When you are at the top there is no room for error. Once you slip and start going down, there is no stopping. The mistakes of Pakistan's perishing president Musharraf are too obvious. He did not resign from the army at the retirement age, instead he gave the supreme court the authority to change army service rules in his favor by creating an exception. He failed to tell his american friends that he was bound by certain ethics and national idiosyncrasies which he could not violate. He failed to let go of the prime minister when it had become obvious that a brilliant finance minister may not necessarily prove a capable prime minister. He allowed himself to be manipulated by opportunists and men like the Chaudhry brothers, Niazi and the Pirzadas and constantly fiddled with the Constitution. He was dazzled by the knowledge and wisdom of the west, not knowing that I still receive invoices from USA and Europe in Indian rupees and letters addressed "......., Pakistan, India." He failed to realize that in fighting Islamic extremism which was necessary, he was unnecessarily aligning himself with Christian and Jewish extremists. When it became obvious that Benazir was not hurt by either the gun-man or the suicide bomber on her left, he failed to infer that there must have been a third assailant on her right. Above all, he did not keep his words and betrayed his oaths which caused immense pain and grief to the mostly faithful people of his country. He deserves not only a failing grade but also some stick.
However, there is a silver lining to every cloud. MQM, the working class leadership of elite Karachi still believes that Mr. Musharraf's mistakes can be forgiven in consideration of his services to the nation. Although Mr. Musharraf may succeed in mellowing many who have hard feelings against him when he passionately answers the charges against himself, the voting in the parliament would definitely be on partisan lines and he has little chance unless he can find the money to buy nearly a fifth of the delegates. However an impassioned plea might avert any future cruelty against him. On the other hand he can negotiate a favorable secret deal and resign avoiding embarrassment to fellow soldiers.
The prime concern now is how the impossible coalition now ruling Pakistan will work in the months to come. Peoples Party is basically a socialist party now headed by a multi-billionaire habitual gaolbird, while PML(N) is dominated by industrialists and business tycoons. Previous governments of both were dismissed in the past on charges of corruption which were partly true. ANP and MQM have only localized following. All parties suffer from autocratic or elitist top leadership and a tendency to be violent at times. The leaders of all political and religious parties in Pakistan must reform and democratize their organizations and carry out a purge of elements having criminal or fraudulent tendencies. The formation of a new nab and grab team and persecution of opponents would be simply tragic.