Musharraf Gets Tough . . .

Gartenstein-Ross, Daveed

Musharraf Gets Tough . . . But don't get your hopes up for a second act. by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross In a country that for the past year has consistently ceded ground to terrorists, the storming of...

...Lal Masjid leaders had recruited fighters and suicide bombers to fight coalition forces in Afghanistan...
...His previous attempts to order military strikes against the Lal Masjid had met with rebuffs...
...In fact, the assassins came so close with their makeshift antiaircraft gun mounted on the roof of an apartment building that they probably knew Musharraf's flight plan...
...In dealing with the Lal Masjid, Musharraf consistently followed up tough talk with concessions, right up until the raid began...
...Abdur Rashid Ghazi and his brother Mohammed Abdul Aziz were known for issuing fatwas in favor of what one U.S...
...In fact, the situation could get worse—and probably will...
...The fact that he seems to be governing without a strategy—acting erratically and in a flatly contradictory fashion—makes many analysts fear that he is losing his grip on power...
...Recently they kidnapped seven Chinese nationals whom they accused of running a brothel...
...Pakistan essentially ceded the Waziristan and Bajaur tribal agencies to the Taliban and al Qaeda by announcing "peace deals" providing that the Pakistani military would no longer carry out strikes there...
...Even as Pakistan acted against the Lal Masjid, Fazlullah took to the FM radio airwaves, demanding that his supporters avenge the mosque by fighting the government...
...Although Pakistan's military said no senior officers were involved, some observers think this announcement reflected a desire to avoid facing hard facts...
...intelligence recently concluded that al Qaeda's operating capabilities are now at levels they have not reached since the months just before the 9/11 attacks— largely because Pakistan has provided this haven...
...But this outcome is by no means inevitable...
...military intelligence official confirmed that the early-morning attack on Musharraf's plane as it took off from a military base in Rawalpindi came close...
...Far from being an aberration, Musharraf's poor handling of the latest crisis is emblematic of the larger picture...
...More than anything, Musharraf's handling of the affair highlights his weakness...
...Pakistan's move to clear the mosque following an extended standoff was indeed a major accomplishment...
...Nor does the Lal Masjid raid signal the end of such concessions...
...Musharraf experienced two close calls in December 2003: A bomb blew up a bridge near Rawalpindi minutes after his car passed over it on December 14, and suicide truck bombs hit his convoy on the same road less than two weeks later...
...Prominent Pakistani military and intelligence figures—individuals like retired Gen...
...The Lal Masjid raid occurs against the backdrop of the government's major land concessions to extremist elements over the past year...
...Although the Pakistani government tried to downplay the incident, a senior U.S...
...Musharraf's eventual solution was to send in 111 Brigade, which is personally loyal to him...
...Given Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, the changes to the global war on terror would be instantaneous and dramatic...
...Mirza Aslam Beg—are ideologically sympathetic to the Taliban and al Qaeda...
...While neither scenario bodes well for Musharraf's future, there is strong evidence to support the notion that he is compromised...
...The Lal Masjid was by no means Pakistan's most militant mosque, but its location in the capital made it a conspicuous symbol of the challenge Musharraf faces...
...Few have thought through the tremendous geopolitical implications of such a succession...
...intelligence source described as "every jihad imaginable...
...The single most poorly timed move during the standoff came on July 6, when Musharraf offered amnesty to everyone holed up in the mosque on the very day he was targeted for assassination...
...Musharraf's negotiations with the mosque could most charitably be described as a carrot and stick approach lacking any apparent strategy for shifting between the two...
...Yet while Western observers would surely like to view the raid as evidence that Pakistani president Per-vez Musharraf has regained his determination to fight terrorism, the facts counsel against undue optimism...
...Moreover, that assassination attempt points to another vulnerability...
...It is not inconceivable that they could seize power...
...If so, then either Musharraf has very poor operational security, or he is compromised at a high level...
...There are differing accounts as to whether Musharraf made the offer before or after the assassination attempt—but no analyst I spoke with would have been surprised if it had followed the attempt on Musharraf's life...
...His followers carried out four major attacks against police between July 3 and July 7. This clear violation of Pakistan's peace deal with Fazlullah resulted in hand-wringing on the government's part, not retaliation...
...Hamid Gul and Gen...
...The government mounted a botched raid in July 2005 Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is the vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the author of My Year Inside Radical Islam...
...He acted erratically and inconsistently, offering concessions precisely when he should have turned up the heat...
...Though the raid on the Lal Mas-jid achieved Musharraf's objectives, it would be unwise to conclude that he is finally getting tough on militants...
...These tensions reached a boil after mosque-affiliated vigilantes stepped up an anti-vice campaign in January, kidnapping people who contravened their austere version of Islamic law...
...China applied enormous pressure to Musharraf...
...The bottom line is that we should not expect the Lal Masjid raid to mark the beginning of a sustained campaign against Pakistan's powerful Islamic militant factions...
...If Musharraf does lose power, the best-case scenario would probably be for a similar military officer (relatively pro-Western but unlikely to challenge extremist domination of the tribal areas) to replace him...
...after evidence emerged suggesting that one of the suicide bombers who had struck London's mass transit system that month had been radicalized at the Lal Masjid...
...As Pakistani forces wrapped up their raid on July 11, their examination of 73 bodies recovered from the so-called red mosque suggested that most of the dead were militants—and that they included mosque leader Abdur Rashid Ghazi...
...Both brothers met fitting ends: Abdur Rashid died, and Abdul Aziz was captured trying to flee while disguised as a woman in a burka...
...Tensions between the mosque and the government have simmered for years...
...by Daveed Gartenstein-Ross In a country that for the past year has consistently ceded ground to terrorists, the storming of the Lal Masjid mosque in Islamabad was a rare bit of good news...
...In late January, after the Pakistani army refused to raid the mosque, Musharraf ordered his air force to do so—only to see this order refused as well...
...In late May, Pakistan reached a similar agreement with Maulana Fazlullah, a cleric affiliated with the extremist Tehreek Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM), over the district of Swat, in the North-West Frontier Province...

Vol. 12 • July 2007 • No. 42


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.