WASHINGTON, June 18 — The United States on Monday ended an economic and political embargo of the Palestinian Authority in a bid to bolster President Mahmoud Abbas and the new Fatah-led emergency government he has established in the West Bank as a counterweight to Hamas-controlled Gaza.
Skip to next paragraph
Multimedia
Back Story With The Times's Helene Cooper (mp3)
The American decision freed up tens of millions of dollars in aid to the Palestinians that has been frozen since the Hamas victory in legislative elections in early 2006. The European Union similarly announced plans to resume direct aid to the Palestinians, while Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would release to Mr. Abbas Palestinian tax revenues that Israel has withheld since Hamas took control of the Palestinian parliament.
But in siding so firmly with Mr. Abbas, the Bush administration steered into new territory in its dealings with the Palestinians, as it essentially threw its support behind the dismantling of a democratically elected government. Mr. Abbas’s decision to strip Hamas of its representation in the National Security Council to form a new emergency government has already kindled a legal battle over whether he has overstepped boundaries laid out in the Palestinian constitution.
The American moves amount to a major step toward what some call a “West Bank first” strategy in which money, aid and international political recognition would be heaped on the West Bank, leaving Gaza to be ruled by Hamas, largely as its fief.
But Middle East experts said the Palestinian constitution might allow Mr. Abbas’s emergency government to remain in power for only 60 days, and Hamas, which won the last legislative elections, has indicated that it will not agree to new elections on Mr. Abbas’s timetable.
“We are going to support President Abbas and what he wants to do,” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in announcing the change in policy. She said the United States would work to “restructure” and unfreeze $86 million in aid that was originally set out to help Mr. Abbas build up his security forces. It was frozen because Hamas would not renounce violence, was considered a terrorist group and did not believe Israel had a right to exist.
By diplomatic standards, the American response to the upheaval in the Palestinian territories has come about at the speed of lightning. It was less than a week ago that Hamas gunmen routed rival Fatah forces in Gaza, and took control over Fatah-run outposts on the teeming strip on the Mediterranean. Mr. Abbas called it a coup, dissolved the national unity government and announced a new cabinet made up of his allies and situated in the West Bank, where Fatah remains strong.
At least for now, the United States and Europe appear in agreement that perhaps the only way to salvage some advantage from the Hamas victory in Gaza is to bolster Mr. Abbas in the West Bank, in order to provide Palestinians there and in Gaza with a preview of what life could be like with a pro-Western government in charge.
Ms. Rice, in response to a question at a news conference on Monday, said she considered Mr. Abbas’s new government to be legitimate. “I think we will leave to the Palestinians issues of how they work through their own constitutional issues,” she said. “Our view, very strongly, is that what President Abbas has done is legitimate and it is responsible and we’re going to support that action.”
But Daniel Levy, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation and a former Israeli peace negotiator, said the American move to back Mr. Abbas “looks suspiciously like there’s an effort afoot to reimpose single party rule on the Palestinian body politic.”
President Bush, who is to meet with Mr. Olmert at the White House on Tuesday, informed Mr. Abbas of the policy shift during a telephone conversation on Monday. Mr. Abbas moved quickly to capitalize on the shift, telling Mr. Bush that it was time to restart Middle East peace talks with Israel, his spokesman said. That is something that Ms. Rice has been pushing but, so far, with little overt backing from Mr. Bush.
“Everyone has looked over into the abyss and seen what happens when moderates don’t come together,” said David Makovsky, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “What we’re seeing now is a second chance for everybody.”
Administration officials said Monday that Mr. Bush might use the coming five-year anniversary of his announcement of a roadmap toward a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians as an occasion to throw his weight behind a renewed push for peace talks.
Plans for a regional meeting next week between Arab and Israeli officials, along with representatives from Europe, the United Nations and the United States, were put on the shelf for now, Arab officials said. But in a telephone call with Mr. Olmert, King Abdullah II of Jordan urged Israelis and Palestinians to restart the peace process.
Officially, Bush administration officials insisted they would not write off Gaza, and Ms. Rice said the United States would give $40 million to the United Nations to finance relief projects there. “It is the position of the United States that there is one Palestinian people and there should be one Palestinian state,” she said. “We will not leave one and a half million Palestinians at the mercy of terrorist organizations.”
A “West Bank first” strategy would mean leaning on the Israeli government to dismantle settlements, ease up on travel restrictions for Palestinians moving around the West Bank, and release a substantial number of Palestinian prisoners being held by Israel, Middle East experts said. Such moves would probably require significant prodding from the Bush administration; it is unclear whether Mr. Bush, who has thus far refrained from pressuring Israel to make political concessions to Mr. Abbas, will actually do so now.
“This is as serious as it gets,” said Ziad Asali, head of the American Task Force on Palestine. “It is time to lift the siege off the Palestinian people. This is the time to open up the political and economic horizons, and wage a campaign for the hearts and minds of the Palestinian people.”
The Associated Press reported that a Hamas spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri, accused the international community of hypocrisy, noting that Hamas had defeated Fatah in parliamentary elections in 2006. “This confirms the falseness of the international community’s support for democracy,” he said.
2007年6月19日星期二
Major Assault Pressed Against Insurgents Near Baghdad
Major Assault Pressed Against Insurgents Near Baghdad
Chris Hondros/Getty Images
Thick smoke rose over an area of Baghdad on Sunday after American airstrikes were called in to attack suspected bomb-making facilities।
BAQUBA, Iraq, Tuesday, June 20 — More than 10,000 coalition troops worked their way through Diyala province and thousands more engaged in operations elsewhere in and around Baghdad today, as part of a major attack against Sunni insurgent positions that began last night.
