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Proscribing Islamist politics in
Bangladesh: lessons from
and for Pakistan

All democratic and secular Bangladeshis should come forward demanding the immediate de-registration of all religion-oriented parties. Civil society has to play an important role in this regard as some of the leading ‘secular nationalist’ political parties are still going around with Islamists, weighing in the ‘vote bank’ potential of the Islamist groups,
writes Taj Hashmi


CONTRARY to what Indian nationalist Gopal Krishna Gokhale (1866-1915) is said to have observed, ‘What Bengal thinks today, India thinks tomorrow.’ In view of the ongoing and least expected ‘Pakistanisation’ of Bangladesh, one may rephrase the statement as, ‘What Pakistan thinks today, Bangladesh thinks tomorrow.’ It is beyond the comprehension of many analysts and scholars that a country created in the name of Bengali nationalism, democracy and secularism, within five years of its inception adopted Islamism and autocracy turning away from the last vestiges of secularism, democracy and the rule of law.
   The growing menace of Islamism and state-sponsored Islamisation has been wrecking havoc to Pakistan’s economy and socio-political structure, at times making experts and laymen wonder if the country has already become a ‘failed state’ or on the verge of becoming one. The situation in Bangladesh, an erstwhile Pakistani province, is slightly different in this regard as Islamists do not pose any impending threat of taking over parts of the country, as in Pakistan.
   Nonetheless, it has also inherited Islamism as a legacy of the past; Islamist terrorism, including suicide attacks, is no longer an unfamiliar phenomenon in Bangladesh; Islam-oriented parties have become decisive factors in forming governments. While overt or covert martial law has become normative, with periodic interregnums of dynastic civil oligarchies a la Pakistan, Islamism and state-sponsored cosmetic Islamisation of the polity have remained well-entrenched since late 1975.
   One may attribute these phenomena to the failure of the welfare state, not that different from what has happened in Algeria, Egypt, Afghanistan and Sudan, among other Muslim countries. Nevertheless, we need other explanations as to why not only the crest-fallen masses have been drawn to Islamism (considered an alternative to the ‘failed’ secular ideologies of democracy, nationalism and national-socialism by many), but also the bulk of political and intellectual elite, including some hitherto-radical leftists.
   As poverty, bad governance and the ‘Global Jihad’ breed Islamist nihilism, so is illegitimate rulers’ exploiting religious sentiments of the people with a view to legitimising their rule with state-sponsored Islamisation. Islamisation of the polity out of sheer political expediency, in the long run, could be disastrous for the polity as we find out in Pakistan, and on a minuscule level, in Bangladesh. What was once beyond one’s imagination that Bangladesh, a country created in the name of secular nationalism, would one day adopt Islam as its ‘state religion’, and pro-Pakistani Islamist political parties would play important role in running the polity, is a reality now.
   However, despite the abysmally poor state of affairs in regard to governance and overall well-being of the people, there is a faint hope that Bangladesh will eventually reduce the level of Islamist obscurantism and insurgency in the near future. One is hoping against hope in view of the latest development in the country. The so-called neutral caretaker government is contemplating some bold steps towards curtailing the influence of Islamist political parties.
