At Agra, another failing system produced a young,energetic leader who looked good on television and succeeded in putting hiscounterpart – an older, less crisp leader with a talent for personifying hiscountry’s virtues, but not for debate – on the defensive. This is annoying,but hardly any reason not to see how far the chap is willing to go. The groundrealities are that Pakistan has a recovering fundamentalist nation on one(Iran), a beginning recovering fundamentalist nation on another (Afghanistan),an authoritarian, culturally alien state on a third (China) and a pluralistdemocracy with an irresistibly attractive and subversive culture on the fourth(India). By far the fastest way for Pakistan to find its way out of the dead endin which it finds itself is to give up on the notion that it can reinvent thewheel when it comes to social arrangements in the subcontinent and to settledown to an independent but interdependent existence with its larger culturalkin, much as other nations elsewhere have done at earlier times in history(Canada with the United States, Austria with Germany). It strikes me thatcrafting a process that accomplishes this with Pakistan’s dignity intact maypersuade Musharraf, like Gorbachev before him, to go an extra mile. Pakistan’smiddle class may feel a symbolic loss (much as the Russians miss being a globalmilitary power) but in their heart of hearts, and in the writings of some intheir media and academia, they know that this is a lost cause and one that iskeeping them from a more normal existence that they would find compensationenough.