Address to
Council of the Socialist International
Casablanca 31 May – 1 June 2002

Mr Prime
Minister, Mr President of the `Socialist International, Mr Secretary
General, Dear Brothers, Sisters and Comrades
We meet in
Casablanca at an extraordinary and dangerous time. The war against
international terrorism enters a new phase. Simultaneously the nuclear
armed nations of India and Pakistan stand at the brink of war over the
disputed area of Jammu and Kashmir.
This is not
the way we expected the new millennium to begin but life has its own plan.
I address the new realities in this phase of tragedy.
Ladies and
Gentleman
Terrorism
will not succeed unless we fall into the psychopaths trap. Professor
Samuel Huntington of Harvard University has written of a clash between
civilisations.
This clash is
not inevitable unless we make it so.
The precepts
of Islam are part of the Judeo Christian heritage. In the Muslim Holy
Book, Abraham is our Father just as Moses and Jesus are our Prophets,
There will
only be a clash of civilisation if we allow ignorance and fanaticism to
take control, to shape the agenda, to shape the debate.
Osama and his
men use commercial airliners as bombs against cities and symbols to
provoke the clash of cultures under which they will thrive.
They want the
people all over the world to actually believe that this is a war between
Islam and the West.
I am not
unfamiliar with these people.
As Prime
Minister of Pakistan I stood up to many of them. I battled with many of
the same extremists, including Osama Bin Laden himself.
During the
Afghan Soviet war, my country Pakistan became the breeding ground for
their political and religious manipulation. Hiding under the cloak of
religion, they preached a lesson that enslaves, not liberates, that
teaches children to hate, that keeps people hopeless and desperate, bitter
and paranoid.
The Pakistan
Peoples Party government had them on the run.
We disarmed
their schools. We stopped them from entering the Kashmir struggle. We
stopped their friends the Taliban from seizing all Afghanistan. Osama Bin
Laden never gave an interview from Afghanistan declaring war against the
world during our tenure in office,
Moreover,
they were unable to plan a single act of international terror. Each act of
international terror took place when my Party was in the Opposition. These
included the two attacks on the World Trade Center, the CIA headquarters,
the two US embassies in Africa, the Cole ship in Yemen, the Bombay Blasts,
the Indian Parliament attack as well as the May 14 attack on women and
children in Kashmir.
Distinguished
delegates,
The
extremists greatest fear is the spread of information, social equality and
democracy that are the principle of the International.
And it was in
the clusters of information, social equality and democracy that my
government gave attention,
We introduced
deregulation and decentralisation. We introduced privitisation, We opened
up markets, We opened up minds and we opened up opportunity,
Pakistan
integrated into the global economy which the fanatics so fear, becoming
one of the ten emerging capital markets of the world, attracting billions
of dollars of investment.
We brought
down the population growth rate. We reduced infant mortality. We recruited
an army of women, fifty thousand strong, to deliver health services to the
rural poor. We fought domestic violence, established women’s police
stations to defend the women of Pakistan, appointed women judges to the
superior courts.
It was a
transformation that was bringing Pakistan into the modern era as a model
to one billion Muslims of what moderate, enlightened Islam could
accomplish for its people.
And thus to
the fanatics and to the extremists, we became the enemy, the threat and
the obstacle. To Islam at the crossroads, a modern Pakistan was one fork
in the road, fanaticism and ignorance the other.
Dear
delegates,
It was with
the eclipse of the PPP government, that the Taliban seized Kabul, imposed
their will over Afghanistan, invited Bin Laden in and allowed the
recruitment and training in terror.
And since the
overthrow of my government, India and Pakistan have thrice come to the
brink of a nuclear war.
Ladies and
Gentlemen,
Kashmir has
long been considered by the CIA as the place most likely on earth to
trigger a nuclear conflagration.
When Britain
granted independence to the Sub Continent, two states were created on
religious lines. The princely states were allowed to accede to either
India or Pakistan. All but one affiliated with its religious homeland. In
the Muslim state of Kashmir, the Hindu ruler acceded to India inciting the
first of the three wars between the two countries.
In 1947 a UN
ceasefire left Kashmir divided between India and Pakistan. The UN
resolution on the dispute was blocked triggering the largest military
occupation since the end of world war 11.
Now the smell
of war is in the air again. Like helpless actors, the two countries of
India and Pakistan are moving inexorably in the direction of a deadly
conflict.