   As reported in the media, the caretaker government is contemplating on imposing a ban on all religion-based political parties in accordance with the 1972 Constitution. It is indeed heartening that the provisions of the latest Representation of the People Order stipulate that ‘a political party shall not be qualified for registration if any discrimination regarding religion, race, caste, language or sex is apparent in its constitution’. Since Islamist parties allow membership exclusively to ‘religious Muslims’, the RPO, in accordance with the constitution, may legitimately de-register all religion-based parties.
   In view of the above, as Bangladesh have lessons to learn from the Pakistani experience that unbridled growth of Islamism and even worse, state-sponsored Islamisation of the polity, can be disastrous in the long run; similarly Pakistan may learn from the example of Bangladesh, where the government is thinking about proscribing Islamist political parties as a step towards containing, if not eliminating, Islamism. A successful deregistration of all Islamist political parties, especially the well-organised and well-funded Jamaat-e-Islami in Bangladesh, would be a good example for Pakistan and other countries confronting similar Islamist menace. This would also demolish the myth that Islamisation of a polity is not reversible. We once nourished similar view about communism.
   There is no reason to be complacent about allowing the so-called ‘constitutional’ and ‘non-violent’ Islamist parties like the Jamaat, Muslim Brotherhood and their likes. Although apparently they look different from al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, the Taliban and similar Islamist outfits, there is no reason to assume that the Jamaat and Brotherhood believe in democracy and peaceful coexistence with liberal Muslims and non-Muslims. These proto-fascist organisations are committed to installing Islamist governments throughout the Muslim World by gradually infiltrating into every level of the polity, finally to takeover by violent means.
   Let us hope Bangladesh will make an important breakthrough in de-legitimising Islamism by de-registering all Islam-oriented political parties as the first step. All democratic and secular Bangladeshis should come forward demanding the immediate de-registration of all religion-oriented parties. Civil society has to play an important role in this regard as some of the leading ‘secular nationalist’ political parties are still going around with Islamists, weighing in the ‘vote bank’ potential of the Islamist groups. Then again, Bangladesh alone cannot de-legitimise Islamism in the country. Since deregistration of the various Islamist parties would be a major step towards their elimination process, countries and international donors can play a vital role in this regard. Having enough leverage to influence the policymakers in the country, they should press them hard to implement the proposed deregistration order vis-à-vis the Islamist parties.
   Conversely, if Bangladesh fails to contain the so-called ‘constitutional and democratic’ Islamist parties along with the clandestine Islamist ones now, under this unique military-backed caretaker government, the forthcoming elected government (in the event of elections taking place by December) is least likely to succeed in this regard irrespective of which party or coalition comes to power. Firstly, the major political parties in the country want to appease the Jamaat and similar Islamist groups out of political expediency; and secondly, the prevalent Islamisation of the polity mainly due to bad governance, corruption and patronage of Islamism by various governments in the last 30-odd years, Islamism has its special niche in the body politic of Bangladesh. In sum, we must realise what Islamist quagmire Pakistan has fallen into due to sheer negligence of the menace in its formative phase and the various governments’ flirting with the Jamaat and its likes since the 1970s. Bangladesh government’s success in deregistering Islamist parties would be a positive example for others, signalling a major victory in the ‘war on terror’.
   Taj Hashmi is a professor of security studies at Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies, Hawaii.