Skip to next paragraph
Readers’ Questions
Q&A: Life in Iraq
What is daily life like for U.S. troops, Iraqi civilians and the reporters who cover them? The Times’s Baghdad bureau will answer your questions.
Ask a Question
The operation is aimed at blunting the persistent car and suicide bombings that have terrorized Iraqis and thwarted political reconciliation.
The assault is unusual in its scope and ambition, representing a more aggressive strategy of attacking several insurgent strongholds simultaneously to tamp down violence throughout the country.
It reflects an acknowledgment that as fresh infusions of American troops focused on Baghdad in recent months, insurgents moved their bases outside the city. Commanders said the goal of the operation, which is called Arrowhead Ripper, was to break the cycle of sectarian killings and retribution that has swept Iraq.
The fighting is expected to be hard. By daylight today, attack helicopters and ground forces had killed 22 suspected insurgents in and around Baquba, the capital of Diyala province, the military said in a statement. Lt. Colonel Christopher Garver, a military spokesman here, said this afternoon that he had received no reports of American casualties so far.
In recent months, Diyala has emerged as a center of the Sunni Arab insurgency as Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and other groups have made it their deadliest base of operations, supplanting Anbar Province. Violence in Anbar dropped after Sunni Arab tribes joined forces with the Americans to drive out Qaeda fighters.
American military officials say Diyala Province is now home to as many as 2,000 fighters who have flocked there from throughout the country, not only from Anbar but also from Mosul and, since the security crackdown, Baghdad.
But American commanders say the Baquba insurgents, a mix of former members of Saddam Hussein’s army and paramilitary forces, embittered Sunni Arab men, criminal gangs and Qaeda Islamists, are increasingly well trained and highly disciplined. In the past year or more, the militias have terrorized the mixed Sunni and Shiite population, wiping out Shiite families and turning the city into a ghost town.
The tense political situation in Baquba and surrounding Diyala Province, which is north and east of Baghdad, has been further inflamed over the past year by Shiite-dominated militias, some of whom had infiltrated the security forces and persecuted Sunni Arabs. They proved ill prepared to take on the insurgents.
Some of the fighters are also believed to be natives of the province who shifted to the western part of Baquba after an American battalion began operating in the eastern section of the capital several months ago. It is not clear if senior insurgent leaders are still in the city, but some American officials suspect they may have moved to other parts of Diyala in anticipation of the assault.
The Baquba operation is being led by the Third Stryker Brigade Combat Team, Second Infantry Division, with support from units from two other brigades. The American troops are either directly involved in the assault or in supporting efforts on the flanks, along with combat aircraft and artillery.
In the initial attack early Tuesday, American forces cut off the western portion of Baquba, where the commander of the brigade, Col. Steve Townsend, said 300 to 500 Qaeda fighters are believed to have been operating. Helicopters took part in the assault to cut off escape routes and tank fire could be heard down the streets.
In the next phase, American forces will begin the dangerous and painstaking process of clearing the city, which is still occupied by thousands of civilians. Iraqi security forces will have a role in securing the western section of the city after it has been captured by American troops, but are not involved in the initial assault.
The Qaeda and insurgent strongholds in Baquba are strongly defended, according to American intelligence reports. The insurgents’ defenses include enormous buried bombs that are powerful enough to destroy or disable an armored vehicle. Combat engineers recently cleared a main road in Baquba of 17 roadside bombs in a stretch of less than a mile, Colonel Townsend said. Of those, 14 were disarmed and three exploded but did not cause casualties.
Houses are believed to have been rigged with explosives, and enemy fighters — including expert snipers — are believed to have machine gun नेस्त्स
American forces are already operating in the eastern section of Baquba. A Stryker battalion began clearing the area several months ago and succeeded in the face of tough resistance. But those operations channeled some fighters to the western part of the provincial capital.
Skip to next paragraph
Readers’ Questions
Q&A: Life in Iraq
What is daily life like for U.S. troops, Iraqi civilians and the reporters who cover them? The Times’s Baghdad bureau will answer your questions.
Ask a Question
Initially, however, in at least some parts of the city, resistance seemed to be limited.
In what appeared to be a preliminary operation in Baquba, police officials and witnesses said that early on Monday, a small contingent of Iraqi security forces moved into one area of Baquba, encountering little fire.
The Iraqi forces were joined by some members of the 1920s Revolutionary Brigade, a Sunni Arab group with units that have recently repudiated a longstanding alliance with Al Qaeda, and witnesses said the two groups were welcomed by the residents. American helicopters could be heard overhead, ready to assist, but residents told the Iraqis they wanted help stopping the sectarian bloodshed and ridding Iraq of the Americans.
“Why didn’t you do this in the past?” said a man in who gave his name as Abu Muhammad, as he pulled together the hands of a police captain and a brigade commander. He added: “If you work together you can secure Iraq, and the occupation will have no choice but to leave. But if you stay divided Al Qaeda will stay and the occupation will stay.”
The Iraqi police said the assault on Baquba led to the deaths of at least four insurgents by Monday afternoon. Fourteen others were arrested, the police said, and a large arms cache was seized, though American officials did not confirm the deaths or detainments. It was unclear if there were any casualties among Iraqi or American troops.
