On the Israel/Palestinian problem he has insisted on the need for President Bush to make a personal effort in progressing negotiations between the two sides.
It is fascinating that Musharraf feels able to speak in this way when only five years ago Pakistan was close to being regarded as a pariah state after he led a military coup against the elected government.
Its membership of the Commonwealth was suspended and the United States imposed sanctions because of its nuclear weapons tests. All this changed after 9/11 because of America's need for military access to Taleban bases in Afghanistan which Pakistan could provide.
President Musharraf decided to throw in his lot with the West, and has since been handsomely rewarded; his country is now the third largest beneficiary of US aid (after Isael and Egypt) and he is warmly received at the White House. The fact that Pakistan's leading nuclear scientist, Abdul Quadeer Khan, passed on nuclear know-how to Iran is overlooked, as is Musharraf's failure to keep his promise to relinquish his military rank as president by the end of this year.
Pakistan has never been an easy country to govern and it has veered between dictatorship and democracy since becoming independent in 1945. Musharraf has provided a considerable measure of stability but, as yet, not the democracy about which President Bush speaks so often.
No comments
To be able to write a comment, you have to be registered and logged in
Currently there are no comments.