How the US garrisons the planet
and doesn’t even notice

by Tom Engelhardt


HERE it is, as simply as I can put it: In the course of any year, there must be relatively few countries on this planet on which US soldiers do not set foot, whether with guns blazing, humanitarian aid in hand, or just for a friendly visit.
   At the height of the Roman Empire, the Romans had an estimated 37 major military bases scattered around their dominions. At the height of the British Empire, the British had 36 of them planet-wide. Depending on just who you listen to and how you count, we have hundreds of bases. According to Pentagon records, in fact, there are 761 active military ‘sites’ abroad.
   The fact is: We garrison the planet north to south, east to west, and even on the seven seas, thanks to our various fleets and our massive aircraft carriers which, with 5,000-6,000 personnel aboard – that is, the population of an American town – are functionally floating bases.
   And here’s the other half of that simple truth: We don’t care to know about it. We, the American people, aided and abetted by our politicians, the Pentagon, and the mainstream media, are knee-deep in base denial.
   Now, that’s the gist of it. If, like most Americans, that’s more than you care to know, stop here.
   
   Where the sun never sets
   Let’s face it, we’re on an imperial bender and it’s been a long, long night. Even now, in the wee hours, the Pentagon continues its massive expansion of recent years; we spend militarily as if there were no tomorrow; we’re still building bases as if the world were our oyster; and we’re still in denial. Someone should phone the imperial equivalent of Alcoholics Anonymous.
   But let’s start in a sunnier time, less than two decades ago, when it seemed that there would be many tomorrows, all painted red, white, and blue. Remember the 1990s when the US was hailed – or perhaps more accurately, Washington hailed itself – not just as the planet’s ‘sole superpower’ or even its unique ‘hyper-power’, but as its ‘global policeman’, the only cop on the block? As it happened, our leaders took that label seriously and our central police headquarters, that famed five-sided building in Washington DC, promptly began dropping police stations – aka military bases – in or near the oil heartlands of the planet (Kosovo, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait) after successful wars in the former Yugoslavia and the Persian Gulf.
   As those bases multiplied, it seemed that we were embarking on a new, post-Soviet version of ‘containment’. With the USSR gone, however, what we were containing grew a lot vaguer and, before 9/11, no one spoke its name. Nonetheless, it was, in essence, Muslims who happened to live on so many of the key oil lands of the planet.
   Yes, for a while we also kept intact our old bases from our triumphant mega-war against Japan and Germany, and then the stalemated ‘police action’ in South Korea (1950-1953) – vast structures which added up to something like an all-military American version of the old British Raj. According to the Pentagon, we still have a total of 124 bases in Japan, up to 38 on the small island of Okinawa, and 87 in South Korea. (Of course, there were setbacks. The giant bases we built in South Vietnam were lost in 1975, and we were peaceably ejected from our major bases in the Philippines in 1992.)
   But imagine the hubris involved in the idea of being ‘global policeman’ or ‘sheriff’ and marching into a Dodge City that was nothing less than Planet Earth itself. Naturally, with a whole passel of bad guys out there, a global ‘swamp’ to be ‘drained’, as key Bush administration officials loved to describe it post-9/11, we armed ourselves to kill, not stun. And the police stations… Well, they were often something to behold – and they still are.
   Let’s start with the basics: Almost 70 years after World War II, the sun is still incapable of setting on the American ‘empire of bases’ – in Chalmers Johnson’s phrase – which at this moment stretches from Australia to Italy, Japan to Qatar, Iraq to Colombia, Greenland to the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia, Rumania to Okinawa. And new bases of various kinds are going up all the time (always with rumours of more to come). For instance, an American missile system is slated to go into Poland and a radar system into Israel. That will mean Americans stationed in both countries and, undoubtedly, modest bases of one sort or another to go with them. (The Israeli one – ‘the first American base on Israeli territory’ – reports Aluf Benn of Haaretz, will be in the Negev desert.)
   There are 194 countries on the planet (more or less), and officially 39 of them have American ‘facilities’, large and/or small. But those are only the bases the Pentagon officially acknowledges. Others simply aren’t counted, either because, as in the case of Jordan, a country finds it politically preferable not to acknowledge such bases; because, as in the case of Pakistan, the American military shares bases that are officially Pakistani; or because bases in war zones, no matter how elaborate, somehow don’t count. In other words, that 39 figure doesn’t even include Iraq or Afghanistan. By 2005, according to the Washington Post, there were 106 American bases in Iraq, ranging from tiny outposts to mega-bases like Balad Air Base and the ill-named Camp Victory that house tens of thousands of troops, private contractors, Defence Department civilians, have bus routes, traffic lights, PXes, big name fast-food restaurants, and so on.
   Some of these bases are, in effect, ‘American towns’ on foreign soil. In Afghanistan, Bagram Air Base, previously used by the Soviets in their occupation of the country, is the largest and best known. There are, however, many more, large and small, including Kandahar Air Base, located in what was once the unofficial capital of the Taliban, which even has a full-scale hockey rink (evidently for its Canadian contingent of troops).
   In Washington, our garrisoning of the world is so taken for granted that no one seems to blink when billions go into a new base in some exotic, embattled, war-torn land. There’s no discussion, no debate at all. News about bases abroad, and Pentagon basing strategy, is, at best, inside-the-fold stuff, meant for policy wonks and news jockeys. There may be no subject more taken for granted in Washington, less seriously attended to, or more deserving of coverage.
   
