By Zeeshan Haider ISLAMABAD, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Pakistan's support for a campaign against al Qaeda and its cohorts is unlikely to be affected by U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf's weakened position following his allies election defeat, analysts say. Whoever rules in Islamabad, they say, the army under General Ashfaq Kayani's command will stay focused on the threat to Pakistan's stability posed by the Islamist militancy spreading out of tribal areas on the northwest border with Afghanistan. "The election results may endanger Pervez Musharraf's rule, but I don't foresee any big change in the policy on the war on terror," said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a newspaper editor in Peshawar, the northwestern city that has been a prime target for bomb attacks over the past 18 months. Voters didn't just vanquish Musharraf's allies. They also dumped Islamist parties that accounted for 17 percent of seats in the last National Assembly and had held power in North West Frontier Province and shared it in Baluchistan, the other province abutting Afghanistan. The party of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto won most seats in the National Assembly, and is likely to form a coalition with other moderate forces. One of its allies will almost certainly be the Awami National Party that trounced the political mullahs who'd held power in the NWFP capital Peshawar since 2002. Most of the victorious independent candidates in the seven semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun tribal lands, the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, were affiliated to either Bhutto's Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) or the ANP. "Pashtuns have sent a clear message to the world in these elections that they are not terrorists and extremists," Ghulam Ahmed Bilour, vice president of ANP told Reuters. BAND OF MODERATES He said ANP was negotiating to cobble together a coalition with "like-minded parties", including PPP, in the province. Since the suicide attack that killed Bhutto after an election rally in the garrison town of Rawalpindi on Dec. 27, more than 450 people have perished in the ongoing campaign of violence by the al Qaeda and Taliban groups fighting their asymmetrical war against the Pakistan state. Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto's widower and de facto leader of PPP, said his wife had been martyred standing up against terrorism and there could be no relenting. "It is war of terror against Pakistan and we have to fight it as our war," Zardari told a news conference late on Tuesday. Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack blamed on al Qaeda-linked militants at the end of an election rally in the city of Rawalpindi on Dec. 27. Analysts say election results showed that Pakistanis have rejected religious militancy. "The greatest achievement of this transition to democracy is the rout of religious extremists who wanted to plunge Pakistan into anarchy," Najam Sethi, editor of the Daily Times wrote on Wednesday. Pakistan's Islamist parties had never won more than 10 percent of National Assembly seats until 2002, when they benefited from a wave anti-American sentiment sweeping the region in the wake of the U.S.-led attack on the Taliban militia's government in Afghanistan. The alliance of six Islamist parties, known as Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), had also been helped then by Musharraf's marginalisation of both Bhutto and Sharif's parties. This time round disunity in the alliance meant some Islamist parties contested while others boycotted an election they thought would legitimise Musharraf's presidency. Instead, Musharraf's grip on power appears more precarious than ever, while the Islamists have around 1 percent of seats in the National Assembly, and only around 10 percent in the NWFP Assembly they had controlled. Commenting on elections in Pakistan that were less violent and fairer than many people had anticipated, U.S. President George W. Bush described it as a victory for the people of Pakistan. "I view it as a part of the victory on the war on terror," he told a news conference in Ghana. (Editing By Simon Cameron-Moore)
Supporters of slain opposition leader Benazir Bhutto celebrate their victory in the general elections in Karachi February 19, 2008. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf's opponents won a big election victory on Tuesday ...