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Musharraf thumbs his nose at US17 Nov 2007, 2317 hrs IST,Chidanand Rajghatta,TNN
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WASHINGTON: The Bush administration has egg on its face after its long favoured military dictator Pervez Musharraf bluntly rejected its demand that he lift Emergency, and instead put the fear of "loose nukes" into Washington if the west pressed too hard.
Musharraf told Washington's No.2 diplomat John Negroponte on Saturday that the Emergency is meant to reinforce and strengthen the law enforcement apparatus in the fight against militancy and extremism.
"President Musharraf made it clear to the visiting US envoy that the Emergency can only be lifted once the situation regarding law and order improves," a Musharraf aide told wire services after the two met for two hours in Islamabad.
Musharraf also played on Washington's fear of loose nukes by suggesting that if the elections were held in a "disturbed atmosphere" it could bring in dangerous elements who might pose a risk to control of Pakistan's nuclear weapons.
"They cannot fall into the wrong hands, if we manage ourselves politically. The military is there - as long as the military is there, nothing happens to the strategic assets, we are in charge and nobody does anything with them," he told BBC ahead of the meeting.
The public rebuff - and the loose nukes threat - leaves US policy in Pakistan in near tatters, since it was premised on Bush's proposition that Musharraf is his "tight" buddy, a "man of courage and vision" who he could do business with.
The US also believed that it has the leverage to bend Musharraf to its will because it pays the Pakistani military more than $100 million a month for services rendered in the "war on terror" besides millions in military hardware and equipment.
Ahead of the Negroponte visit, US officials had said he would deliver a "tough message" to Musharraf. But instead, it appears it was Musharraf who has sent a tough message to Bush to butt out.
Threats of an aid cut seem to have made no impression since the administration has already signalled that this was not on the cards because of it need for access into Afghanistan.
The administration's response to snub was not immediately forthcoming, although the US media quoted unnamed official in Islamabad diplomat as saying "In diplomacy, things don't happen instantaneously."
The diplomat insisted that Negroponte "came with a very strong message and he delivered a very strong message."
In the past week Washington has clutched at the crumbs and straws Musharraf has cast amid a growing clamour here to dump the dictator.
Administration officials made much of Musharraf releasing some opposition figures and civil rights activists from prison and relaxing the hold on the media, although thousands remain incarcerated and press freedom is now subject to compliance to new military guidelines.
The Bush administration still believes in the proposition that Musharraf is the frontline ally in its war on terror and its efforts to contain nuclear weapons spread, even though Pakistan, under the dictator, has cut deals with the militants, freed terrorists, and has retreated and lost vast swath of territory, while cracking down on civil society.
It also stands accused of giving nuclear weapons technology and guidance to rogue regimes and while its scientists have parlayed with Osama bin Laden.
Washington's credulous approach is now being sharply questioned by some lawmakers and analysts. "Musharraf is a sharp, intelligent individual who is playing with the naivety of France's, Europe's and America's diplomacy," the French writer Bernard Levy said in a talk this week, arguing that the jihadist threat in Pakistan is not limited to its borders, but is also establishment-based and comes from the heart of the country which Musharraf controls.
"In my experience, unfortunately the red areas are not at the margins, but at the very center," Levy said. "Terrorists and jihadists are like fish in water in Islamabad and in Karachi itself."
Lawmakers who realise this are pressing the administration to cut ties with Pakistan's military establishment, arguing that Washington is losing traction with Pakistani civil society. But an equally influential group is buying Musharraf's argument and stressing that continued backing for the military is key to preventing loose nukes.
This is the weekend that Bush and Washington might have to make a call one way or the other.
I don't usually care much for Rajghatta's drivel, but some interesting opinions in here.
I guess the question is, will the US back off once the SC verdict comes in and Musharraf doffs his uniform? Or even more importantly, will the US wait that long?
Also, why is the US so doggedly pursuing Bhutto, when a wide spectrum of Pakistanis have expressed strong disapproval of her. It is also becoming more and more apparent, from Musharraf's comments, that Bhutto is going to get no "extra help" in the elections, unless something dramatic happens - which means she will be at the mercy of the electorate and will probably not garner enough seats to form a government on her own.