In what appeared to be a separate operation deep in the south near the Iranian border, a ferocious battle between American troops and Shiite militants left at least 20 people dead and wounded scores more, Iraqi and American officials said.
The clashes, in Amara and Majjar al-Kabir, a pair of mostly Shiite towns just north of Basra, started early Monday. They were sparked by raids on what American officials described as a secret network involved in transporting “lethal aid” from Iran to Iraq, particularly deadly roadside bombs known as explosively formed penetrators, or E.F.P.’s.
Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, an American military spokesman in Iraq, said American troops have intensified their focus on finding and dismantling places where those weapons are built, like the towns raided Monday, because the weapons were especially hard to stop at the border. “It’s hard to catch because they are shipped as components, not completed weapons,” he said.
According to officials aligned with the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr in Basra, the fighting involved members of Mr. Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia. The battle appeared to be the largest clash with Mr. Sadr’s loosely affiliated gunmen since the start of the new American security plan in February.
In addition to the 20 dead, six suspects were wounded and one was detained, officials said. A hospital official said that at least 60 people were wounded.
A few hours later, members of the Mahdi Army marched alongside the coffins of those killed, but the battle did not resume, said Abdul Karim al-Muhammadawi, a senior tribal and political figure in Amara. By Monday afternoon, he said, “The armed presence of the Mahdi Army was gone.”
Despite the heightened military operation, violence churned on elsewhere in Iraq. In southern Baghdad, two consecutive car bombs near a gas line killed at least seven people and wounded 29, an Interior Ministry official said. Baghdad authorities found 33 unidentified bodies, many showing signs of torture, as mortar shells, shootings and bombs across the capital killed at least nine people, including a national police commander.
Between violence in Anbar, west of Baghdad; Hilla, south of Baghdad; and Kirkuk, to the north, eight people were killed and more than a dozen wounded. The United States military said one soldier was killed late Sunday when an improvised explosive device exploded near a foot patrol in a southern part of the capital.
In Samarra, where insurgents destroyed the two remaining minarets of a Shiite shrine on Wednesday, gunmen and a suicide bomber attacked the headquarters of the area’s national police commandos, killing four policemen and wounding eight, security officials said. A civilian was also killed in the assault, which came the day after the lifting of a curfew that was imposed when the shrine was bombed.
Michael R. Gordon reported from Baquba, and Damien Cave from Baghdad. Reporting was contributed by Ali Adeeb, Karim Hilmi and Alissa J. Rubin from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of The New York Times from Basra and Baquba.
Chris Hondros/Getty Images
Thick smoke rose over an area of Baghdad on Sunday after American airstrikes were called in to attack suspected bomb-making facilities।
BAQUBA, Iraq, Tuesday, June 20 — More than 10,000 coalition troops worked their way through Diyala province and thousands more engaged in operations elsewhere in and around Baghdad today, as part of a major attack against Sunni insurgent positions that began last night.
Skip to next paragraph
Readers’ Questions
Q&A: Life in Iraq
What is daily life like for U.S. troops, Iraqi civilians and the reporters who cover them? The Times’s Baghdad bureau will answer your questions.
Ask a Question
The operation is aimed at blunting the persistent car and suicide bombings that have terrorized Iraqis and thwarted political reconciliation.
The assault is unusual in its scope and ambition, representing a more aggressive strategy of attacking several insurgent strongholds simultaneously to tamp down violence throughout the country.
It reflects an acknowledgment that as fresh infusions of American troops focused on Baghdad in recent months, insurgents moved their bases outside the city. Commanders said the goal of the operation, which is called Arrowhead Ripper, was to break the cycle of sectarian killings and retribution that has swept Iraq.
The fighting is expected to be hard. By daylight today, attack helicopters and ground forces had killed 22 suspected insurgents in and around Baquba, the capital of Diyala province, the military said in a statement. Lt. Colonel Christopher Garver, a military spokesman here, said this afternoon that he had received no reports of American casualties so far.
In recent months, Diyala has emerged as a center of the Sunni Arab insurgency as Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and other groups have made it their deadliest base of operations, supplanting Anbar Province. Violence in Anbar dropped after Sunni Arab tribes joined forces with the Americans to drive out Qaeda fighters.
American military officials say Diyala Province is now home to as many as 2,000 fighters who have flocked there from throughout the country, not only from Anbar but also from Mosul and, since the security crackdown, Baghdad.
But American commanders say the Baquba insurgents, a mix of former members of Saddam Hussein’s army and paramilitary forces, embittered Sunni Arab men, criminal gangs and Qaeda Islamists, are increasingly well trained and highly disciplined. In the past year or more, the militias have terrorized the mixed Sunni and Shiite population, wiping out Shiite families and turning the city into a ghost town.
The tense political situation in Baquba and surrounding Diyala Province, which is north and east of Baghdad, has been further inflamed over the past year by Shiite-dominated militias, some of whom had infiltrated the security forces and persecuted Sunni Arabs. They proved ill prepared to take on the insurgents.
Some of the fighters are also believed to be natives of the province who shifted to the western part of Baquba after an American battalion began operating in the eastern section of the capital several months ago. It is not clear if senior insurgent leaders are still in the city, but some American officials suspect they may have moved to other parts of Diyala in anticipation of the assault.
The Baquba operation is being led by the Third Stryker Brigade Combat Team, Second Infantry Division, with support from units from two other brigades. The American troops are either directly involved in the assault or in supporting efforts on the flanks, along with combat aircraft and artillery.
