Dear Readers,
As an avid student of
military history, Pervez Musharraf should be able
to recite Clausewitz's "Principles of War"
backwards. With a goodish stint as COAS Pakistan Army,
more than 10 years, and having had a wonderful time
as President for nearly 8, he should have let go of
the Army when he retired as COAS in Nov 2008. And
when he resigned as President in August 2009, he should
have let go of the country. One should remind him
again of the ageless Gen Macarthur observation, "old
soldiers never die, they simple fade away". Having
thoroughly enjoyed the good life as an absolute monarch
in all senses of the word, particularly of the Ahsanullah-kind,
it is only human to want it all over again. Musharraf
being no exception will therefore simply not give
up. Every move of his seems to be geared to engineer
return to the pinnacle of power that he once enjoyed
absolutely. The amazing political comebacks of Benazir
Bhutto and Mian Nawaz Sharif act as salutary examples,
the ultimate model being Asif Ali Zardari, once (and
still) the most vilified man in Pakistan, but also
now the democratically elected President of the country,
and that too by a heavy mandate. Throughout his life
Pervez Musharraf grew up in the shadow of people like
Ali Kuli Khan Khattak, the rabid jealousy that must
have burned inside Musharraf for years came out with
unabated venom in his book "In the Line of fire".
So Pervez Musharraf will not fade away gracefully,
he will keep at it to get back the unfettered power
he once enjoyed as COAS Pakistan Army, and concurrently
as President. One doubts the Army will receive him
with open arms, he is an embarrassment that refuses
to go away. Will his political detractors take his
unrelenting ambition to return to power lying down?
They are sharpening their knives, the recent FIR lodged
against him for incarcerating the judge is just the
beginning of many. Interpol will be kept pretty busy,
Musharraf (or his friends) should set aside funds
to fight extradition battles in UK. The irony is that
the same Federal Secretary Interior who was more loyal-than-King
Musharraf himself ordered the restraints on Chief
Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry on Musharraf's behalf, he
has now given the tacit sanction for the FIR against
Musharraf. If not for his own sake, for the sake of
the uniform he once wore, which will be pelted with
rotten eggs symbolically, Musharraf will be well advised
to quietly fade away. London is a good place to fade
away in. For the benefit of readers, I am re-publishing
my article, "THE END OF MARTIAL LAWS?".
That his Nov 3, 2007 pre-emptive strike against the
SC was illegal and unconstitutional was acknowledged
by Pervez Musharraf soon after the event, it was logical
that the excesses of this blatantly self-serving action
had to be legally reversed. The Supreme Court (SC)
"Short Order" will be a historic verdict
provided the detailed judgment reaches its logical
conclusion, accountability across the board.
The paradox, even though popular in the streets as
well as among the intelligentsia at that time, the
Oct 12, 1999 coup was far more illegal and unconstitutional.
It put an elected PM in jail, sent Parliament packing
- and coerced the judges to take fresh oath under
PCO 2000. It will be interesting see how the detailed
judgment differentiates between Oct 12 and Nov 3,
particularly for those two SC judges who now face
the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) for talking oath
under PCO 2007?
The SC reverted to "the doctrine of necessity"
to avoid "derailing" the system, leaving
it to Parliament to ratify within 90 days those Presidential
Ordinances and Constitutional Amendments issued post-haste
before Nov 3, 2007 and upto Dec 15, 2007, including
the obnoxious Amendment desecrating the Constitution
by making the NRO a part of it.
We may soon be witness as to how democracy is subverted
and made farcical. Our Parliamentarians have a sorry
history of succumbing to influence, either through
coercion or outright bribery, they will either, viz
(1) blacken the Constitution by ratifying the NRO
or (2) let the NRO lapse for all past and closed transactions
on the "Malik Asad" formula. Not striking
down this black law not only legalises corruption
of the past, it is an incentive for open season by
outright crooks for the present and the future. Just
read what eminent media personality Kamran Khan has
exposed in the last week!
