Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for BusinessWeek. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. It was released this week.

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A Blog on Russia, Central Asia and
the Caucasus

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Echoes of Zia in Bhutto Assassination; A Reasonable Election Delay

The bungling of the post-mortem in the Benazir Bhutto assassination is eerily reminiscent of the aftermath 19 years ago to the death of the general who hanged her father, Zia ul-Haq. In the Zia case too, police and investigators corrupted the scene of death, a field where a C-130 carrying him and most of his top generals crashed, killing all of them. Likewise, there were widespread cries of coverup, including by the United States, which blocked a FBI investigation and carried away key forensic evidence.

I looked into the Zia investigation thoroughly during the 1990s, and was never satisfied with how it was handled. A joint U.S.-Pakistani military panel found cause for suspecting murder -- one theory was that a nerve gas was implanted in the cockpit that disabled the pilots -- and recommended that a fresh panel comprised of pathologists be formed to look into that angle. But the investigation was halted right there. I concluded that the various powers -- the new Army general Mirza Aslam Beg, the intelligence agencies, and especially the United States -- decided that, if it was murder, they were better off not to know by whom. For instance, one suspect was Moscow, which at the time was in the middle of withdrawing from Afghanistan; if Mikhail Gorbachev were accused of murder, the pullout could be scotched. Another suspect was India, and a new war could be threatened on the Subcontinent.

All of this makes me unsurprised that the Bhutto murder scene was compromised. As with the Zia case, it could be a simple matter of incompetence. Otherwise, the issues appear different -- there ought to be no reason why officialdom wouldn't want to identify the culprits. Unless of course they themselves suspect the possibility of perhaps low-level inside connivance.

CNN has thoughtfully posted the Bhutto post-mortem, which I pass along here. It also posted a story that includes new film of the moments of the killing.

Parliamentary elections: The word is that President Pervez Musharraf will postpone parliamentary elections. On one hand, holding the elections on time next week would have been a strong show of calm leadership on Musharraf's part. On the other, rioters appear to have destroyed all the electoral paperwork in a dozen or so Election Commission offices, and it needs to be reconstructed so Pakistanis can vote in those districts. As my former Wall Street Journal colleagues reported over the weekend, Musharraf's opponents are urging Pakistanis to take out their grief on him; they are likely to see something pernicious in a delay. But it seems to me that a few weeks to get the records in order is reasonable. The date for a new election will probably be the end of February or the beginning of March.

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Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Who Said Musharraf Was a Democrat?

Prediction: Unless he's forced out by his military cohorts pre-emptively, Pervez Musharraf will retire as Army chief, take the oath of office for another five-year term, this time technically as a civilian president, and hold parliamentary elections as planned Jan. 8th.

The hullabaloo over Musharraf's declaration of emergency in Pakistan has been both amusing and absurd. When did Musharraf say he was a democrat? When he seized power in a coup? When he forced political feudals Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif into exile? When he manipulated parliamentary elections and installed a hand-picked prime minister?

The United States and the rest of the West is behind Musharraf for one reason: to try to contain the germination of jihadis. The democracy agenda was always a subtext.

One thing is sure. Were Musharraf to fall in the current crisis, it would not signal the advent of democracy. The Army would remain Pakistan's primary political force, and insist on continued dominant influence given the country's precarious security problem in the West.

I personally would be more impressed with Bhutto and Sharif's expressions of dismay if they demonstrated that they are not all about selfish aspirations, and passed their respective mantles on to untainted party colleagues. For instance, Bhutto could anoint Aitzaz Ahsan, the leader of the pro-democracy lawyer's movement.

Short of such selflessness, Pakistan remains a snake pit. And the West might curb its sanctimony over Musharraf's alleged perfidy regarding who he was.

Photo: Chadmill
Rights: Creative Commons

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