Benazir's Assassination: The Aftermath
by B. Raman
The assassination of Mrs. Benazir Bhutto on December
27,2007, has considerably embarrassed President Pervez
Musharraf. This was because the Intelligence Bureau (IB),
which comes under the Ministry of the Interior, had the
over-all responsibility for her security and it was headed
by Brig (retd). Ijaz Shah, a close associate of Musharraf,
against whom she and her husband Mr. Asif Zardari had been
repeatedly complaining ever since the first attempt to kill
her at Karachi on October 18, 2007. Musharraf's perceived
failure to address her concerns and to respond to her
requests for better security have created a widespread
perception of willful negligence in protecting her.
2. There was definitely negligence in protecting her, but
it is difficult to say at what level of the intelligence
and security establishment. In the short term, Musharraf
should be able to get over this embarrassment provided the
street reaction to the assassination does not become
widespread and uncontrollable. There have been violent
street protests---particularly in Sindh, as expected, and in
pockets of Punjab and the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP)---
resulting in the deaths of over 30 persons and extensive
damage to public and private property. But, surprisingly,
the street protests have thus far remained controllable and
have been no more serious in Karachi than those witnessed
earlier this year over the suspension of former Chief
Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhury of the Supreme Court.
3. One had expected the whole of Sindh to blow up and
rise against Musharraf after the assassination.
Surprisingly, this has not happened so far---not even after
the funeral of Benazir in her native village. The absence so
far of uncontrollable street anger probably indicates a
certain disenchantment with her attempts to make a deal with
the Army before she returned from exile on October 18,2007,
and with her pro-US policies. Her strongly pro-US
statements did not apparently go down well even in Sindh and
this is reflected in the absence of massive protests so far.
4. The support for Musharraf from the Army is unlikely to
be weakened as a result of the assassination unless the
street protests become massive in the days to come, thereby
making his position increasingly untenable. If the protests
remain at the present level and show signs of losing steam
in the days to come, he may be tempted to go ahead with the
elections even in the face of a boycott by the Pakistan
People's Party (PPP) and the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) of
Mr. Nawaz Sharif. The long-suppressed differences inside the
PPP between the Zardari loyalists and the traditional
loyalists are likely to sharpen. Sindhi leaders such as
Makhdoom Amin Fahim have always had their own secret
personal ambitions, though they remained loyal to her till
the last. Now that she is no more, personal ambitions would
increasingly play a more important role than party loyalty
in influencing their behaviour and Musharraf should be able
to exploit this to draw them into a coalition with the
Pakistan Muslim League (Qaide Azam) engineered by him in
2002.
5. The removal of Benazir from the scene is unlikely to
redound to the benefit of Nawaz Sharif in any substantial
measure. Thus, the short-term political beneficiary of the
removal of Benazir from the scene would be Musharraf and the
PML (QA). Musharraf would find it hard to resist the
temptation to exploit the situation to strengthen the
political backing for him by going ahead with the elections.
6. The US is in a dilemma. It realises the folly of
uncritical dependence on Musharraf. Had Benazir been there
and done well in the elections, she would have provided it
with another card. With her gone, the US is back to its
pre-October 18 position of having only the Musharraf card.
It would not like to throw away this card for the present.
The US has reasons to be alarmed by indications of the
spread of Al Qaeda's tentacles to Rawalpindi. Countering Al
Qaeda is more important in its eyes than really nurturing
democracy. Pro forma support for a transition to democracy
and carrying along with Musharraf despite all that has
happened till an acceptable alternative is on the horizon
will be its policy. For this purpose, it would want
Musharraf to go ahead with the elections even if their
credibility had been weakened.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)