In the initial attack early Tuesday, American forces cut off the western portion of Baquba, where the commander of the brigade, Col. Steve Townsend, said 300 to 500 Qaeda fighters are believed to have been operating. Helicopters took part in the assault to cut off escape routes and tank fire could be heard down the streets.
In the next phase, American forces will begin the dangerous and painstaking process of clearing the city, which is still occupied by thousands of civilians. Iraqi security forces will have a role in securing the western section of the city after it has been captured by American troops, but are not involved in the initial assault.
The Qaeda and insurgent strongholds in Baquba are strongly defended, according to American intelligence reports. The insurgents’ defenses include enormous buried bombs that are powerful enough to destroy or disable an armored vehicle. Combat engineers recently cleared a main road in Baquba of 17 roadside bombs in a stretch of less than a mile, Colonel Townsend said. Of those, 14 were disarmed and three exploded but did not cause casualties.
Houses are believed to have been rigged with explosives, and enemy fighters — including expert snipers — are believed to have machine gun नेस्त्स
American forces are already operating in the eastern section of Baquba. A Stryker battalion began clearing the area several months ago and succeeded in the face of tough resistance. But those operations channeled some fighters to the western part of the provincial capital.
Skip to next paragraph
Readers’ Questions
Q&A: Life in Iraq
What is daily life like for U.S. troops, Iraqi civilians and the reporters who cover them? The Times’s Baghdad bureau will answer your questions.
Ask a Question
Initially, however, in at least some parts of the city, resistance seemed to be limited.
In what appeared to be a preliminary operation in Baquba, police officials and witnesses said that early on Monday, a small contingent of Iraqi security forces moved into one area of Baquba, encountering little fire.
The Iraqi forces were joined by some members of the 1920s Revolutionary Brigade, a Sunni Arab group with units that have recently repudiated a longstanding alliance with Al Qaeda, and witnesses said the two groups were welcomed by the residents. American helicopters could be heard overhead, ready to assist, but residents told the Iraqis they wanted help stopping the sectarian bloodshed and ridding Iraq of the Americans.
“Why didn’t you do this in the past?” said a man in who gave his name as Abu Muhammad, as he pulled together the hands of a police captain and a brigade commander. He added: “If you work together you can secure Iraq, and the occupation will have no choice but to leave. But if you stay divided Al Qaeda will stay and the occupation will stay.”
The Iraqi police said the assault on Baquba led to the deaths of at least four insurgents by Monday afternoon. Fourteen others were arrested, the police said, and a large arms cache was seized, though American officials did not confirm the deaths or detainments. It was unclear if there were any casualties among Iraqi or American troops.
In what appeared to be a separate operation deep in the south near the Iranian border, a ferocious battle between American troops and Shiite militants left at least 20 people dead and wounded scores more, Iraqi and American officials said.
The clashes, in Amara and Majjar al-Kabir, a pair of mostly Shiite towns just north of Basra, started early Monday. They were sparked by raids on what American officials described as a secret network involved in transporting “lethal aid” from Iran to Iraq, particularly deadly roadside bombs known as explosively formed penetrators, or E.F.P.’s.
Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, an American military spokesman in Iraq, said American troops have intensified their focus on finding and dismantling places where those weapons are built, like the towns raided Monday, because the weapons were especially hard to stop at the border. “It’s hard to catch because they are shipped as components, not completed weapons,” he said.
According to officials aligned with the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr in Basra, the fighting involved members of Mr. Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia. The battle appeared to be the largest clash with Mr. Sadr’s loosely affiliated gunmen since the start of the new American security plan in February.
In addition to the 20 dead, six suspects were wounded and one was detained, officials said. A hospital official said that at least 60 people were wounded.
A few hours later, members of the Mahdi Army marched alongside the coffins of those killed, but the battle did not resume, said Abdul Karim al-Muhammadawi, a senior tribal and political figure in Amara. By Monday afternoon, he said, “The armed presence of the Mahdi Army was gone.”
Despite the heightened military operation, violence churned on elsewhere in Iraq. In southern Baghdad, two consecutive car bombs near a gas line killed at least seven people and wounded 29, an Interior Ministry official said. Baghdad authorities found 33 unidentified bodies, many showing signs of torture, as mortar shells, shootings and bombs across the capital killed at least nine people, including a national police commander.
Between violence in Anbar, west of Baghdad; Hilla, south of Baghdad; and Kirkuk, to the north, eight people were killed and more than a dozen wounded. The United States military said one soldier was killed late Sunday when an improvised explosive device exploded near a foot patrol in a southern part of the capital.
In Samarra, where insurgents destroyed the two remaining minarets of a Shiite shrine on Wednesday, gunmen and a suicide bomber attacked the headquarters of the area’s national police commandos, killing four policemen and wounding eight, security officials said. A civilian was also killed in the assault, which came the day after the lifting of a curfew that was imposed when the shrine was bombed.
Michael R. Gordon reported from Baquba, and Damien Cave from Baghdad. Reporting was contributed by Ali Adeeb, Karim Hilmi and Alissa J. Rubin from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of The New York Times from Basra and Baquba.
2007年6月3日星期日
Former Leader Talks of Return to Pakistan, and Maybe Power
Former Leader Talks of Return to Pakistan, and Maybe Power
Joao Silva for The New York Times
Benazir Bhutto, the former Pakistani prime minister, has been in self-imposed exile for the last eight years.
function getSharePasskey() { return 'ex=1338696000&en=e21e897149912e64&ei=5124';}
function getShareURL() {
return encodeURIComponent('http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/04/world/asia/04bhutto.html');
}
function getShareHeadline() {
return encodeURIComponent('Former Leader Talks of Return to Pakistan, and Maybe Power');
}
function getShareDescription() {
return encodeURIComponent('Benazir Bhutto is raising her profile again and positioning herself as savior of Pakistan.
