Musharraf Steps Down as Head of Pakistani Army
President Pervez Musharraf formally stepped down as the chief of Pakistan’s powerful army Wednesday morning, reluctantly bowing to international pressure to end his eight-year reign as the increasingly unpopular military ruler of this nuclear-armed Muslim nation of 160 million.Gen. Musharraf, 64, handed over his post as promised to the vice-army chief and retired from the army at an elaborate ceremony on a vast parade ground inside army headquarters in the nearby garrison city of Rawalpindi. He is now scheduled to take his oath Thursday as Pakistan’s civilian president for the next five years.
Obviously this is only a small step, and it certainly doesn’t solve all the problems Pakistan faces, but it is welcome regardless. How the January elections go, and if Pakistan will be able to address the Jihadist insurgency they are facing are big outstanding questions.
We can certainly hope for the best. Should Pakistan fall further toward totalitarianism, either from a continued slide toward a Musharref autocracy or as a result of a Jihadist takeover our world will be that much more dangerous.



…and what has changed?