Defending Dictatorship: Another View on Pakistan

Posted on March 27, 2008
Filed Under >Syed Abbas Raza, People, Politics
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Syed Abbas Raza

A military dictatorship is a military dictatorship, and a democracy is a democracy. And the latter is always automatically better than the former. It is safer to agree with this statement and to look at every particular complex political situation through the lens of this cliché than to risk having one’s liberal-democratic credentials questioned.

Musharraf of Pakistan

But as a friend of mine once remarked, “All arguments for democracy in Pakistan are theoretical. For dictatorships, the greatest argument is the actual experience of Pakistani democracies.” Very similarly, another friend recently commented that “There are of course no theoretical arguments for a dictatorship, only practical ones.” In the case of Pakistan, the last two civilian democratic governments were sham democracies, and while I by no means support everything Pervez Musharraf has done, especially recently, there are various things for which his government deserves praise. Moreover, while George W. Bush may have gotten almost everything else wrong, his Pakistan policy has been basically sound.

Whenever Musharraf’s name comes up in the Western media, it is inevitably followed by an appositive whisper like “…who took power in a military coup in 1999.” It is never mentioned that the coup was thrust upon him by the greatest kleptocrat in Pakistan’s history, and then serving Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, who tried to kill Musharraf by refusing to allow his plane to land in Karachi when Musharraf was returning from an official trip to Sri Lanka as Pakistan’s military chief. (Sharif wanted to promote and appoint one of his lackeys as the chief of the army, bypassing many more-senior officers, and Musharraf’s term was not yet up.) With over 200 civilians on board the commercial PIA jumbo flight, and with little fuel to spare, Musharraf himself entered the cockpit and radioed down to the army corps commander in Karachi. He ordered that the airport be secured, that the fire trucks preventing the plane from landing be immediately removed from the runway, and that the Prime Minister be arrested. The plane landed with seven minutes of fuel to spare. (All this information can be checked against the testimony of the crew and transcripts of the air traffic communications which were used as evidence in Nawaz Sharif’s subsequent trial.)

At that time, Pakistan stood at the brink of political and economic disaster. Years of mismanagement and outright pillage (friends in the money-management industry in New York tell me that by the late ’90s Pakistan was the largest source of “flight capital”—stolen money which is deposited in secret accounts offshore and managed from New York by American financial experts—in the world) by the supposedly business-friendly Sharif and his cronies had left the State Bank of Pakistan with foreign exchange reserves of a few hundred million dollars. Defaults on international debt payments were imminent. The democratic process itself had collapsed into a travesty in which Sharif had goons from his party scale the walls of the Supreme Court (literally!) and beat the Chief Justice and other judges into submission with clubs. Members of the National Assembly (MNAs) of all parties were being bought and sold like pork futures, switching parties on a weekly basis. Sectarian violence was epidemic, crime was at an all-time high, and religious extremists were gaining ground. In a 1998 survey, Pakistan was identified as the eleventh most corrupt nation in the world, sitting uncomfortably between Latvia and Cameroon. All this in the nuclear-armed, sixth-largest country of the world.

Thus, in this precarious situation in late 1999, the only “democratic” option was to hand over the government to another disastrous criminal gang, and this was not a politically responsible choice. Musharraf knew that what was immediately necessary was the stabilization of the country, and most importantly the economy. He sought the best and brightest Pakistani financial minds from all over the world to undo the damage wrought by the incompetence and robbery by Sharif’s (and that of his predecessor, Benazir Bhutto’s) relatives and cronies.

Shaukat Aziz was the third-most-senior man at Citigroup at the time and a known financial whiz. Musharraf convinced him to come home from NYC at immense cost in personal income to take over as Finance Minister. (Sandy Weil, legendary long-time CEO of Citigroup, lamented that “Pakistan’s gain is our loss.”) Razzaq Daud, a very well-respected industrialist known for his integrity as well as his financial acumen, was made Minister of Commerce, and Dr. Ishrat Husain, serving as Chief Economist at the World Bank at the time, was convinced to return as Governor of the State Bank. By 2002, Pakistan’s foreign currency reserves had risen from a few hundred million to $8.5 billion. That year, Business Week declared the Karachi Stock Exchange the “Best Performing Stock Market of the World.” By the time I visited Pakistan in the autumn of 2004, the change was obvious in the pulsing streets and overflowing markets of Karachi. By October of 2007, Pakistan’s foreign currency reserves had risen to $16.5 billion. The World Bank’s website states that:

After a decade of anemic economic growth, Pakistan’s economy has grown by more than 6.5 percent per year since 2003. While income inequality has increased somewhat, poverty has declined significantly. Exports (in US$ terms) have grown by over 15 percent since 2004. Investment as a share of GDP increased from 17 percent in 2001/02 to 20 percent in 2005/06. A wide-ranging program of economic reforms launched in 2000 [by the Musharraf government, immediately after taking control]—fiscal adjustment, privatization of energy, telecommunications, and production, banking sector reform and trade reform—have played a key role in the country’s economic recovery.

