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Afghanistan/South Asia
WaPo sez Pakland's army becoming moderate. Really.
2004-04-04
At the Pakistan Military Academy, the atmosphere fairly reeks of the British Raj: the cricket field, the polo ponies, the high-ceilinged mess hall with its turbaned waiters and white linen tablecloths. "We observe all the British traditions except the toast," Lt. Col. Saadat Saeed Bhutta says proudly. "And we say, 'Bismillah' " -- In the name of God -- at the start of every meal. But the alcohol ban and the traditional Islamic blessing aren't the only departure from British ways. The emphasis on religion, in fact, is hard to miss. At the main entrance to the academy, an Arabic-lettered sign proclaims: "Victory Awaits Those Who Have Faith in God." Fallen war heroes are honored in a "Martyrs' Gallery." The curriculum includes a six-month course in Islamic studies. "Our basic route is Islam," says Manan Abdul, 20, an army officer's son from Punjab province who will soon graduate from the academy as a second lieutenant. "When we have to command, when we have to make decisions, for that we have a role model: the prophet, peace be upon him."
That's why they've won all those wars.
At least in part, such expressions of faith are a legacy of a conscious strategy of "Islamization" of the military that began in the late 1970s and has included active support for Muslim extremist groups, including the Taliban movement in Afghanistan. Now, as Gen. Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, seeks to steer his country on a more moderate course, rolling back that legacy has emerged as one of his most challenging -- and most urgent -- priorities.
Kinda like holding back the ocean with a fork, I'd call it...
In some respects, the army would seem to be the least of Musharraf's worries. Most of its senior commanders owe their jobs to the president, who has taken pains to ensure that the military's upper ranks are filled with officers who share his moderate, pro-Western outlook. Even before Musharraf seized power in a 1999 coup, the army had instituted procedures to sideline officers seen as overly sympathetic to radical groups. "The joke in Islamabad is that the drinking generals are back, which is not a bad thing," said a Western-educated academic who is close to the military establishment. The army, so steeped in British tradition that its officers take their regimental silver on peacekeeping deployments abroad, remains a disciplined organization with a strong institutional interest in preserving its perks and privileges, according to active-duty and retired officers, Western and Pakistani military experts, and Western diplomats. Far more than an instrument of national defense, the army is Pakistan's dominant political and economic power, with vast influence over important civilian institutions, such as universities, and extensive holdings in real estate and commercial industry.
It's a feudal society with a "warrior aristocracy" running things to keep themselves and their caste comfy, while the commons are allowed to attend to their own devices free from interference except where their actions impinge on the perks of the aristocrats.
Senior officers caution against reading too much into the army's embrace of religious symbols and slogans -- including its 28-year-old motto, "Faith, Piety and Jihad in the Way of Allah" -- which they describe as a "motivational tool" rather than a battle cry against the West. Two recent exhortations by al Qaeda lieutenant Ayman Zawahiri for the Pakistani army to rise up against the "traitor" Musharraf had no apparent impact. "It is not a secular army, but it is not a rabid jihadi army," said retired army Col. Abdul Qayyum, a onetime friend and adviser to Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, who instituted the Islamization program as Pakistan's military ruler from 1977 to 1988. "The basic ethos of the army is Muslim. In Zia ul-Haq's time it got more explicit, open. This external display of it has receded, and I personally don't see any possibility of a coup."
Oh, I do.
But for all the emphasis on moderation, Musharraf and the army maintain strong ties with Muslim hard-liners, having helped to engineer a strong showing by an alliance of six hard-line Islamic parties in 2002 elections for parliament and provincial legislatures. Ever the tactician, Musharraf has permitted the hard-line parties to flourish, analysts say, to blunt any potential challenge to his rule from the secular opposition parties that still command the largest following in Pakistan. There are indications, moreover, that Musharraf still faces a potential threat from extremists in the military angered by his close cooperation with the United States in the war on terrorism and his pursuit of a peaceful settlement of the conflict with India over Kashmir. An inspector from the paramilitary Rangers, for example, has been charged in connection with a plot to assassinate Musharraf by bombing his convoy in Karachi in June 2002. Two air force technicians have been arrested in connection with the nearly successful suicide bombing against Musharraf's limousine in Rawalpindi on Dec. 25. And an army major faces court martial for allegedly providing shelter to Khalid Sheik Mohammed, a top al Qaeda figure captured in Rawalpindi in March 2003; a colonel and two other officers were arrested for failing to report the major even though they allegedly knew of his activities. "Though this major was acting independently, it is not unfair to say that al Qaeda had some penetration in the army," said a senior Pakistani official.
So your statement that a coup isn't likely is mere flatulence. Unless you're referring to the tanks in the streets thing, rather than Perv being bumped off and another, more amenable, general taking over?
Such warnings have fueled concerns abroad about the security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal -- a worry that was underscored by the recent proliferation scandal involving scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. "Something will snap at some point," said retired Lt. Gen. Hamid Gul, nut case a conservative Muslim who ran Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) from 1987 to 1989. "It's like bending a green stick. The cracking point comes, but when is anyone's guess."
The fact that somebody remotely like Hamid Gul could rise to a position of authority and influence in the Pak military defines it as an organization that can't be trusted, not even by its own members.
Retired Lt. Gen. Talat Masood, a former secretary of defense production, does not go quite that far. Still, he said: "The question mark is essentially the middle ranks and lower ranks. It would take some time before you are able to convince the rank and file because they had a certain indoctrination and mind-set over the years, and it's not easy to switch gears." Much of that indoctrination dates to the time of Zia, a religious conservative who sought to put an Islamic stamp on the military by enhancing the status of Muslim clerics assigned to combat units and introducing Islamic teachings at the military academy and at the army's Command and Staff College.
That, no doubt, improved the military's grasp on strategy and tactics no end. Definitely made it a better, more capable organization...
The sense of identification with a larger Islamic cause was further strengthened by the army's role in funneling arms and ammunition -- much of it supplied by the CIA -- to Islamic guerrillas battling Soviet forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s. After the Soviets withdrew in 1989, moreover, relations between the United States and Pakistan deteriorated. Washington imposed sanctions in a response to Pakistan's nuclear program, cutting off military training programs in a move that fueled a sense of isolation and betrayal in the army, according to retired Pakistani officers and Western diplomats. Most sanctions were lifted in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States, and the training programs have since resumed. But the army began to come to terms with Zia's legacy in 1995, when a handful of uniformed zealots, led by a major general, were arrested for plotting a coup with the aim of imposing Islamic rule in Pakistan.
No chance of that ever happening again, of course...
As a direct result, officers from the rank of lieutenant colonel on up were "thoroughly screened" for signs of excessive Islamic zeal by field detachments from the army's director general for military intelligence, according to retired U.S. Army Col. David Smith, who served two tours as a military attache in Pakistan, most recently from 2000 to 2003. Officers thought to have militant leanings "were not purged, but if they were in a sensitive position they were very quietly reassigned," Smith said in an interview. "That system has remained in effect to this day." Smith recalled one particular illustration of the army's alertness to signs of Islamic militancy. In December 2001, he said, he was invited to graduation ceremonies at the army staff college. He made a point of counting the number of graduates with beards -- a common practice among foreign military attaches eager for any indicators of religious trends in the army. After he had finished, Smith recalled, an ISI protocol officer approached him and asked, "How many beards did you count?" Smith replied that he had counted 30 beards out of 225 graduates, down from 45 the year before. But the Pakistani took issue with his tally, insisting that only long beards -- of which there were five -- should be counted. "Those are the ones we worry about," the ISI officer said.
"We don't worry about the ones that are only a little bit nuts..."
The cross-currents of Islam and British influence converge visibly at the military academy, whose stone buildings, freshly painted curbs and manicured grounds are nestled in a spur of the Himalayas about 70 miles northwest of Islamabad. About 1,500 cadets are enrolled and spend two years studying for the equivalent of a bachelor's degree before entering the officer corps. At a gathering of upperclassmen called together for the benefit of a foreign guest, Bhutta, the lieutenant colonel and campus administrator, listened with a look of growing exasperation as several cadets stressed the centrality of Islam to the shaping of a Pakistani officer. "Yes, but what is the percentage of Islamic teachings?" Bhutta finally interrupted, eager to make the point that cadets devote much more of their classroom time to secular studies in areas such as political science, computers, and military history and tactics. "There was a visible leaning toward religion, but over time it has faded out," said the academy commandant, Maj. Gen. Hamid Rab Nawaz, 52, a strapping special forces veteran.
Oh, yesss... That's obvious. Can't miss it, can you?
Campus life, in fact, does not seem overly saturated with religion. Cadets spend free time surfing the Internet or -- since the installation of cable television in lounge areas last year -- watching movies such as "Bruce Almighty" on HBO. "A fantastic movie," said 21-year-old Farhan Laghari, a landowner's son from Sindh province, of the comedy starring Jim Carrey as God.
"Blasphemous, but fantastic. The director and all the actors have to be killed, of course. Blasphemous, y'know? But still, a fantastic move."
Posted by:Dan Darling

