HistoryEarly History The northwest of the Indian subcontinent, which now constitutes
Pakistan, lies athwart the historic invasion routes through the
Khyber, Gumal, and Bolan passes from central Asia to the heartland
of India, and for thousands of years invaders and adventurers
swept down upon the settlements there. The Indus valley civilization
, which flourished until c.1500 BC, was one of the region's earliest
civilizations. The Aryans, who surpassed the Indus, were followed
by the Persians of the Achaemenid empire, who by c.500 BC reached
the Indus River. Alexander the Great, conqueror of the Persian
empire, invaded the Punjab in 326 BC The Seleucid empire, heir
to Alexander's Indian conquest, was checked by the Mauryas, who
by 305 BC occupied the Indus plain and much of Afghanistan. British Control and the Muslim League The British attempted to subdue the anarchic northwest during the First Afghan War (1839-42) and succeeded in conquering Sind in 1843 and the Punjab in 1849. The turbulence of the region was intensified by the fierce forays of Baluchi and Pathan tribespeople from the mountainous hinterlands. The British occupied Quetta in 1876 and again attempted to conquer the tribespeople in the Second Afghan War (1878-80) but were still unsuccessful. With the creation of the North-West Frontier Province in 1901, the British shifted from a policy of conquest to one of containment. Unlike previous settlers in India, the Muslim immigrants were not absorbed into Hindu society. Their ranks were augmented by the millions of Hindus who had been converted to Islam. There was cultural interchange between Hindu and Muslim, but no homogeneity emerged. After the Indian Mutiny (1857), a rising Hindu middle class began to assume dominant positions in industry, education, the professions, and the civil service. Although, in these early decades of the Indian National Congress, vigorous efforts were made to include Muslims in the nationalist movement, concern for Muslim political rights led to the formation of the Muslim League in 1906; in the ensuing years Hindu-Muslim conflict became increasingly acute. The idea of a Muslim nation, distinct from Hindu India, was introduced
in 1930 by the poet Muhammad Iqbal and was ardently supported
by a group of Indian Muslim students in England, who were the
first to use the name Pakistan [land of the pure, from the Urdu
pak, =pure and stan, =land]. It gained wide support in 1940 when
the Muslim League, led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah , demanded the establishment
of a Muslim state in the areas of India where Muslims were in
the majority. The League won most of the Muslim constituencies
in the 1946 elections, and Britain and the Congress party reluctantly
agreed to the formation of Pakistan as a separate dominion under
the provisions of the Indian Independence Act, which went into
effect on Aug. 15, 1947. Partition and Conflict Jinnah became the governor-general of the new nation and Liaquat Ali Khan the first prime minister. While India inherited most of the British administrative machinery, Pakistan had to start with practically nothing; records and Muslim administrators were transferred from New Delhi to a chaotic, makeshift capital at Karachi. Moreover, an autumn of violence and slaughter among Hindus and Muslims came between independence and the task of developing the new nation. Disturbances in Delhi were only a prelude to the slaughter in the Punjab, where the Gurdaspur district had been partitioned to give India access to Kashmir. Although there was some violence in Calcutta (now Kolkata), the efforts of Mohandas K. Gandhi prevented widespread killing in partitioned Bengal. The communal strife took more than 500,000 lives; 7.5 million Muslim refugees fled to both parts of Pakistan from India, and 10 million Hindus left Pakistan for India. Disputes between India and Pakistan arose also over the princely states of Junagadh, Hyderabad, and Kashmir. In the first two, Muslim rulers held sway over a Hindu majority but India forcibly joined both states to the Union, dismissing the wishes of the rulers and basing its claims instead on the wishes of the people and the facts of geography. In Kashmir the situation was precisely the opposite; a Hindu ruler held sway over a Muslim majority in a country that was geographically and economically tied to West Pakistan. The ruler signed over Kashmir to India in Oct., 1947, but Pakistan refused to accept the move. Fighting broke out (see India-Pakistan Wars ) and continued until Jan., 1948, when India and Pakistan both appealed to the United Nations, each accusing the other of aggression. A cease-fire was agreed upon and a temporary demarcation line partitioned (1949) the disputed state. In the meantime, Pakistan faced serious internal problems. A liberal statement of constitutional principles was promulgated in 1949, but parts of the proposed constitution ran into orthodox Muslim opposition. On Oct. 16, 1951, Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan was assassinated by an Afghan fanatic. His death left a leadership void that prime ministers Khwaja Nazimuddin (1951-53) and Muhammad Ali (1953-55) and governor-general Ghulam Muhammad (1951-55) failed to fill. In East Bengal, which had more than half of the nation's population, there was increasing dissatisfaction with the federal government in West Pakistan. In 1954, faced with growing crises, the government dissolved the constituent assembly and declared a state of emergency. In 1955, the existing provinces and princely states of West Pakistan were merged into a single province made up of 12 divisions, and the name of East Bengal was changed to East Pakistan, thus giving it at least the appearance of parity with West Pakistan. In Feb., 1956, a new constitution was finally adopted, and Pakistan
