Pakistan: Might Makes Right
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5636017/site/newsweek/
Under Musharraf, the military has become more powerful at the expense
of just about everything else
By Ron Moreau and Zahid Hussain
Newsweek
Aug. 16 issue - In the war on terror, few foreign leaders produce
results like Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. His security forces
have arrested some of Al Qaeda's most-wanted leaders, includ-ing Osama
bin Laden's operational whiz, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. Since the
September 11 attacks, Musharraf has turned over more than 500
terrorist suspects to the United States for questioning. And only last
month, in joint operations with U.S. personnel, the Pakistanis nabbed
a senior Tanzanian Qaeda operative, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, as well as
Muhammed Neem Noor Khan, a Pakistani computer expert who had been
running a communications center for bin Laden's outfit in the eastern
city of Lahore. For this and other antiterror successes, Musharraf has
received nothing but admiration from American and other Western
leaders. Wearing his favorite bemedaled commando's uniform, the
president regularly meets in Islamabad with a parade of visiting
European and U.S. officials who come to consult with and congratulate
him.
Pakistan Pakistani Pakistanis Pak
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