The same people who decry increased American aid to Pakistan after 9/11/01 and (correctly) claim that it mainly goes to the military, are, in their eagerness to discredit both Musharraf’s government and Bush’s foreign policy, quick to explain Pakistan’s recent economic success as a result of that increase in aid. Almost all economists I have spoken to agree that American aid had little or nothing to do with it.

To confront the endemic and systemic corruption in the country, Musharraf set up the National Accountability Bureau (yes, it makes for an unfortunate acronym) to investigate charges against various bureaucrats and others, and put the incorruptible Lt. General Syed Tanweer Naqvi at its head. In addition, he assigned army personnel to be present in civilian government offices where the public could previously not obtain service without paying huge bribes. The presence of army personnel made significant improvements in many cases. When I visited in 2004, a friend showed off his new driver’s license to me. But you’ve been driving for years, I said. Yes, he replied, but it used to be easier to pay off the cops if they stopped you than to pay the exorbitant bribes at the Motor Vehicle Department (or whatever the equivalent office is in Pakistan—I forget). Soon after taking power in 1999, Musharraf also declared all his (very modest) assets and ordered all senior officials in his government to do the same, in the interest of transparency. If any of them is now found to own a condo in Dubai or a chalet in Switzerland, it makes it that much easier to prosecute. This was an unprecedented step in Pakistan. By 2007, it was ranked the 38th most corrupt country in the world – still depressing but much improved.

Musharraf also realized that, as a precondition to genuine democracy, there must be more than lip service to a free press. He started granting unprecedented licenses for new radio and television channels, many of which immediately took a radically anti-government line. In the years since he took over, and until the ill-advised emergency declared by him late last year, every single day one could read the most excoriating editorials against Musharraf in countless Urdu and English newspapers all over Pakistan. His has been an era of more press freedom than ever before in the entire history of Pakistan.

On the religious extremism front, Musharraf has had mixed success. His government failed to follow through with a policy of dismantling madrassas which did not integrate a proper educational curriculum and which are basically training grounds for fundamental jihadists, and illegal mosques which continue to spring up like weeds all over the country. Because of Bush’s disastrous invasion of Iraq, Musharraf had to deal with an increasingly anti-American public, and one which, especially in the provinces bordering on Afghanistan, was increasingly inclining toward the fundamentalist parties. He had to tread lightly or risk civil war. Despite this, he purged the army’s general staff of fundamentalist sympathizers, and Pakistan has captured more terrorists in the war against al-Qaida than all other countries of the world combined. Pakistan has paid a high price for this: weekly, if not daily, suicide bombings by al-Qaida have become the norm, including two assassination attempts against Musharraf himself (which he escaped narrowly) and the recent tragic assassination of Benazir Bhutto.

It is for all of these many reasons that until recently, when he started making disastrously bad decisions in the hopes of staying in a position of power to which, alas, like so many others, he has become addicted, he was a relatively popular leader in most segments of Pakistani society. Business loved him, young people enjoyed the new media and the opportunities the much-better economy was affording them, and middle-class Pakistanis were glad they were not getting shafted by the feudal and business elites. People had seen real improvements in their quality of life under his tenure. In 2002, most people that I know happily voted for him in the referendum that made him president for the next five years. Only religious extremists and people associated with Nawaz Sharif’s party hated him since the teats of patronage and graft that they had become used to suckling on had gone dry under Musharraf. Even Benazir Bhutto at the end was willing to work with him and cut a power-sharing deal because she knew that he represented the only honest and moderate force in the country.

Let us now turn to US policy. It has become common in left-liberal circles in the US to lump Bush’s policy toward Pakistan in with every other catastrophe for which Bush actually is responsible. But it is not clear what the Bush administration could have done differently. The implication that it is American aid which has kept democracy from being restored in Pakistan is ludicrous. First of all, the amount of aid is relatively tiny, and it was in America’s as well as Pakistan’s interest to battle al-Qaida in Afghanistan. Pakistan needed help with money and military equipment for this effort. If anything, the US did not provide enough support, and the State Department always dragged its feet in approving Pakistani requests, such as for helicopters to patrol the border region with Afghanistan. Consider that the total amount of aid delivered to Pakistan since 2001 is less than what Israel gets every year from the United States to illegally expand its settlements on Palestinian land, build its walls and launch its invasions, and less than what the US spends on its disastrous occupation of Iraq every month. Had some of this money been used for reconstruction in Afghanistan (as was promised after the Taliban were removed) it would have gone a long way toward curbing anti-Americanism in Muslim countries.