formally became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations;
Gen. Iskander Mirza became the first president. Economic conditions
remained precarious, even though large shipments of grain from
the United States after 1953 had helped to relieve famine. In
foreign relations, Pakistan's conflict with India over Kashmir
remained unresolved, and Afghanistan continued its agitation for
the formation of an autonomous Pushtunistan nation made up of
the Pathan tribespeople along the northwest frontier. Pakistan
joined the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization in 1954 and the
Central Treaty Organization in 1955. After 1956 the threat to
the stability of the Pakistan government gradually increased,
stemming from continuing economic difficulties, frequent cabinet
crises, and widespread political corruption. The Ayub Khan Regime Finally, in Oct., 1958, President Mirza abrogated the constitution
and granted power to the army under Gen. Muhammad Ayub Khan .
Ayub subsequently assumed presidential powers (in 1960 he was
elected to a five-year term), abolishing the office of prime minister
and ruling by decree. Under the dictatorship, a vigorous land
reform and economic development program was begun, and a new constitution,
which provided for a federal Islamic republic with two provinces
(East and West Pakistan) and two official languages (Bengali and
Urdu), went into effect in 1962. The new city of Islamabad, N
of Rawalpindi (which had been interim capital since 1959), became
the national capital, and Dhaka , in East Pakistan, became the
legislative capital. A treaty with India governing the use of the waters of the Indus basin was signed (1961). Communal strife was constantly present in the subcontinent—in Jan., 1961, several thousand Muslims were massacred in Madhya Pradesh state in India, and there were reprisals in Pakistan; in 1962 there was further communal conflict in Bengal. Diplomatic relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan were severed (1961-63) after some border clashes and continued Afghan agitation, supported by the USSR, for an independent Pushtunistan. A series of conferences on Kashmir was held (Dec., 1962-Feb.,
1963) between India and Pakistan following the Chinese assault
(Oct., 1962) on India; both nations offered important concessions
and solution of the long-standing dispute seemed imminent. However,
Pakistan then signed a bilateral border agreement with China that
involved the boundaries of the disputed state, and relations with
India again became strained. Pakistan's continuing conflict with
India over Kashmir erupted in fighting (Apr.-June, 1965) in the
Rann of Kachchh region of NW India and SE West Pakistan and in
an outbreak of warfare (August-September) in Kashmir. Some improvement
in relations between the two countries came in 1966, when President
Ayub Khan and Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri of India reached
an accord in the Declaration of Tashkent at a meeting sponsored
by the USSR. Despite the accord, however, the basic dispute over
Kashmir remained unsettled. Bangladesh and Bhutto The Awami League , under Sheik Mujibur Rahman , in a campaign for full autonomy in East Pakistan, won an overwhelming majority in the National Assembly by taking 153 of the 163 seats allotted to East Pakistan. The opening session of the National Assembly, scheduled to meet in Dhaka in Mar., 1971, was twice postponed by Yahya Khan, who then canceled the election results, banned the Awami League, and imprisoned Sheik Mujib in West Pakistan on charges of treason. East Pakistan declared its independence as Bangladesh on Mar. 26, 1971, but was then placed under martial law and occupied by the Pakistani army, which was composed entirely of troops from West Pakistan. In the ensuing civil war, some 10 million refugees fled to India and hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed. India supported Bangladesh and on Dec. 3, 1971, sent troops into East Pakistan. Following a two-week war between Pakistan and India, in which fighting also broke out along the India-West Pakistan border, Pakistani troops in East Pakistan surrendered (Dec. 16) and a cease-fire was declared on all fronts. Following Pakistan's defeat, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto , the deputy prime minister and foreign minister, came to power in West Pakistan. Sheik Mujib was released from prison and eventually allowed to return to Bangladesh. Relations with India remained strained over the issue of the more than 90,000 Pakistani soldiers who had surrendered after the civil war and become prisoners of war, over Pakistan's refusal to recognize Bangladesh, and over Bangladesh's declared intention to bring to trial some Pakistani soldiers on war-crimes charges. A summit meeting held in Shimla, India, in July, 1972, resulted in an easing of tensions and an agreement to settle differences between the two nations peacefully. Demarcation of the truce line in Kashmir was finally completed