');
}
function getShareKeywords() {
return encodeURIComponent('Politics and Government,Pakistan,Benazir Bhutto,Pervez Musharraf');
}
function getShareSection() {
return encodeURIComponent('world');
}
function getShareSectionDisplay() {
return encodeURIComponent('International / Asia Pacific');
}
function getShareSubSection() {
return encodeURIComponent('asia');
}
function getShareByline() {
return encodeURIComponent('By CARLOTTA GALL');
}
function getSharePubdate() {
return encodeURIComponent('June 4, 2007');
}
Sign In to E-Mail or Save This
Print
Single Page
Reprints
Share
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Permalink
writePost();
By CARLOTTA GALL
Published: June 4, 2007
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, June 3 — Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto is stirring up Pakistani politics by quietly talking through intermediaries about a power-sharing deal with the president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, and suggesting in an interview that she could return to Pakistan before the end of the year.
Threatened with arrest and dogged by corruption charges, Ms. Bhutto has sat out the last eight years in self-imposed exile in London and Dubai, while still leading what is arguably the country’s largest opposition party. In that time, she has seen General Musharraf, her former chief of military operations, seize power in a coup. She has watched the political turmoil build as Pakistanis grow restless under military rule, galvanized most recently by General Musharraf’s ouster of the chief Supreme Court justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.
Her party, the Pakistan People’s Party, was heavily represented in a peaceful rally for Mr. Chaudhry in Abbottabad on Saturday, just weeks after more than 40 people died in Karachi in clashes related to his ouster.
As Pakistan veers toward elections this year, General Musharraf has run into mounting opposition over his plans to seek a second term. Ms. Bhutto, 53, is raising her profile once again and positioning herself as savior of the nation, someone who can lead Pakistan back to democracy and provide a more reliable ally than General Musharraf, whose performance she criticized in fighting terrorism and extremism.
Under General Musharraf, she noted, Al Qaeda and the Taliban have used lawless areas of northern Pakistan to regroup and cause havoc in neighboring Afghanistan and within Pakistan itself. Yet Washington continues to support General Musharraf, she said, giving him billions of dollars in assistance since 2001.
Despite his repeated insistence that Ms. Bhutto will not be allowed to participate in the elections, General Musharraf, according to aides and diplomats, has been conducting discreet negotiations for some kind of deal that would allow her to return and him to stay on as president. The corruption charges, which Ms. Bhutto says are politically motivated, might then be dropped. “General Musharraf says that he wouldn’t allow me back and I interpret that to mean that he would then arrest me and prevent me from having freedom of movement and freedom of speech and freedom of association,” Ms. Bhutto said in the interview, which took place recently at one of her homes outside Pakistan. “In any event I’d like to go back, and I’m looking at the window between September and December to do that.”
To some, the prospect of Ms. Bhutto’s return confronts Pakistan with an unsavory choice, one it has faced before. Since its independence in 1947, this nation of 149 million that now has nuclear weapons has alternated between rule by generals who have fronted for a domineering military and civilian politicians who have won an enduring reputation for corruption. They have by turns worn out their welcomes. The country has had no fewer than four Constitutions, four military takeovers of government, and never experienced a constitutional transfer of power.
General Musharraf seized power in a coup in October 1999, overthrowing Ms. Bhutto’s successor, Nawaz Sharif, who also lives abroad to avoid prosecution on corruption charges. General Musharraf was at that time embraced by much of the population, wearied by turbulent years of short-lived, self-serving civilian governments. Yet today, Ms. Bhutto, part of a storied family dynasty, is probably the most popular politician with national appeal. If allowed to return, she may well be in a position to form the next government and serve again as prime minister, even if General Musharraf remains as president, if both agreed.
The daughter of a politician executed by the military, educated at Harvard and Oxford and the first woman to serve as prime minister in the Islamic world, at age 35, Ms. Bhutto captivated supporters in the West as well as many Pakistanis in her early days. She was twice prime minister, from 1988 to 1990 and then from 1993 to 1996, when her personal and political fortunes unraveled.
She left Pakistan eight years ago under a cloud। She was embroiled in a family feud when her brother, Murtaza, tried to claim leadership of the party their father founded, the Pakistan’s People’s Party.
Her brother was shot dead in 1996. Ms. Bhutto’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari, was jailed on suspicion of the murder, though the case was never proved. Ms. Bhutto says the killing was a plot by Pakistani intelligence to divide and weaken her family.
That same year, Ms. Bhutto’s three-year-old government was dismissed amid accusations of mismanagement and corruption. Three months later she suffered a resounding defeat in elections. While she says the balloting was rigged, the polls also reflected the disillusion and anger of Pakistanis over a deteriorating economy, rising violence and a leadership that many here felt was concerned only with itself.
Though she has lived in self-imposed exile since 1999 to avoid prosecution for corruption, she denies wrongdoing. Her party fared badly in the previous two elections, after she and her husband left the country, but it remains politically strong.
No date has been set for the next elections, but the voting must take place by the end of the year. “Ultimately, for the elections to be credible, it is important that the participation should not be denied to a leader of a party, and a party which is the most popular party in the country,” Ms. Bhutto said.