   Missing bases
   Americans have, of course, always prided themselves on exporting ‘democracy’, not empire. So empire-talk hasn’t generally been an American staple and, perhaps for that reason, all those bases prove an awkward subject to bring up or focus too closely on. When it came to empire-talk in general, there was a brief period after 9/11 when the neoconservatives, in full-throated triumph, began to compare us to Rome and Britain at their imperial height (though we were believed to be incomparably, uniquely more powerful). It was, in the phrase of the time, a ‘unipolar moment’. Even liberal war hawks started talking about taking up ‘the burden’ of empire or, in the phrase of Michael Ignatieff, now a Canadian politician but, in that period, still at Harvard and considered a significant American intellectual, ‘empire lite’.
   On the whole, however, those in Washington and in the media haven’t considered it germane to remind Americans of just exactly how we have attempted to ‘police’ and control the world these last years. I’ve had two modest encounters with base denial myself:
   In the spring of 2004, a journalism student I was working with emailed me a clip, dated October 20, 2003 – less than seven months after American troops entered Baghdad – from a prestigious engineering magazine. It quoted Lt Col David Holt, the army engineer ‘tasked with facilities development’ in Iraq, speaking proudly of the several billion dollars (‘the numbers are staggering’) that had already been sunk into base construction in that country. Well, I was staggered anyway. American journalists, however, hardly noticed, even though significant sums were already pouring into a series of mega-bases that were clearly meant to be permanent fixtures on the Iraqi landscape. (The Bush administration carefully avoided using the word ‘permanent’ in any context whatsoever, and these bases were first dubbed ‘enduring camps’.)
   Within two years, according to the Washington Post (in a piece that, typically, appeared on page A27 of the paper), the US had those 106 bases in Iraq at a cost that, while unknown, must have been staggering indeed. Just stop for a moment and consider that number: 106. It boggles the mind, but not, it seems, American newspaper or TV journalism.
   TomDispatch.com has covered this subject regularly ever since, in part because these massive ‘facts on the ground,’ these modern Ziggurats, were clearly evidence of the Bush administration’s long-term plans and intentions in that country. Not surprisingly, this year, US negotiators finally offered the Iraqi government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki its terms for a so-called status of forces agreement, evidently initially demanding the right to occupy into the distant future 58 of the bases it has built.
   It has always been obvious – to me, at least – that any discussion of Iraq policy in this country, of timelines or ‘time horizons’, draw-downs or withdrawals, made little sense if those giant facts on the ground weren’t taken into account. And yet you have to search the US press carefully to find any reporting on the subject, nor have bases played any real role in debates in Washington or the nation over Iraq policy.
   I could go further: I can think of two intrepid American journalists, Thomas Ricks of the Washington Post and Guy Raz of NPR, who actually visited a single US mega-base, Balad Air Base, which reputedly has a level of air traffic similar to Chicago’s O’Hare International or London’s Heathrow, and offered substantial reports on it. But, as far as I know, they, like the cheese of children’s song, stand alone. I doubt that in the last five years Americans tuning in to their television news have ever been able to see a single report from Iraq that gave a view of what the bases we have built there look like or cost. Although reporters visit them often enough and, for instance, have regularly offered reports from Camp Victory in Baghdad on what’s going on in the rest of Iraq, the cameras never pan away from the reporters to show us the gigantic base itself.
   More than five years after ground was broken for the first major American base in Iraq, this is, it seems to me, a remarkable record of media denial. American bases in Afghanistan have generally experienced a similar fate.
   My second encounter with base denial came in my other life. When not running TomDispatch.com, I’m a book editor; to be more specific, I’m Chalmers Johnson’s editor. I worked on the prophetic Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, which was published back in 2000 to a singular lack of attention – until, of course, the attacks of 9/11, after which it became a bestseller, adding both ‘blowback’ and the phrase ‘unintended consequences’ to the American lexicon.
   By the time The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, the second volume in his Blowback Trilogy, came out in 2004, reviewers, critics, and commentators were all paying attention. The heart of that book focused on how the US garrisons the planet, laying out Pentagon basing policies and discussing specific bases in remarkable detail. This represented serious research and breakthrough work, and the book indeed received much attention here, including major, generally positive reviews. Startlingly, however, not a single mainstream review, no matter how positive, paid any attention, or even really acknowledged, his chapters on the bases, or bothered to discuss the US as a global garrison state. Only three years later did a major reviewer pay the subject serious attention. When Jonathan Freedland reviewed Nemesis, the final book in the trilogy, in the New York Review of Books, he noticed the obvious and, in a discussion of US basing policy, wrote, for instance:
   ‘Johnson is in deadly earnest when he draws a parallel with Rome. He swats aside the conventional objection that, in contrast with both Romans and Britons, Americans have never constructed colonies abroad. Oh, but they have, he says; it’s just that Americans are blind to them. America is an “empire of bases”, he writes, with a network of vast, hardened military encampments across the earth, each one a match for any Roman or Raj outpost.’
   Not surprisingly, Freedland is not an American journalist, but a British one who works for the Guardian.
   In the US, military bases really only matter, and so make headlines, when the Pentagon attempts to close some of the vast numbers of them scattered across this country. Then, the fear of lost jobs and lost income in local communities leads to headlines and hubbub.
   Of course, millions of Americans know about our bases abroad firsthand. In this sense, they may be the least well kept secrets on the planet. American troops, private contractors, and Defence Department civilian employees all have spent extended periods of time on at least one US base abroad. And yet no one seems to notice the near news blackout on our global bases or consider it the least bit strange.
   