in Dec., 1972. In Aug., 1973, India and Pakistan reached an agreement
on the release of Pakistani prisoners-of-war and the exchange
of hostage populations in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh—especially
of the Bengalis in Pakistan and the Biharis in Bangladesh. Bhutto
recognized Bangladesh in Feb., 1974, prior to the start of a world
Islamic summit conference in Lahore. In the mid-1970s Bhutto's
government faced increasing regional tensions among Pakistan's
various ethnic groups. After Bhutto's 1977 election victory was
challenged by the opposition, widespread riots ensued. Recent History Failure to reach a reconciliation prompted the army chief of staff, Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, to depose Bhutto in a military coup in July and declare martial law. Zia was declared president in September, and Bhutto, convicted of ordering the murder of political opponents, was hanged in Apr., 1979. In the 1980s Pakistan was dominated by events occurring in neighboring Afghanistan, where the Soviet invasion resulted in the flight of over 3 million people to Pakistan. Pakistan served as the primary conduit for U.S. aid to the Afghan resistance, resulting in large amounts of U.S. aid to Pakistan as well. The relationship prompted Zia to return the government to civilian hands, and in 1985 he announced the end of martial law, but only after amending the constitution so as to greatly strengthen his power as president. In 1986, Benazir Bhutto , daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and his heir as head of the Pakistan People's party (PPP), returned to the country. In May, 1988, Zia dismissed parliament, charging it with widespread corruption, and announced general elections for November. In August, Zia died in a mysterious plane crash. The PPP won the November elections, and Bhutto became prime minister. Despite a strong power base, Bhutto encountered numerous problems in office, including regional ethnic clashes, the difficulties of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, and long-term tensions caused by Pakistan's poverty and its uneasy relationship with India. In Aug., 1990, President Ghulam Ishaq Khan dismissed Bhutto and her cabinet, accusing them of misconduct and abuse of power. November elections brought to power a coalition government headed by Nawaz Sharif , whose administration instituted economic reform policies of privatization and deregulation in an effort to stimulate growth. In 1991 the parliament passed legislation incorporating Islamic law (sharia) into the legal code. When Sharif moved to reduce presidential power, he was dismissed (1993) by President Ishaq Khan; the ensuing crisis was resolved with the resignations of both men. Bhutto's party won the most seats in new elections later in 1993, and she once again became prime minister, heading a coalition government; Farooq Leghari, a Bhutto ally, was elected president. In 1995 some three dozen military officers were arrested, reportedly for plotting an Islamic revolution in Pakistan. In 1996 Bhutto was again dismissed on charges of corruption, by President Leghari. In 1997, Leghari established a Council for Defense and National Security, which gave a key role in political decision-making to the heads of the armed forces. Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) won a huge majority in the 1997 elections and he once again became prime minister. Sharif soon moved to enact legislation curbing the president's power to dismiss elected governments and to appoint armed forces chiefs; the supreme court blocked these moves and reinstated a corruption inquiry against Sharif. In an apparent victory for Sharif, President Leghari resigned in Dec., 1997, and the chief justice of the supreme court was dismissed. Mohammad Rafiq Tarar became president in 1998. Following the detonation of underground nuclear devices by India in May, 1998, Pakistan carried out its own series of nuclear tests; the United States imposed economic sanctions against both countries. In the summer of 1999, conflict with India over Kashmir erupted again, with Pakistani-backed troops withdrawing from Indian-held territory after several weeks of fighting. In Oct., 1999, a bloodless military coup led by Gen. Pervez Musharraf ousted Sharif, suspended the constitution, and declared martial law. Sharif was charged with treason, and