan ther MMA has formed a coalition
Government with the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League ( Qaid-e-Azam). The
impressive electoral performance of this coalition in October last was
facilitated by actions of Musharraf such as breaking Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan
People's Party Parliamentarians (PPPP) in NWFP and withdrawal of the pending
cases under the Anti-Terrorism Act against the members of the coalition who
wanted to contest the elections. After coming to power, the coalition
released all the cadres of terrorist organisations still in detention. It has
provided shelter to the surviving members of Al Qaeda, the Taliban and
Hizbe-Islami in the mosques and madrasas of the NWFP and Balochistan and asked
the provincial police not to co-operate with the FBI in its investigations and
raids for arresting the absconding terrorists.
* Amongst other terrorists against whom cases
were withdrawn by Musharraf to enable their election was Maulana Azam Tariq,
the leader of the Sunni extremist Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP). Its militant
wing called the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ) was banned as a terrorist organisation
by Musharraf himself on August 14, 2001, and the SSP was banned on January 15,
2002. Despite these bans, the Election Commission did not disqualify the
candidature of Maulana Azam Tariq, who managed to get elected to the National
Assembly. The LEJ, which is also a member of bin Laden's IIF, was designated
by the US State Department as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation last year
following its involvement, along with the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) and the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI), in the kidnapping and murder of Daniel
Pearl, the US journalist ; the murder of the wife of an American diplomat and
their daughter through a grenade attack in an Islamabad church; a suicide car
bomb explosion outside a Karachi hotel which killed some French submarine
engineers; another suicide car bomb explosion outside the US Consulate-General
in Karachi; an attack on a group of German and other foreign tourists
travelling by road to Xinjiang in China along the Karakoram Highway; and
attacks on Christian establishments in different parts of Pakistan. Despite
this, Maulana Azam Tariq remains untouched and moves around without any action
against him.
* The HUM, under its then name of
Harkat-ul-Ansar (HUA), was designated by the US as a Foreign Terrorist
Organisation in October,1997, because of its involvement in the kidnapping of
some American and other Western tourists in India's Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) in
1995. One of these kidnapped tourists, an American, managed to escape from
custody. The fate of the remaining is not known, but they are feared dead long
ago. Despite this, Musharraf has not yet formally banned the HUM as a
terrorist organisation under Pakistan's Anti-Terrorism Act. Nor has he banned
the HUJI. Both the HUM and the HUJI are also members of bin Laden's IIF. Last
year, the HUM started operating under the name HUM (Al-Alami meaning
International). Some of its leaders have recently been convicted by a Karachi
court and sentenced to death for their confessed involvement in the planning
and execution of the car bomb explosion outside the US Consulate. Despite
this, there is as yet no ban on this organisation.
* Musharraf has been making contradictory
statements on Al Qaeda and bin Laden. Sometimes he says he is not aware of any
Al Qaeda. On other occasions, he says there could be some members of Al Qaeda
in Pakistani territory and claims to be co-operating with the US in arresting
them. Initially, he said that bin Laden must be dead. Then he said that while
there was a possibility that bin Laden might be still alive, he was definitely
not in Pakistan. He has recently admitted the possibility that bin Laden
might be in Pakistan, but denied any knowledge of his whereabouts. All the
recorded video and audio cassettes of bin Laden calling for jihad against the
USA and Israel were handed over to Al Jazeera either in Karachi or Islamabad.
The Pakistani authorities have till now not taken any effective action to
prevent the dissemination of these cassettes (calling for terrorist attacks)
from Pakistani territory.
* The case relating to the kidnapping and
murder of Daniel Pearl is being adjourned month after month under some pretext
or the other. A special anti-terrorism court had found Omar Sheikh and his
accomplices guilty and sentenced Omar himself and another person to death.
Others were sentenced to life imprisonment. They went in appeal against the
conviction. The hearing in the appeal is yet to start and has already been
delayed for eight months. The Karachi media has been alleging since July last
that Fazal Karim, a terrorist who has admitted to having slit the throat of
Pearl was in the custody of the Pakistani authorities and that for some reason
they have not prosecuted him. Till recently, the Pakistani authorities denied
these reports. Only earlier this month, in response to a court directive in a
habeas corpus case have they admitted his whereabouts, but they are still
silent on his involvement in the murder of Pearl and are avoiding explaining
why they are not prosecuting him.