   The foreshortened American Century
   In a nutshell, occupying the planet, base by base, normally simply isn’t news. Americans may pay no attention and yet, of course, they do pay. It turns out to be a staggeringly expensive process for US taxpayers. Writing of a major 2004 Pentagon global base overhaul (largely aimed at relocating many of them closer to the oil heartlands of the planet), Mike Mechanic of Mother Jones magazine online points out the following: ‘An expert panel convened by Congress to assess the overseas basing realignment put the cost at $20 billion, counting indirect expenses overlooked by the Pentagon, which had initially budgeted one-fifth that amount.’
   And that’s only the most obvious way Americans pay. It’s hard for us even to begin to grasp just how military (and punitive) is the face that the US has presented to the world, especially during George W Bush’s two terms in office. (Increasingly, that same face is also presented to Americans. For instance, as Paul Krugman indicated recently, the civilian Federal Emergency Management Agency has been so thoroughly wrecked these last years that significant planning for the response to Hurricane Gustav fell on the shoulders of the military’s Bush-created US Northern Command.)
   In purely practical terms, though, Americans are unlikely to be able to shoulder forever the massive global role the Pentagon and successive administrations have laid out for us. Sooner or later, cutbacks will come and the sun will slowly begin to set on our base-world abroad.
   In the Cold War era, there were, of course, two ‘superpowers’, the lesser of which disappeared in 1991 after a lifespan of 74 years. Looking at what seemed to be a power vacuum across the Bering Straits, the leaders of the other power prematurely declared themselves triumphant in what had been an epic struggle for global hegemony. It now seems that, rather than victory, the second superpower was just heading for the exit far more slowly.
   As of now, ‘the American Century’, birthed by Time/Life publisher Henry Luce in 1941, has lasted but 67 years. Today, you have to be in full-scale denial not to know that the twenty-first century – whether it proves to be the Century of Multipolarity, the Century of China, the Century of Energy, or the Century of Chaos – will not be an American one. The unipolar moment is already so over and, sooner or later, those mega-bases and lily pads alike will wash up on the shores of history, evidence of a remarkable fantasy of a global Pax Americana.
   Not that you’re likely to hear much about this in the run-up to November 4th in the US. Here, fantasy reigns in both parties where a relatively upbeat view of our globally dominant future is a given, and will remain so, no matter who enters the White House in January 2009. After all, who’s going to run for president not on the idea that ‘it’s morning again in America’, but on the recognition that it’s the wee small hours of the morning, the bender is ending, and the hangover… Well, it’s going to be a doozy.
   Better take some B vitamins and get a little sleep. The world’s probably not going to look so great by the dawn’s early light.
   TomDispatch.com, September 4, 2008. Slightly abridged. Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute’s TomDispatch.com.




Tata and its cheapest car project


A cheap car will not make money.
   Imtiyaz Husain,
   Gulshan, Dhaka


The blame game


The military-controlled caretaker government harassed syndicates of importer and businessmen who happened to be members of the FBCCI. We expressed our concern on that indiscriminate witch-hunting. Now the FBCCI itself has changed the strategy and pointing finger to Kawran Bazaar wholesale dealers. It is true that the wholesalers influence prices in retail markets but there are many factors which contribute in pricing in wholesale markets. The single-most important factor in Bangladesh is logistics. Inefficient and expensive transportation cost and highway police bribing eat up the profit and force the wholesalers to mark up prices. Could not the railway run special night goods trains to keep the market supplies to the optimum level? Could not the military lend their trucks to work out affordable supply chains, especially during the month of Ramadan? At lot of things could have been done and can be done instead of indulging in the blame game and initiating another witch-hunt.
   MH Khan
   Via e-mail


Qualitative change in politics


If the character of people can be changed in two years then there would have been no requirement of the Holy prophet to preach for long twenty three years for the change in Arabia in the age of Jaheliat. History shows that after his ofat many tried to revert to old habits. How can we expect any miraculous change in our body politic and the character of people in just two years? Any one who believes must be living in a fool’s paradise.
   F Islam
   Dhaka


Clash in orthopaedics hospital


What animals! This is what happens when we equate vandalism and lawlessness with activism. Vandals and hoodlums can carry this kind of bestial acts when they feel that they are above the law.
   AA
   Via e-mail

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