in Apr., 2000, he was convicted of hijacking an airliner (as a result of issuing orders to deny permission to land to the plane that Musharraf had been on prior to the 1999 coup) and was sentenced to life in prison. Sharif subsequently was also convicted on corruption charges, and later exiled (Dec., 2000) to Saudi Arabia. In June, 2001, Musharraf appointed himself president. A summit in July with Prime Minister Vajpayee of India proved unfruitful and ended on a bitter note. Following the September terrorist attacks on the United States that were linked to Osama bin Laden , the United States ended its sanctions on Pakistan and sought its help in securing bin Laden from the Taliban government of Afghanistan, but Pakistan proved unable to influence the Taliban, who had received support from Pakistan since the mid-1990s. Pakistan permitted U.S. planes to cross its airspace and U.S. forces to be based there during the subsequent military action against Afghanistan. These moves provoked sometimes violent anti-U.S. demonstrations erupted in Pakistani cities, particularly in border areas where many Afghan refugees and Pathans live. In response, the government cracked down on the more militant Islamic fundamentalist groups. After terror attacks by Pakistani-based guerrillas on Indian government buildings in late 2001, India threatened to go to war with Pakistan unless all guerrilla attacks were ended. As Pakistan moved haltingly to suppress such groups the crisis escalated, but in Jan., 2002, Musharraf attacked religious extremism and its affect on Pakistani society, and stated that no group engaging in terrorism would be tolerated. A crackdown on such groups was complicated by strong popular Pakistani support for guerrillas fighting Indian rule in Kashmir, but many Pakistanis also objected to the Islamic fundamentalism espoused by many of the guerrillas and their supporters. In mid-2002 Pakistan's army established garrisons in a number of tribal areas for the first time since independence. Also in January, Musharraf announced plans for national and provincial legislative elections in Oct., 2002, while indicating that he intended to remain in office. In April, he called for a referendum on extending his rule for five more years. Most national political parties called for a boycott of the referendum, and turnout appeared low in many locations; Musharraf claimed a 50% turnout, with a 98% yes vote. In August he imposed 29 constitutional amendments designed to make his rule impervious to political opposition in parliament. Meanwhile, tensions with India again reached the brink of war in May, as a result of escalating attacks by Muslim militants in India. Concern that a conflict might evolve into nuclear warfare prompted international mediation, and the crisis eased after Pakistan stopped state-sponsored guerrilla infilitration across the line of control in Kashmir. The fighting in Afghanistan, violence and political turmoil in Pakistan, and tension with India hurt the Pakistani economy, particularly the export textile and apparel industries. Parliamentary elections in Oct., 2002, resulted in a setback
for Musharraf, as the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q; renamed
the Pakistan Muslim League [PML] in 2004), which supported him,
placed second in terms of the seats it won. Bhutto's PPP placed
first, and a generally anti-American Islamic fundamentalist coalition
was a strong third and also won control of the North-West Frontier
prov., where the legislature subsequently approved (June, 2003)
the establishment of Islamic law. Zafarullah Khan Jamali, the
PML-Q leader, was narrowly elected Pakistan's prime minister.
Tensions with India further eased in 2003, and midway through
the year diplomatic relations were restored. In Mar., 2004, Pakistan's military began operations against foreign Islamic militants in South Waziristan, but local militants who regarded the attacks as a breach of local autonomy joined in fighting against government forces. The fighting continued into 2005, when operations were also begun in North Waziristan. Agreements with tribal leaders in both regions ended military operations in Waziristan in late 2006. Fighting also occurred in Baluchistan, where local tribes demanding a greater share in the provinces mineral wealth and an end of the stationing of military forces there mounted a series of attacks that continued into 2006. Meanwhile, in Apr., 2004, a bill was passed creating a national security council, consisting of military and civilian leaders, to advise the government on matters of national interest. Creation of the council gave the military an institutionalized voice in national affairs. Prime Minister Jamali resigned and the cabinet was dissolved
in June, after Jamali lost the support of the president. Chaudhry
Shujaat Hussain, a close political ally of Musharraf, became interim
prime minister until Shaukat Aziz, the finance minister in the
outgoing cabinet and Musharraf's choice to succeed Jamali, was
elected to the national assembly and took office (Aug., 2004).