To quote, "Why do Martial Laws Fail?" written
in 1995, "Martial Laws fail because the initiators
of extra-Constitutional rule ride into town on tanks
with the lofty Aim of saving the country, relying
on that platonic national purpose to make themselves
credible but they soon adjust the Aim to more material
(and less patriotic) reasons of self-perpetuation.
The original Aim, which remains publicly the same,
becomes an exercise in self-delusion. Martial Laws
fail because a lot of lip-service is given to self-accountability
but there is no real will to ensure that those who
misuse their powers in any manner will be brought
to similar summary justice as they are prescribing
for others. It is no secret that many people have
made millions due to Martial Law and its derivatives.
Martial Laws fail because the Armed Forces get themselves
involved in mundane, routine bureaucratic duties that
they are not supposed to be involved in. Martial Laws
fail because those who impose Martial Laws do not
have correct knowledge about the working of the State
or the individuals who run it, soon being surrounded
by sycophants who are usually holdovers from previous
governments. Easily susceptible to flattery and manipulation,
our Martial Law leaders attract adventurers and adventuresses
like bees to honey. They could not shake off leeches
in one form or the other, undercutting the integrity
of the Martial Law Regimes, making them worse than
the political and/or civil rule they had come to save
the people from", unquote.
The application of the doctrine of necessity does
become necessary sometimes, it goes wrong when those
that apply it forget that their role is limited, to
support technocrat governance for a short period and
not become a part of it. They are soldiers and when
they become part of the wrong they came to correct,
they force-multiply the wrongs into a catastrophe,
like Musharraf eventually did. All soldiers take an
oath to defend the Constitution "even to the
peril of their lives". If the cause is just and
their motivation pure, why should they fear their
fate if they are forced by circumstances to violate
that oath? Unless they used their acquired powers
under Martial Law to enrich themselves, their friends
and relations, actions being in good faith and without
excesses, soldiers can always face up to the consequences
of their actions. COAS Bangladesh Army Gen Moeen and
his associates successfully managed "the Bangladesh
Model" in 2007 and 2008, and returned to the
barracks, Gen Moeen subsequently retired. No court
in the world can convict them in circumstances of
"Clear and Present Danger" to the country
for violating their oath. Our Lordships would do well
to read up on the most eminent jurist of his time,
US Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes.
The men of the Pakistan Army are correcting the excesses
of ineffective and corrupt governance complicated
by political indecision by shedding their blood in
Swat and FATA. One notes with pride that major generals
down to the ordinary soldier have been engaged in
actual combat, physically in "the line of fire"
instead of just talking (and writing) about it. To
paraphrase Winston Churchill, never has so much sacrifice
been rendered by so many to keep so few crooked in
such absolute luxury. Does the military hierarchy
put a value of this precious blood against the property
in Dubai owned by the beneficiaries of corruption?
While many are calling for Musharraf's trial (and
he has given enough reasons for it), it is unthinkable
that the entire army be subjected to vituperation
by all and sundry because of the ambitions of one
errant individual.Pervez Musharraf missed a huge opportunity
to make a legal defence of "the doctrine of necessity"
through his team of eminent lawyers. Who can guarantee
that Pakistan will not face such a crisis requiring
such necessity in the future? Madame de Steal said
of Napoleon's "coup de etat", to quote,
"As soon as the moral power of the national representation
was destroyed, a legislative body, whatever it might
be, meant no more to the military than a crowd of
five hundred men, less vigorous and disciplined than
a battalion of the same number", unquote. Something
on the lines of Ch Shujaat's "two trucks and
a jeep"!
History is witness that armies returning from the
field have a low threshold of toleration of a blatantly
corrupt system. For them the NRO will not stand. The
SC can declare the Nov 3 action illegal a million
times, and the PM may grandly announce the SC has
"shut the door on dictatorship", the NRO
will remain a red flag (casus belli) for future military
intervention. The NRO is an excellent reason to keep
the army involved in a war without end!
M. Ikram Sehgal