For the general’s part, after a series of political missteps in recent months, including the suspension of the justice, he finds himself in ever greater need of allies if he is to win re-election by Parliament. Some of his supporters see Ms. Bhutto as the preferred moderate partner.
The violence in Karachi that left more than 40 people dead on May 12 occurred after parties backing General Musharraf clashed with members of the Pakistan People’s Party and other opponents as the justice flew in to make a speech. After that, Ms. Bhutto declared that all negotiations with General Musharraf were off. But in the interview she made clear that she still wanted to find a smooth transition to democracy.
“The fact that he was ready to engage with the P.P.P. was positive,” Ms. Bhutto said. “I think he toyed with the idea of moderate forces getting together.” Ms. Bhutto presents herself now as a leader who not only can help Pakistan thread a potentially treacherous course back to civilian rule, but also as someone who can stem a tide of extremism, a claim that opponents say she is exaggerating to gain favor in the West.
Two battle lines are being drawn in Pakistan, she said, military dictatorship versus democracy, and moderate Islam versus extremism. While General Musharraf is her most obvious foe, she says the elections may also be Pakistan’s last chance to choose a moderate path. “My fear is if we don’t act in these elections, by the next elections it might be too late,” Ms. Bhutto said.
“Anyone who has lived in Pakistan knows very well that there is a group of people who believe in a war against the West,” she added, referring to religious extremists both in the government’s intelligence agencies and in jihadi groups. “And it is not just that, it is the hatred that they preach.”
A negotiated transition to democracy remains her preferred option, she said, because violent confrontation could quickly be usurped by extremists. “If the streets hold sway, then it is anyone’s guess who actually captures the movement,” she said. “After all, when there was a revolution in Iran, nobody expected the religious parties to triumph.”
But Ms। Bhutto warned that while General Musharraf may speak in favor of moderate Islam, the advisers and the military and intelligence extremists around him, who hold the strings of power, were working against it. “The country is actually run by military hard-liners,” she said. “It remains my concern that these hard-liners want to destabilize democracy in Pakistan because their agenda is to bring about a soft Islamic revolution,” she added. “They are building secretly on their militant cells across the country.”
She pointed out that despite the general’s declared policy of leading Pakistan toward “enlightened moderation,” Al Qaeda and the Taliban had used northern Pakistan to regroup, and the Taliban influence was seeping into other parts of the country. She said she was appalled that the government had made deals that allow foreign militants sway in parts of the country. She pointed out that the building of madrasas, religious schools that have been used to recruit militants, had increased.
Critics have long charged that the situation was not wholly different even under her government, when Pakistan backed the Taliban and used Islamic extremist groups as levers against its neighbor, India, in their dispute over the border territory of Kashmir. But Ms. Bhutto defended her government’s performance in fighting terrorism, saying that even though she supported the Taliban in their early days, during her time in office there were no Qaeda terrorist training camps in Pakistan, and no terrorist acts anywhere in the world connected to Pakistan.
She said she had collaborated with the F.B.I. in the arrest of Ramzi Yousef, the man behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, and had cracked down on extremist groups. At least six terrorist plots, including the London transit bombings, have been traced to Pakistan since General Musharraf took power.
“Look at what there was in 2002, and see how much worse the situation has got by 2007,” she said. Despite her alarm, Ms. Bhutto said she believed that the religious extremists in both the intelligence circle and jihadi groups were running out of options. And open and fair elections would show just how little support the religious parties and extremists actually had in the country, she said. “Elections are important because at the end of the day when we empower the people, the minority extremists will get totally marginalized and sidelined; their strength is being disproportionately blown up,” she said.
“It is a battle for the heart and soul of Pakistan,” she said. “It is also a battle for the rest of the Muslim world and the world at large. It is not just Pakistan. What we are doing in Pakistan has much larger implications not only on Afghanistan and India, but in my view for the larger world.”
Joao Silva for The New York Times
Benazir Bhutto, the former Pakistani prime minister, has been in self-imposed exile for the last eight years.
function getSharePasskey() { return 'ex=1338696000&en=e21e897149912e64&ei=5124';}
function getShareURL() {
return encodeURIComponent('http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/04/world/asia/04bhutto.html');
}
function getShareHeadline() {
return encodeURIComponent('Former Leader Talks of Return to Pakistan, and Maybe Power');
}
function getShareDescription() {
return encodeURIComponent('Benazir Bhutto is raising her profile again and positioning herself as savior of Pakistan.
');
}
function getShareKeywords() {
return encodeURIComponent('Politics and Government,Pakistan,Benazir Bhutto,Pervez Musharraf');
}
function getShareSection() {
return encodeURIComponent('world');
}
function getShareSectionDisplay() {
return encodeURIComponent('International / Asia Pacific');
}
function getShareSubSection() {
return encodeURIComponent('asia');
}
function getShareByline() {
return encodeURIComponent('By CARLOTTA GALL');
}
function getSharePubdate() {
return encodeURIComponent('June 4, 2007');
}
Sign In to E-Mail or Save This
Single Page
Reprints
Share
Digg
Newsvine
Permalink
writePost();
By CARLOTTA GALL
Published: June 4, 2007
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, June 3 — Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto is stirring up Pakistani politics by quietly talking through intermediaries about a power-sharing deal with the president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, and suggesting in an interview that she could return to Pakistan before the end of the year.
