Pervez Musharraf--(b. August 11,
1943)
Pervez Musharraf , commanding general
of the Pakistani military, as well as the
current president of Pakistan, is a
military dictator who seized power in a
military coup on October 12, 1999. In his
time as Pakistan's top general and as its
political leader, he has led Pakistan into
conflict with India (the Kargil Conflict),
supported the Taliban in neighboring
Afghanistan,
become an ally of the United States
against the Taliban after September 11,
2001, fought against rebels in
Baluchistan, and against frontier tribes,
al-Qaida and the Taliban in the resurgent
Waziristan
War and the Siege of the Red Mosque.
Musharraf has presided over the political
fragmentation of his country as he tries
to suppress democracy and continue his
hold on power especially with his ongoing
political conflict with Pakistan's Supreme
Court and his imposition of a State of
Emergency, (martial law) in early November
of 2007.
Musharraf was born in Nahr wali Haveli,
Delhi, British India on August 11, 1943.
British India was divided between the
newly independent nations of Pakistan and
India, and, as Muslims, the Musharraf
family migrated from Hindu-dominated India
to the Muslim nation of Pakistan, along
with millions of other Indian Muslims. His
father was a Pakistani diplomat, reaching
the position of Minister of Foreign
Affairs.
Musharraf graduated in 1956 from Saint
Patrick's School in Karachi, Pakistan, and
later attended Forman Christian College in
Lahore. Though he is Muslim, it was then
common for children of the educated elite
to attend such private schools.
Musharraf entered the military in 1964,
and served in the 1965 Indo-Pakistani War.
He later fought in the 1971 Indo-Pakistani
War (a.k.a. the Bangladesh War of
Independence). Musharraf does not belong
to the largely ethnic Punjabi officer
class which dominates the Pakistani army.
The Musharraf family are members of the
Urdu ethnic group. His rise through the
military is notable due to his minority
status. In addition to his education as a
youth, Musharraf also acquired military
training in the United Kingdom. (See also:
Indo-Pakistani
Wars)
In 1998, General Pervez Musharraf was
appointed to the position of Army Chief of
Staff by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. The
1998-1999 Kargil Crisis and conflict,
which was overseen by General Musharraf,
ended as an embarrassing loss for
Pakistan, and brought him into open
conflict with the Prime Minister. In
October, 1999, Prime Minister Sharif
attempted to fire Musharraf, who then led
a bloodless coup against Sharif.
Immediately following the Musharraf coup,
tensions with India increased, though
eventually the Musharraf regime worked
successfully to ease tensions with
India.
Prior to the terrorist attacks on the
United States on September 11, 2001,
Pakistan supported the Taliban movement in
neighboring Afghanistan, but Musharraf
decided to work with the United States
against the Taliban and al-Qaida as the
U.S. and its allies invaded Afghanistan in
October, 2001. Musharraf's stance against
Islamic extremists like the Taliban and
al-Qaida helped lead to violence within
Pakistan as those groups aided frontier
tribes oppose the authority of Pakistan's
central government. Traditionally, the
tribal groups along Pakistan's Northwest
Frontier have enjoyed a great deal of
autonomy, and when Musharraf sent the
Pakistani military to the frontier in an
attempt to prevent Taliban and al-Qaida
infiltration along the border (per
American requests), the tribes saw this as
a violation of their rights. The Taliban
and al-Qaida were more than willing to aid
the tribes against the government, and
this border conflict became the latest
War
in Waziristan, as part of the frontier
is known. Islamic militants have attempted
to assassinate President Musharraf several
times, and in the summer of 2007, violence
hit the Pakistani capital with the Siege
of the Red Mosque. Islamic militants led
by Abdul
Rashid Ghazi defied government
authority, which prompted a violent army
siege of an important mosque in Islamabad,
resulting in hundreds of deaths.
Musharraf named himself President of
Pakistan in June, 2001, and has maintained
that post as well as his old position of
Army Chief of Staff. The legality of his
dual role has brought him into conflict
with the Pakistani Supreme Court. Despite
the fact that Musharraf allowed a former
Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto to return
from exile, he imposed martial law in
early November of 2007. This act brought
condemnation from many foreign
governments, including the United States.
Pakistan is at the brink of serious
political violence as Musharraf attempts
to further consolidate power at the
expense of his country's remaining
democratic institutions.
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