I'm continuing my effort to understand Pakistani political landscape, and how Pakistan came to the situation it is in now.
I remember watching news of "yet another" revolution in Pakistan, or that's how it was reported by the media back in 1999.
Even as a 9 years old, I couldn't have not felt that "something was off." Revolutions can't be so peaceful. It felt empty, and choreographed. All I knew it was certainly not a Wuchang Uprising.
Now looking at it 20 years after. The whole period looks very uneventful other than it's ending following tumultuous years after Bhutto's assassination.
How loyal was really the army to Musharraf? From what I researched, he was really a decorated, and connected military man, who could've walked into any barracks, and redone the 1999 with ease.
Why he was so easily deposed? Was he really the top dog at the time, or were somebody else still behind him was the real brains behind his rule? Did his ouster really happen because of popular resistance getting so powerful, or he was given a kick to the back from behind?
I remember watching news of "yet another" revolution in Pakistan, or that's how it was reported by the media back in 1999.
Even as a 9 years old, I couldn't have not felt that "something was off." Revolutions can't be so peaceful. It felt empty, and choreographed. All I knew it was certainly not a Wuchang Uprising.
Now looking at it 20 years after. The whole period looks very uneventful other than it's ending following tumultuous years after Bhutto's assassination.
How loyal was really the army to Musharraf? From what I researched, he was really a decorated, and connected military man, who could've walked into any barracks, and redone the 1999 with ease.
Why he was so easily deposed? Was he really the top dog at the time, or were somebody else still behind him was the real brains behind his rule? Did his ouster really happen because of popular resistance getting so powerful, or he was given a kick to the back from behind?