Threatened with arrest and dogged by corruption charges, Ms. Bhutto has sat out the last eight years in self-imposed exile in London and Dubai, while still leading what is arguably the country’s largest opposition party. In that time, she has seen General Musharraf, her former chief of military operations, seize power in a coup. She has watched the political turmoil build as Pakistanis grow restless under military rule, galvanized most recently by General Musharraf’s ouster of the chief Supreme Court justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.
Her party, the Pakistan People’s Party, was heavily represented in a peaceful rally for Mr. Chaudhry in Abbottabad on Saturday, just weeks after more than 40 people died in Karachi in clashes related to his ouster.
As Pakistan veers toward elections this year, General Musharraf has run into mounting opposition over his plans to seek a second term. Ms. Bhutto, 53, is raising her profile once again and positioning herself as savior of the nation, someone who can lead Pakistan back to democracy and provide a more reliable ally than General Musharraf, whose performance she criticized in fighting terrorism and extremism.
Under General Musharraf, she noted, Al Qaeda and the Taliban have used lawless areas of northern Pakistan to regroup and cause havoc in neighboring Afghanistan and within Pakistan itself. Yet Washington continues to support General Musharraf, she said, giving him billions of dollars in assistance since 2001.
Despite his repeated insistence that Ms. Bhutto will not be allowed to participate in the elections, General Musharraf, according to aides and diplomats, has been conducting discreet negotiations for some kind of deal that would allow her to return and him to stay on as president. The corruption charges, which Ms. Bhutto says are politically motivated, might then be dropped. “General Musharraf says that he wouldn’t allow me back and I interpret that to mean that he would then arrest me and prevent me from having freedom of movement and freedom of speech and freedom of association,” Ms. Bhutto said in the interview, which took place recently at one of her homes outside Pakistan. “In any event I’d like to go back, and I’m looking at the window between September and December to do that.”
To some, the prospect of Ms. Bhutto’s return confronts Pakistan with an unsavory choice, one it has faced before. Since its independence in 1947, this nation of 149 million that now has nuclear weapons has alternated between rule by generals who have fronted for a domineering military and civilian politicians who have won an enduring reputation for corruption. They have by turns worn out their welcomes. The country has had no fewer than four Constitutions, four military takeovers of government, and never experienced a constitutional transfer of power.
General Musharraf seized power in a coup in October 1999, overthrowing Ms. Bhutto’s successor, Nawaz Sharif, who also lives abroad to avoid prosecution on corruption charges. General Musharraf was at that time embraced by much of the population, wearied by turbulent years of short-lived, self-serving civilian governments. Yet today, Ms. Bhutto, part of a storied family dynasty, is probably the most popular politician with national appeal. If allowed to return, she may well be in a position to form the next government and serve again as prime minister, even if General Musharraf remains as president, if both agreed.
The daughter of a politician executed by the military, educated at Harvard and Oxford and the first woman to serve as prime minister in the Islamic world, at age 35, Ms. Bhutto captivated supporters in the West as well as many Pakistanis in her early days. She was twice prime minister, from 1988 to 1990 and then from 1993 to 1996, when her personal and political fortunes unraveled.
She left Pakistan eight years ago under a cloud। She was embroiled in a family feud when her brother, Murtaza, tried to claim leadership of the party their father founded, the Pakistan’s People’s Party.
Her brother was shot dead in 1996. Ms. Bhutto’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari, was jailed on suspicion of the murder, though the case was never proved. Ms. Bhutto says the killing was a plot by Pakistani intelligence to divide and weaken her family.
That same year, Ms. Bhutto’s three-year-old government was dismissed amid accusations of mismanagement and corruption. Three months later she suffered a resounding defeat in elections. While she says the balloting was rigged, the polls also reflected the disillusion and anger of Pakistanis over a deteriorating economy, rising violence and a leadership that many here felt was concerned only with itself.
Though she has lived in self-imposed exile since 1999 to avoid prosecution for corruption, she denies wrongdoing. Her party fared badly in the previous two elections, after she and her husband left the country, but it remains politically strong.
No date has been set for the next elections, but the voting must take place by the end of the year. “Ultimately, for the elections to be credible, it is important that the participation should not be denied to a leader of a party, and a party which is the most popular party in the country,” Ms. Bhutto said.
For the general’s part, after a series of political missteps in recent months, including the suspension of the justice, he finds himself in ever greater need of allies if he is to win re-election by Parliament. Some of his supporters see Ms. Bhutto as the preferred moderate partner.
The violence in Karachi that left more than 40 people dead on May 12 occurred after parties backing General Musharraf clashed with members of the Pakistan People’s Party and other opponents as the justice flew in to make a speech. After that, Ms. Bhutto declared that all negotiations with General Musharraf were off. But in the interview she made clear that she still wanted to find a smooth transition to democracy.
“The fact that he was ready to engage with the P.P.P. was positive,” Ms. Bhutto said. “I think he toyed with the idea of moderate forces getting together.” Ms. Bhutto presents herself now as a leader who not only can help Pakistan thread a potentially treacherous course back to civilian rule, but also as someone who can stem a tide of extremism, a claim that opponents say she is exaggerating to gain favor in the West.
Two battle lines are being drawn in Pakistan, she said, military dictatorship versus democracy, and moderate Islam versus extremism. While General Musharraf is her most obvious foe, she says the elections may also be Pakistan’s last chance to choose a moderate path. “My fear is if we don’t act in these elections, by the next elections it might be too late,” Ms. Bhutto said.
