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India-Pakistan
Perv to bid farewell to troops
2007-11-27
ISLAMABAD - President Pervez Musharraf was set to embark on pomp-filled farewell visits to his troops on Tuesday, one day before he quits as head of PakistanÂ’s nuclear-armed military and becomes a civilian leader. The former commando, who grabbed power in a coup in 1999 and then signed up as a US ally in the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, will tour various military bases to say his goodbyes over the next two days, officials said.
"So long guys, I'll be thinking of you when you're in Swat ... and I'm not!"
He is to step down as army chief on Wednesday. On the following day, he will take the oath for a second five-year term as president -- but this time without the uniform that he has described as being like his skin.
Just making way for the next General-President-Honcho.
“General Musharraf will make a series of farewell visits to various military headquarters on Tuesday and Wednesday,” presidential spokesman Rashid Qureshi told AFP. He is on Tuesday to visit the headquarters of the joint services, the navy and the air force, which are spread out between the capital Islamabad and the neighbouring garrison city of Rawalpindi, Qureshi said.

Musharraf will on Wednesday go to the armyÂ’s general headquarters in Rawalpindi to hand over his position as chief of army staff to his heir apparent, General Ashfaq Kiyani, the spokesman added. Officials said Musharraf would receive a guard of honour during the handover ceremony to Kiyani, the former head of PakistanÂ’s premier spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence.
Gotta wonder just how devious Kiyani is ... and how quick ...
Posted by:Steve White

#10  John Frum, looks like he came in third in his high school's Field Days 100 m. dash.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2007-11-27 21:56  

#9  

That General Kiyani looks a young Zia Ul Haq.

Zia hanged Bhutto, the man who had promoted him above others to Army Chief....

Perv may regret his trust in Kiyani...
Posted by: john frum   2007-11-27 18:19  

#8  Nice shiny medals you get there Perv...



Any for actually winning something?
Posted by: john frum   2007-11-27 18:17  

#7  A Sadat moment, a Zia moment, a Bhutto pere moment. None of them good moments for those departed "leaders"...

When Pakistan says "departed leader", they mean it.

As is too often the case, the traditional instability of autocracies seems to have coalesced into a discordant yet perverse sympathetic resonance within the MME (Muslim Middle East). While Iraq may have served as some sort of "quantum butterfly", to begin this domino chain reaction, the inherent brittleness of Muslim institutions more likely plays a greater role.

Nonetheless, the convergence of political turmoil in Iraq, Iran and, now, Pakistan all present some significant challenges to American military planners. I would love to see Old Patriot's scenario come to pass. While I remain concerned regarding our ability to field the expeditionary force required for such an action, it would send a truly unmistakable message to our other putative "allies"—Saudi Arabia in particular—that no further duplicity will be tolerated.

I can only add how—woe beset as Bush's tenure has been—far better that the rather inconvenient advent of this new crisis comes now while there is still some fight left in the White House, rather than having the wave crest during the watch of some spineless democrat.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-11-27 14:14  

#6  A Sadat moment, a Zia moment, a Bhutto pere moment. None of them good moments for those departed "leaders"...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2007-11-27 12:55  

#5  Actually, having the taliban take over in Pakistan would be a good thing. Then we can quit pretending that Pakistan is an ally, and stomp them into the ground, as many so richly deserve. Attacking south out of Afghanistan and north through a Marine amphibious landing, with India attacking from the east would put a hurt on Pakistan like nothing else every envisioned. The first attack needs to take out the nukes...
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-11-27 12:28  

#4  Osama bin laden is next in the line of succession for Pakistan.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2007-11-27 09:47  

#3  Goooodbye, troops. Helloooooo, ISI!
Posted by: Zenster   2007-11-27 02:01  

#2  I think India is gonna miss Musharraf. As are we.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2007-11-27 01:35  

#1  
I wonder if he worries about having an Anwar Sadat moment.
Posted by: Whugum Gonque4662   2007-11-27 00:58  

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