In Oct., 2004, the governing coalition passed legislation permitting
Musharraf to remain chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, despite
the president's earlier pledge to resign from the post, and at
the end of the year Musharraf announced he would not resign. Passage (July, 2005) by the North-West Frontier government of a law calling for Islamic moral policing was challenged by the national government, and the supreme court declared the legislation unconstitutional. A similar but somewhat weaker bill was passed in 2006 and again challenged. An earthquake in Oct., 2005, caused widespread devastation in N Pakistan, particularly in Kashmir, killed more than 73,000 and injured nearly as many, and left an estimated 3 million homeless. Many victims in remote areas were slow to receive aid when those areas became practically inaccessible as a result of damage to roads combined with inadequate alternative transportation. In 2006 relations with Afghanistan became increasingly strained as Afghan officials accused Pakistan of allowing the Taliban and Al Qaeda to use bordering areas of Pakistan, particularly Baluchistan around Quetta, as safe havens and to send forces and weapons across border into Afghanistan. After a series of bomb attacks (July, 2006) in Mumbai, India, that India asserted were linked to Pakistani security forces, peace talks were suspended between the two nations, but they resumed in late 2006 and an agreement designed to prevent an accidental nuclear war between India and Pakistan was signed in Feb., 2007. In Mar., 2007, Musharraf suspended Pakistan's chief justice for
misuse of authority; the justice had conducted investigations
into human rights abuses by Pakistan's security forces and was
regarded as independent of the government. While the chief justice
challenged the move in the courts, Pakistani lawyers and judges
denounced the move as unconstitutional, and they and opposition
parties mounted demonstrations in support fo the chief justice,
believing that the president was attempting to remove him as a
prelude to extending his presidency beyond the end of 2007. A
planned rally in Karachi in support of the chief justice led to
two days of violence in May in which those who died were largely
opposition activists; the violence provoked additional opposition
demonstrations and strikes. In July, the supreme court ruled that
the chief justice's suspension was illegal and that he should
be reinstated. In June, 2007, there was devastating flooding in
Baluchistan after a cyclone struck the coast; some 2 million were
affected by the floodwaters. Meanwhile, with parliamentary elections due by Jan., 2008, former prime ministers Sharif and Bhutto made plans to return from exile. Sharif, who returned in September, was immediately deported, but after an October court ruling he was allowed to return in November. Following negotiations with the government, Bhutto returned in October, surviving an attempted assassination the day of her return that killed more than 130 persons. Musharraf was reelected president the same month, but the official declaration of the result was postponed until after the supreme court ruled on whether he was permitted to run while remaining army chief. Before the court could issue its ruling, Musharraf declared emergency rule, suspended the constitution, and dismissed the members of the court who seemed likely to rule against him. The challenges against his reelection were then dismissed, and later in the month Musharraf resigned as army chief. In December, emergency rule was ended; late in the month Bhutto was assassinated after a campaign rally, possibly by Islamists. Several days of unrest followed her death, and the government postponed the January elections to Feb., 2008. Bhutto's PPP and Sharif's PML-N won the largest blocs of seats in the election, and agreed to form a coalition; Yousaf Raza Gilani, of the PPP, became prime minister in March. The election was a striking setback for Musharraf, and also for the Islamist parties. In May, however, the PML-N withdrew from the government over a disagreement concerning the restoration of powers to the judiciary; the PPP wanted some limitations imposed while the PML-N supported fully restoring judicial powers. (The PML-N briefly returned to the government in August.) Relations were further strained with Afghanistan in July, 2008, when Afghanistan's President Karzai accused Pakistani agents of being behind a bomb attack against the Indian embassy in Kabul. In Aug., 2008, the governing coalition announced that it planned to begin impeachment proceedings against Mushurraf; the move was seen as driven especially by Sharif's PML-N. As preparations for the impeachment proceedings advanced, Musharraf announced his resignation as president. The following month Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Khan Zardari, was elected president. The new government was faced with increased militant Islamist threats—including festering conflicts with militants (fighting resumed in Swat in July and intensified in Bajaur, in the Tribal Areas, in August), an assassination attempt against the prime minister, and a suicide bomb attack on an Islamabad hotel (Sept., 2008) that resulted in many casualties—and a financial meltdown that left the country close to defaulting on its considerable debt. September also saw increased tensions between Pakistani forces and U.S. forces in Afghanistan after U.S. and Afghan forces conducted a ground raid against Islamists in Pakistan, and Pakistan protested against ongoing U.S. missile strikes against militant targets in Pakistan's Tribal Areas.
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