“Anyone who has lived in Pakistan knows very well that there is a group of people who believe in a war against the West,” she added, referring to religious extremists both in the government’s intelligence agencies and in jihadi groups. “And it is not just that, it is the hatred that they preach.”
A negotiated transition to democracy remains her preferred option, she said, because violent confrontation could quickly be usurped by extremists. “If the streets hold sway, then it is anyone’s guess who actually captures the movement,” she said. “After all, when there was a revolution in Iran, nobody expected the religious parties to triumph.”
But Ms। Bhutto warned that while General Musharraf may speak in favor of moderate Islam, the advisers and the military and intelligence extremists around him, who hold the strings of power, were working against it. “The country is actually run by military hard-liners,” she said. “It remains my concern that these hard-liners want to destabilize democracy in Pakistan because their agenda is to bring about a soft Islamic revolution,” she added. “They are building secretly on their militant cells across the country.”
She pointed out that despite the general’s declared policy of leading Pakistan toward “enlightened moderation,” Al Qaeda and the Taliban had used northern Pakistan to regroup, and the Taliban influence was seeping into other parts of the country. She said she was appalled that the government had made deals that allow foreign militants sway in parts of the country. She pointed out that the building of madrasas, religious schools that have been used to recruit militants, had increased.
Critics have long charged that the situation was not wholly different even under her government, when Pakistan backed the Taliban and used Islamic extremist groups as levers against its neighbor, India, in their dispute over the border territory of Kashmir. But Ms. Bhutto defended her government’s performance in fighting terrorism, saying that even though she supported the Taliban in their early days, during her time in office there were no Qaeda terrorist training camps in Pakistan, and no terrorist acts anywhere in the world connected to Pakistan.
She said she had collaborated with the F.B.I. in the arrest of Ramzi Yousef, the man behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, and had cracked down on extremist groups. At least six terrorist plots, including the London transit bombings, have been traced to Pakistan since General Musharraf took power.
“Look at what there was in 2002, and see how much worse the situation has got by 2007,” she said. Despite her alarm, Ms. Bhutto said she believed that the religious extremists in both the intelligence circle and jihadi groups were running out of options. And open and fair elections would show just how little support the religious parties and extremists actually had in the country, she said. “Elections are important because at the end of the day when we empower the people, the minority extremists will get totally marginalized and sidelined; their strength is being disproportionately blown up,” she said.
“It is a battle for the heart and soul of Pakistan,” she said. “It is also a battle for the rest of the Muslim world and the world at large. It is not just Pakistan. What we are doing in Pakistan has much larger implications not only on Afghanistan and India, but in my view for the larger world.”
2007年5月24日星期四
ChineseQueen
Pleas and criticism in search for missing girl
POSTED: 12:16 a.m. EDT, May 12, 2007
Story Highlights0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" border=0>&S226; Little girl went missing from resort apartment last week&S226; Portuguese police said procedures different in Portugal, Britain&S226; Police at border caught letting vehicles pass while staying out of rain&S226; Family of girl said police are doing all they can
Adjust font size:
0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" border=0>0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" border=0>
0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" border=0>0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" border=0>
LONDON, England (CNN) -- An English girl has been missing from a Portugal resort for more than a week, leaving anguished parents and an angry British media staking out Portuguese border crossings.
"Words cannot describe the anguish and despair that we are feeling," said Madeleine McCann's father, Gerry McCann.
"Please, please, do not hurt her. Please do not scare her, please tell us where to find her," the girl's mother, Kate McCann, said in a video plea for the girl's release. (Watch mother plea for missing daughter's return 0 && image.height>0){if(image.width>=510){this.width=510;this.height=image.height*510/image.width;}}" vspace=1 border=0>)
Portuguese police are defending their search for Madeleine, who turns 4 on Saturday. Police say she was abducted from her parent's resort apartment in Portugal's Algarve. The McCanns had left their daughter in bed as they dined nearby.
Portugal's ambassador to Britain, Antonio Santana Carlos, released a statement saying, "Trust the authorities. They're doing their best."
But British media filming roadblocks on Portugal's border with Spain caught police sitting in their cars and waving vehicles by during a recent rainshower.
"Clueless" was a front page headline in London's Daily Mirror newspaper earlier this week.
Andrew Forrester, from Wales, was helping search for Madeleine and found the effort of Portuguese police underwhelming.
"To be honest, it seems as though there is very little going on," he said. "I'm sure they are trying, but the police presence doesn't seem to be massive, which I thought that maybe it would be."
Portuguese police said they were following procedures and that they operated differently than their counterparts at Scotland Yard.
"Some details can't be brought to the public because of the law. I ask the British people to understand things are not equal between UK and Portugal legal systems," said Olegario Sousa, a chief inspector with the Portuguese police.
Armando Ferreira, president of the National Police Union, also defended the search.
"Portuguese police are making a great effort. I have colleagues volunteering during their days off to help," he said, according to a Reuters news service report.
"We're doing everything to find the child alive," Reuters quoted Portugal's President Anibal Cavaco Silva as saying.
British soccer star David Beckham weighed in on the case Friday, making a video plea for information that could lead to the girl's safe return to her parents. "Please, please help us," Beckham pleads as he holds up a missing person poster for Madeleine. (Full story)
While the British press was critical of the police efforts, the girl's family spared police of any criticism concerning the search.
"They're not trying to do a bad job," he said of police. "They're working very hard, they're giving information when it's appropriate. Let's give them our support."
订阅:
博文 (Atom)