* Under the UN Security Council Resolution
No.1373., the Pakistani authorities were required to freeze the bank accounts
of terrorist organisations. Before doing so last year, the ISI tipped off
these organisations of the impending action, thereby enabling them to withdraw
or transfer the bulk of the money to other accounts in different names. As a
result, only Rs. 900 were found in the account of the JEM, US $ 252 in the
account of Al Qaeda held in the name of Ayman-al-Zawahiri, its No. 2, and Rs.
4742 in the account of the HUM. Pakistani Rs. 65 are equivalent to one US
dollar.
5. How about US and other Western civilians
killed by terrorists operating from Pakistani territory? Here are the facts and
figures:
* The assassination of two CIA officers
outside the CIA headquarters in Langley by Mir Aimal Kansi, a Pakistani
national belonging to the SSP, in January,1993. He was found guilty by a US
court and was recently executed in the USA. When his body arrived in Pakistan,
speeches were made by the fundamentalist members of the NWFP and Balochistan
provincial assemblies hailing him as a martyr in the Islamic cause.
* The explosion in the World Trade Centre in
New York in February, 1993. Ramzi Yousef, a Pakistani national, was one of the
principal accused in the case. He escaped to Pakistan after the explosion. He
and Khalid Sheikh Mohammad went to Manila and planned to blow up a number of
US aircraft. The Filippino authorities were alerted to their presence and
activities following a fire in their flat. They escaped to Pakistan, where
Ramzi was arrested by the Benazir Government in 1995 and handed over to the
USA where he has since been convicted.
* The kidnapping and murder of five Western
tourists by the HUM in J&K in 1995.
* The assassination of an American diplomat
and two US oil company executives in Karachi in different incidents in 1995.
The SSP was suspected.
* The 9/11 terrorist strikes in US territory,
which resulted in the death of over 3500 innocent civilians. The perpetrators
of these strikes stayed in the guest house of the LET at Muridke while on
their way to Afghanistan for training and on their way back to the US. The
money for the operation was transmitted to them through Pakistan. Khalid
Sheikh Mohammad and Ramzi Binalshibh, both of whom had assisted bin Laden in
orchestrating these strikes, were found and arrested in Pakistani territory.
* The kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl
in Karachi in in 2002.
* The murder of French submarine engineers in
Karachi in 2002.
* The murder of the wife of an American
diplomat and their daughter in an Islamabad church in 2002.
* The car bomb explosion outside the US
Consulate in Karachi in 2002 killed many Pakistani civilians, but there were
no American casualties even though the bomb was directed at the Consulate.
6. Saddam Hussein had ruthlessly supressed both
Shia and Sunni fundamentalism. He had banned loudspeakers in mosques, madrasas,
receipt of foreign money by religious elements,and involvement in political
activities by Mullas and Imams. How about Musharraf?
* In January,2002, Musharraf had promised to
put an end to the use of madrasas for promoting terrorism, but he has not yet
done so.
He put severe restrictions on the political
activities and demonstrations of non-religious parties in order to prevent
them from mounting a challenge to his rule. He got the leading lights of
these parties involved in a plethora of fabricated cases to prevent them from
contesting the elections. He banished Nawaz Sharif, former Prime Minister,
from the country and prevented Benazir from returning to the country by
threatening to arrest her if she did so.
* But, he gave all facilities to the
religious fundamentalist parties for holding public meetings and
demonstrations. He withdrew all pending cases against them, even under the
Anti-Terrorism Act, to enable them to contest the elections.
* Before Musharraf staged the coup and seized
power in October,1999, religious fundamentalist parties in Pakistan never used
to get more than about three per cent of the votes polled. Thanks to the
assistance from him, they got 11 per cent in the October elections and have
come to power in two provinces, which are vital to the US from the point of
view of its war against terrorism. If Musharraf continues to favour and assist
them in the same manner, they may one day come to power in Islamabad itself
and get their finger on the nuclear button.
Despite all this, he is looked upon by the US
as a stalwart ally and showered with one economic bonanza after another.
7. How about proliferation of WMD by Pakistan
to rogue states and terrorists? Again let facts speak for themselves:
* Pakistan has had a long history of a
military supply relationship with the rogue state of North Korea, which poses
a serious threat to the security of not only the East Asian countries, but
also the USA itself.
* In the 1980s, it allowed clandestine
military supplies from North Korea for Iran to transit through its territory.
* Under an agreement signed with North Korea
in 1993, it has been receiving from North Korea medium and long-range missiles
capable of carrying nuclear weapons.
* It paid for these missiles by diverting
wheat purchased from the USA and Australia and in cash since 9/11, by taking
advantage of the large cash flow from the USA and other countries. But for
these wheat diversions and cash payments, the rogue State of North Korea would
not have been able to withstand the economic sanctions of the international
community against it as it has done.
