Bhutto Adviser: Musharraf Is To Blame

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A longtime adviser and close friend of assassinated Pakistani ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto places blame for Bhutto’s death squarely on the shoulders of U.S.-supported dictator Pervez Musharraf.

After an October attack on Bhutto’s life in Karachi, the ex-prime minister warned “certain individuals in the security establishment [about the threat] and nothing was done,” says Husain Haqqani, a confidante of Bhutto’s for decades. “There is only one possibility: the security establishment and Musharraf are complicit, either by negligence or design. That is the most important thing. She’s not the first political leader killed, since Musharraf took power, by the security forces.”

Haqqani notes that Bhutto died of a gunshot wound to the neck. “It’s like a hit, not a regular suicide bombing,” he says. “It’s quite clear that someone who considers himself Pakistan’s Godfather has a very different attitude toward human life than you and I do.”

As for what comes next: Haqqani doubts that Musharraf will go forward with scheduled elections. “The greatest likelihood is that this was aimed not just aimed at Benazir Bhutto but at weakening Pakistan’s push for democracy,” he says. “But the U.S. has to think long and hard. Musharraf’s position is untenable in Pakistan. More and more people are going to blame him for bringing Pakistan to this point, intentionally or unintentionally. It’s very clear that terrorism has increased in Pakistan. It’s quite clear that poverty has increased in Pakistan. … anti-Americanism might come in, as people say, ‘You know what, why should we support this [pro-U.S.] regime that has not delivered anything to us?'”

Growing emotional, Haqqani says people should know that “Benazir Bhutto was a very warm person. She was a very strong and courageous person, a very forgiving person. To have gone what she went through — her father assassinated by one military dictator [General Zia ul-Haq], her two brothers assassinated, no one in the elite fully loyal to her… The whole Pakistani security establishment thinks Pakistan should be governed as a national-security state. She resisted that completely, and that doesn’t get seen enough. She questioned their right to govern.”

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