Pakistani support for the Taliban started under Benazir Bhutto’s civilian government and ended with Musharraf. To whatever degree US policy is responsible for the creation of terrorist training grounds in Afghanistan it is not Bush who is responsible. Those policies were put in place by Ronald Reagan to combat the Soviet Union and continued through the ’90s, by which time the mujahedin had turned against America. Bush was also correct to give Musharraf help and technology in developing safeguards for Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal.

N + 1 magazine (N plus one)It is entirely fitting that the very conditions that Musharraf has attempted to create to make true democracy possible in Pakistan should provide the force that may remove him from office when he starts to behave autocratically. His granting of unprecedented independence to the judiciary could not be rolled back, as Musharraf found out when he fired the Chief Justice. The press attacked him mercilessly, and lawyers took to the streets. And the fair elections held under his government in February have resulted in a huge loss for Musharraf’s party. The two main opposition parties have recently announced that they will form a coalition, and they will reinstate the judges removed under Musharraf’s emergency rule of a few months ago. They may also impeach Musharraf. This is as it should be, and an ironic measure of Musharraf’s success in strengthening the democratic infrastructure of Pakistan. Perhaps we now have a chance at genuine democracy instead of the rotten-to-the-core one that Musharraf replaced.

Syed Abbas Raza is the editor of 3QuarksDaily (3QD). This was originally published in N+1 in response to an article titled “The Back Room President” in N+1.

85 responses to “Defending Dictatorship: Another View on Pakistan”

  1. UZM says:

    Pakistan was in darkness most of the time before Musharaff as well, did you not have ‘load shedding’ earlier? GDP growth was a start, India’s been doing well for the past six years, but their poverty levels remain unchanged, the process takes time.

  2. MQ says:

    What good is GDP growth when most of Pakistan is without electricity most of the time? How can you achieve any economic growth without energy? Right now, I am typing this comment on my laptop in darkness in Islamabad!

    I won’t go in other economic statistics, but one should read the State Bank’s latest report. Bluntly, what it says is that Shaukat Aziz’s government had been fudging figures.

  3. Umar Zahoor says:

    Good post. Pakistan’s economy has without a doubt done far better under Musharraf than it did under his predecessors. His substantial macroeconomic reforms helped our economy grow at a pace we couldn’t ever achieve under the past ‘democracies’ that ruled us. Pakistan’s GDP growth rate was 6.4%[CIA] in 2007. We averaged at 3.9% in the 90s before Musharraf. Pakistan’s nominal GDP was 139.7 billion in ’07 [Worldbank] – that is close to double of what we had under Sharif’s and Bhutto’s corrupt regimes.

    Marketwatch reported in March that the KSE-100 index was the best performer among major emerging markets YTD, continuing its good showing through the major part of 2001-07. In contrast, India’s Sensex index (for the same time period) tumbled 20% and China’s Shanghai Composite had dropped 31% from statistics reported until a few days ago [Marketwatch] .
    Of course now, with our volatile political situation, it remains to be seen how stable it can get. An unstable climate is what will defer foreign investment coming into Pakistan, and investment by multinationals and corporations is vital for Pakistan’s developing economy. It brings jobs and revenue into the country and we sure can use that right now.

    It doesnt take a genius to figure out that when the economy of a nation does great, the people live better and put an end to the strife they face. Look at India.

    I do not believe that we are better off without Musharaff. I sincerely pray and hope that this new government does not exhaust our financial reserves the way past governments have looted Pakistan. Did Musharraf do everything right? No. But he was a great statesman and he made decisions that he thought were better for Pakistan in the long run. Every coin has two sides, and not everyone who calls heads wins.

    May Allah unite the people of Pakistan as one and make us prosper as a nation. Ameen.

  4. YLH says:

    Reading this article, one can be reasonably sure that we have not seen the end of military rule… because there are enough of the kind of Mr. Raza to give them a “solid” excuse for their unconstitutional usurpation.

  5. jalal says:

    I think one should evaluate a person without any prejudice, political or otherwise motives. It is only then one tends to understand a persons positive and negative points. And finding faults has always been easy – even for a man in the street. It is only when an objective and dispassionate analysis is carried out , a true picture emerges.
    I think given all the odds, President PM has done pretty well and has projected the image of Pakistan better than any leader could have ever done.
    Yes, he may not be remembered a lot, since our generally ignorant people, over driven by the sentiments so not know what happens when you sit at the top.

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