* In return for the missiles, Pakistan also
trained North Korean nuclear scientists in its establishments, allowed North
Korean scientists to attend its nuclear tests at Chagai in May 1998 and
transferred uranium enrichment technology to North Korea. Pakistani nuclear
scientists have been frequently visiting North Korea.
8.How about dangers of terrorists getting hold
of WMD? The only country in the world where this danger is real is Pakistan for
the following reasons:
* Pakistan is the only state-sponsor of
international terrorism in the world which has a large WMD capability acquired
through the assistance of China and North Korea.
* There is sizeable penetration of Islamic
fundamentalist elements into its Armed Forces and scientific establishment.
* Pakistan is the only Islamic country in the
world,where fundamentalist and jihadi organisations speak of the right and
religious obligation of the Muslims to acquire WMD and use it, if necessary,to
protect Islam. They project their WMD capability as belonging to the whole of
Islamic Ummah. They describe their atom bomb as the Islamic bomb. Bin Laden
picked up his nuclear concepts from the mullas of Pakistan.
* Last year, at the instance of the FBI,
Pakistani authorities had to detain two of their retired nuclear scientists
(Sultan Bashirudeen and Abdul Majid) for visiting Kandahar and maintaining
contact with bin Laden. Though sufficient evidence to warrant their
prosecution was not found,their bank accounts were frozen under the UN
Security Council Resolution No. 1373 and they have been kept under
surveillance.
* A.Q.Khan, the self-styled father of
Pakistan's atomic bomb, used to visit Iraq and North Korea clandestinely and
Musharraf had to remove him from active duty in the nuclear establishment
under US pressure.
9. Pakistan has a facade of a democracy since
October last. Is it real democracy?
* Under Pakistan's Constitution, the
President of the country is to be elected by an electoral college consisting
of the Federal Parliament and the provincial Assemblies. Since Musharraf was
not confident of the support of the members of the non-religious parties, he
got himself elected as the President in a rigged referendum for which there is
no provision, before ordering the elections of October.
* Under Pakistan's electoral laws, a serving
Government servant cannot contest elections to any office. Even after leaving
Government service, he or she cannot contest for two years. Musharraf granted
himself a special exemption from this provision to enable him to continue to
hold charge as the COAS even after getting himself elected as the President.
* Under the rules of appointment and
promotions of the Pakistani Armed Forces, a COAS can hold office only for
three years from the date of his appointment. Musharraf has granted himself a
special exemption from this rule. He has already held office as COAS for four
years and intends doing so for another five years. He says this is necessary
in Pakistan's supreme national interest.
* Under Pakistan's Constitution, all
amendments to the Constitution are to be voted by a two-thirds majority by the
two Houses of the Federal Parliament and, in some cases, also approved by the
provincial Assemblies. Before the elections, Musharraf, under a Legal
Framework Order (LFO), promulgated a number of constitutional amendments
granting himself the powers to appoint the chiefs of the armed forces, the
judges and chief justics of the provincial and Supreme courts and the
Governors of the provinces; to dismiss the elected Prime Minister and his
Council of Ministers; to constitute a military-dominated National Security
Council; and to dissolve the Parliament. He has rejected the persistent demand
of the opposition that he should resign as the COAS, seek re-election as the
President in the manner prescribed in the Constitution and submit the LFO to
the Parliament for its approval by a two-thirds majority.
10.If Saddam murdered democracy, so has
Musharraf. An objective consideration of what has been stated above would show
that Pakistan is a fit case for regime change through pre-emptive action by the
USA and the rest of the international community, but we do not suggest military
action against it. Military action is always messy, creates more problems than
it solves and kills a large number of innocent civilians for the misdeeds and
crimes of their rulers. What is called for is political and economic pre-emptive
action as follows:
* Stop all economic assistance to Pakistan so
long as Musharraf continues in power.
* Force him to resign and hand over full
powers to the political leadership.
* Force the Army to go back to the barracks
and obey the political leadership.
* After the political leadership assumes full
powers, resume all economic assistance and seek its co-operation to deal with
terrorism originating from Pakistani territory, to stop flow of WMD technology
to rogue States like North Korea and to prevent the terrorists and jihadis
from getting hold of its WMD assets.
God bless America and give it the wisdom and
foresight to act before it is too late.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (Retired), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Convenor,
Advisory Committee, Observer Research Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. E-Mail:
corde@vsnl.com
)
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