FACTBOX-No easy options in Pakistan post-poll scenarios
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Nuclear-armed Pakistan is due to hold an election on February 18 that has its neighbours and the West shuddering over what might happen next in a country at risk of being destabilized by al Qaeda.
Here are some of the possible election scenarios, based on Pakistani political analysts and foreign diplomats assessments:
THE BACKDROP
-- Although it is not a presidential vote, U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf's position could be in danger if the election produces a hostile parliament that could seek his impeachment.
-- Musharraf, who came to power as army chief in a 1999 coup, secured a second term as president by imposing emergency rule in November for a few weeks in order to purge the Supreme Court of judges who stood in his way.
-- Opinion polls show most Pakistanis do not believe Musharraf should lead them any longer and, having quit the army to become a civilian president, he is regarded as weaker than ever before.
-- The country is still reeling from the shock of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto's assassination on December 27, and campaigning has been low key due to security fears after a wave of suicide attacks and violence across the northwest.
-- The West is concerned that a Pakistan caught in political flux could lose focus in the war on terrorism, though the United States appears confident in new army chief General Ashfaq Kayani.
MUSHARRAF'S HOLD ON POWER Continued...



