WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 — Almost two weeks into Pakistan’s political crisis,
Bush administration officials are losing faith that the Pakistani president,
Gen. Pervez Musharraf, can survive in office and have begun discussing what
might come next, according to senior administration officials.
In meetings on Wednesday, officials at the White
House, State Department and the Pentagon huddled to decide what message
Deputy Secretary of State John D. Negroponte would deliver to General
Musharraf — and perhaps more important, to Pakistan’s generals — when he
arrives in Islamabad on Friday.
Administration officials say they still hope
that Mr. Negroponte can salvage the fractured arranged marriage between
General Musharraf and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. But in Pakistan,
foreign diplomats and aides to both leaders said the chances of a deal
between the leaders were evaporating 11 days after General Musharraf
declared de facto martial law.
Several senior administration officials said
that with each day that passed, more administration officials were coming
around to the belief that General Musharraf’s days in power were numbered
and that the United States should begin considering contingency plans,
including reaching out to Pakistan’s generals.
More than a dozen officials in Washington and
Islamabad from a number of countries spoke on condition of anonymity because
of the fragility of Pakistan’s current political situation. The doubts that
American officials voiced about whether General Musharraf could survive were
more pointed than any public statements by the administration, and signaled
declining American patience in advance of Mr. Negroponte’s trip.
Officials involved in the discussions in
Washington said the Bush administration remained wary of the perception that
the United States was cutting back-room deals to install the next leader of
Pakistan. “They don’t want to encourage another military coup, but they are
also beginning to understand that Musharraf has become part of the problem,”
said one former official with knowledge of the debates inside the Bush
administration.
That shift in perception is significant because
for six years General Musharraf has sought to portray himself, for his own
purposes, as the West’s best alternative to a possible takeover in Pakistan
by radical Islamists.
While remote areas in northwestern Pakistan remain a haven for Al Qaeda and
other Islamic militants, senior officials at the White House, the State
Department and the Pentagon now say they recognize that the Pakistani Army
remains a powerful force for stability in Pakistan, and that there is little
prospect of an Islamic takeover if General Musharraf should fall.
If General Musharraf is forced from power, they
say, it would most likely be in a gentle push by fellow officers, who would
try to install a civilian president and push for parliamentary elections to
produce the next prime minister, perhaps even Ms. Bhutto, despite past
strains between her and the military.
Many Western diplomats in Islamabad said they
believed that even a flawed arrangement like that one was ultimately better
than an oppressive and unpopular military dictatorship under General
Musharraf.
Such a scenario would be a return to the diffuse
and sometimes unwieldy democracy that Pakistan had in the 1990s before
General Musharraf seized power in a bloodless coup.
But the diplomats also warned that removing the
general might not be that easy. Army generals are unlikely to move against
General Musharraf unless certain “red lines” are crossed, such as
countrywide political protests or a real threat of a cutoff of American
military aid to Pakistan.
Since he invoked emergency powers on Nov. 3,
General Musharraf has successfully used a huge security crackdown to block
large-scale protests. Virtually all major opposition politicians have been
detained, as well as 2,500 party workers, lawyers and human rights
activists, and on Wednesday, a close aide to General Musharraf said the
Pakistani leader remained convinced that emergency rule should continue.
Pakistan’s cadre of elite generals, called the
corps commanders, have long been kingmakers inside the country. At the top
of that cadre is Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, General Musharraf’s designated
successor as army chief. General Kayani is a moderate, pro-American infantry
commander who is widely seen as commanding respect within the army and,
within Western circles, as a potential alternative to General Musharraf.
General Kayani and other military leaders are
widely believed to be eager to pull the army out of politics and focus its
attention purely on securing the country.
Senior administration officials in Washington
said they were concerned that the longer the constitutional crisis in
Pakistan continued, the more diverted Pakistan’s army would be from the
mission the United States wants it focused on: fighting terrorism in the
country’s border areas.
The officials said there was growing worry in
Washington that the situation unfolding in the mountainous region of Swat,
where Islamic militants sympathetic to the Taliban and Al Qaeda are battling
Pakistan’s Army, was a sign that General Musharraf — and the Pakistani Army
— might be too busy jailing political opponents to fight militants.
The administration officials said they were also dismayed that General
Musharraf last week released 25 militants in exchange for 213 soldiers
captured by militants in August, and agreed to withdraw soldiers from
certain areas of South Waziristan.
Since spring, concern has been growing in the
armed forces that General Musharraf’s battle to remain in power and his
recent political blunders have cost him popularity with the public and
damaged the reputation of the armed forces, Western and Pakistani military
analysts say.
The army’s poor performance battling militants
in the country’s rugged tribal areas in the northwest has placed enormous
strain on the army as well. Hundreds of soldiers have died, dozens have
surrendered without a fight and militants have carried out beheadings to
demoralize the force.
“The army is getting more and more concerned and
worried and disturbed,” said Talat Masood, a retired general and political
analyst. “They have a genuine engagement in the tribal belt of Frontier
Province and Baluchistan,” he said, referring to armed clashes. “And now
they have such a major confrontation between the military and civil sectors
of society, and the lines are getting sharper.”
While the military supports the emergency, it is
doing so with caution, and there are red lines the army will not cross,
Western military officials in Pakistan said. “Kayani is loyal to Musharraf,”
said one Western military official. “But also to Pakistan.”
One red line the military would probably not be
prepared to cross would be if it were called on to maintain internal
security anywhere beyond the areas of the insurgency. If widespread
political protests were to emerge, the army could be called out to enforce
law and order.
While no large-scale protests have emerged since
the emergency was declared, the apparent collapse over the last week of
American-backed talks to create a power-sharing deal between Ms. Bhutto and
General Musharraf could lead to more street confrontations, diplomats said.
As General Musharraf has refused to lift his
emergency declaration, lawmakers in Washington have stepped up threats to
freeze aid payments to Islamabad.
“There is widespread disapproval in Congress of
these actions,” said Representative Nita M. Lowey, a New York Democrat who
is on the House Appropriations Committee. “As long as the emergency rule
continues, I don’t know if we can provide direct cash assistance to the
Musharraf government.”
But other top Democrats say they are wary about
endorsing cuts in aid, citing concern that it could undermine efforts to
fight Al Qaeda in Pakistan. And the Western military official in Pakistan
warned that an aid cutoff could anger Pakistan’s army.
Other experts argue that pressure could build on
General Musharraf if the corps commanders believed that the president’s
actions threatened the $1 billion in annual aid Washington provides to
Pakistan’s military.
“The military is pretty demoralized right now,”
said Christine Fair, a Pakistan analyst in Washington. “But what keeps
Musharraf in the position he is in with the military is the huge largess
from the United States.”
David Rohde and Carlota Gall reported from
Islamabad, Pakistan, and Thom Shanker contributed from Washington.