The
military-backed President Musharraf of Pakistan has been dragged, screaming
and kicking, into retirement. He doesn’t know how lucky
he is.
How power maddens people! In 5thC BC democratic Athens, on average two
out of the top ten officials every year were found guilty on a capital
charge and either fled or were executed. It never stopped men putting
themselves forward.
The prospects were even worse for Roman emperors. From the start of the
principate in 27 BC till the technical end of the empire in the West
in AD 476, there were ninety emperors. Of these nearly three in four
were killed, usually by their own troops, or committed suicide. The problem
was that the Roman army was never full depoliticised. Every emperor depended
on it, and the army expected its kickback. Very Musharraf.
The sole exception was Diocletian. He fell badly ill in AD 303 and gave
up on May 1 305. Later he was invited back and famously remarked: ‘If
only you could see the cabbages we have planted at Salonae with our own
hands, you would never again judge that a tempting prospect’. In
republican Rome, only the blood-soaked Sulla, who appointed himself dictator
during the republic’s collapse, retired early (81 BC). Amazingly,
he saw out his days hunting, fishing, drinking and spending time in the
company of his artistic friends - actors, harpists, ballet-dancers, comedians,
female impersonators and other riff-raff. The story was that he dismissed
his bodyguard and walked as a private citizen about the Forum, challenging
anyone to hold him to account. That’s class.
And that, too, is the point. No one became or stayed emperor without
blood on his hands. Sheer terror at losing immunity on becoming a private
citizen played its part. So did the prospect of losing status, position,
prestige, honour, respect – however artificial the respect any
emperor enjoyed.
Cincinnatus in 458 BC showed how to do it. Invited to abandon his plough,
don his toga and assume absolute power in Rome to save the city from
assault, he agreed. Job done, he relinquished office, returned to where
he had left his plough and continued ploughing. But that was when Romans
were honest, noble, bold and true. Doubtless that is how Musharraf will
come to see himself.
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