#4  It's a feudal society with a "warrior aristocracy" running things to keep themselves and their caste comfy, while the commons are allowed to attend to their own devices free from interference except where their actions impinge on the perks of the aristocrats.

Yeah, Saudi Arabia has got to go ... er, I mean Pakistan.

Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-04 8:16:19 PM  

#3  To successfully "moderate" Pakistan's army would require clubbing each and every one of their soldiers into unconsciousness with a vitreous carbon rod.

Posted by: Zenster   2004-04-04 8:14:22 PM  

#2  One of these fine mornings the Hindoooos are going to be in a fuck-ghandi mood and the whole game will be up. I figure it'll take 6 months.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-04-04 10:00:55 AM  

#1  A den of Islamic snakes with cable TV that have tried repeatedly to assassinate Perv, harbored KSM, and think Bruce Almighty is a great movie - leading men who attended hardcore madrassahs. And they count beards to guesstimate their Islamist Zeal quotient. Oops, make that long beards, sorry. The only thing missing is that they Blame Bush For Everything. Sigh. I feel better. No, really, I feel better. Uh, pass me the bong again. Just not quite better enough. BTW, how's our tar ball stockpile holding out?

Thx, Dan! The Zoo is full and the keepers are insane. Poor Pervy. :^(
Posted by: .com   2004-04-04 12:42:23 AM  

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