Pakistan is
now a key ally of the international community. The last situation the
international community would like to see develop is the war against
terror deflected by the war between India and Pakistan.
But if the
militants wanted to deflect attention from the heat of allied forces
against Al Qaeda in the tribal areas bordering Pakistan, they succeeded.
The fight that began last September triggered by militants flying planes
into the Twin Towers, has every possibility of turning into a fight for
Srinagar triggered by militants determined to provoke an Indo Pak clash.
A critical
error by the international community was the conclusion that a military
dictator could defuse tension between India and Pakistan or prevent the
tidal wave of extremism now engulfing the region.
The Pakistan
Peoples Party welcomes the effort by Britain, the United States and Russia
to defuse the crisis through dialogue.
Perhaps the
mission will succeed. A similar attempt last December did defuse war in
2001.
Defusing war
through dialogue is necessary. More necessary is breaking the recurrent
cycle of tension and talk that marks the rise of the Generals in
Islamabad.
There are
concerns that the cycle of three near nuclear confrontations in three
years under General Musharaf could continue unless there is regime change
in Islamabad.
Regime change
in Islamabad offers the possibility of a fresh start at political
negotiation between India and Pakistan. A Musharaf departure can allow a
new government to begin confidence-building measures with a clean slate.
It happened
once before. In 1971, military rules General Yayha resigned paving the way
for a new elected and representative government. That government signed
the Simla Agreement that held peace in place until the nuclear detonations
of 1998.
Since 1998
the two countries have thrice come to conflict. Clearly a new treaty is
needed to prevent the recurrent tensions and the threat of nuclear
annihilation.
Last
November, I travelled to New Delhi to meet with the Indian leadership. I
discussed with the models of conflict management that could give the one
billion people of South Asia a safer region.
My Party is
committed to dialogue and to a peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute
in keeping with the aspirations of the Kashmiri people.
Earlier my
Party successfully concluded the first and only nuclear confidence
building treaty between New Delhi and Islamabad. This was the treaty not
to attack each other’s nuclear facilities.
We signed an
agreement to establish a hot line between army headquarters patterned on
the hotline between Moscow and Washington during the Cold War.
More nuclear
confidence building measures are now needed between Islamabad and New
Delhi to reduce the chances of nuclear catastrophe.
Ladies and
Gentlemen,
Let us
remember that building moderate, stable and democratic political
structures can marginalize the Osamas, the Talibans and extremists of this
world before they unleash their war against the people of the world
community.
The goal of
the Socialist International must always be to simultaneously promote
stability and strengthen democratic values.
These
democratic values are critical to the future direction of my country.
The
democratic future of Pakistan is dear to me. It is also critical to
regional peace and global security.
For whether
out of coincidence or otherwise, a nexus is emerging between events
relating to Al Qaeda and the rise of tension with India.
Last
December, as the bombing of the Tora Bora mountains was driving Al Qaeda
militants to despair, the Indian Parliament attack took place diverting
international attention to Kashmir.
And this May,
as the international troops moved in the mountainous region bordering
Pakistan, forcing al Qaeda into a corner, a suicide attack in Kashmir once
again diverted international attention to an Indo Pak war.
Let us
remember that when Pakistan’s military dictator joined the war against
terror last September, he said and I quote that he was joining “the lesser
evil meaning the West to fight the larger evil meaning India”.
The West has
gambled for decades that dictators can impose stability. But the dictators
have come back to haunt the world.
The Shah of
Iran created a backlash that resulted in the Iranian Revolution.
Pakistan’s
General Zia nurtured the fanatics in the Afghan Mujahideen who became a
Frankenstein’s monster.
How many more
September 11nths, how many more near nuclear conflicts before we all come
to realise that the greatest protection of freedom from terrorism is
replacing dictatorships with democracies. With governments responsible to
the people.
The stakes
are high. The long term implications great. Democracies don’t start wars
and they don’t promote international terrorism.
Elections in
Pakistan are scheduled for October of this year. The Socialist
International could ensure that they take place, that they are fair free
and impartial and open to all parties and candidates.
History has
taught us the very hard lesson that when the world turns against
democracy, it turns against itself. That is why it is critical that in the
war against terrorism and in promoting peace in South Asia we keep sight
of democratic values.
Thank you Mr.
Chairman, ladies and gentlemen.
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