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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Afghanistan
Osma bin Laden buried in Afghanistan, report claims
2015-05-12
[Khaama (Afghanistan)] The head of al Qaeda terrorist network the late Osama bin Laden
... who has left the building...
was buried in Afghanistan after he was killed in a US raid in Abbottabad
... A pleasant city located only 30 convenient miles from Islamabad. The city is noted for its nice weather and good schools. It is the site of Pakistain's military academy, which was within comfortable walking distance of the residence of the late Osama bin Laden....
city of Pakistain fours ago, it has been reported.
Just the head, though. The arms are in Bangla and the legs are in Karachi. The torso's in Soddy Arabia.
In an article for the London Review of Books, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh, has said bin Laden was not buried in sea.
We had the beginning of the story yesterday. I don't believe anything Seymour says unless it's attested by a priest, a rabbi, and a lady Anglican bishop. Even then I'd need to see the video.
The article mainly focuses on major role played by Pakistain stating that the US President Barack Obama
I mean, I do think at a certain point you've made enough money...
lied to Americans about the role of Pakistain special forces in the raid which killed bin Laden.
B.O. lied, people got used to it. As a result, anything he says, to include "it's four o'clock" has to be taken with a grain of salt. He and Seymour are soul mates in that respect.
Quoting former American and Pak intelligence sources the author claims that the White House and CIA repeatedly lied to the public about nearly every aspect of the bin Laden raid.
"Liars and thieves, the lot of them!"
The aricle by Hersh further adds that Paks had been essentially holding bin Laden captive at the Abbottabad compound for years and his location was disclosed by a Pak intelligence official who tipped off American operatives hoping to claim the $25million bounty on the terror leader -- not from interrogation of an al-Qaeda courier.
I'd call it "doing business with him" instead of "holding him captive." All the evidence points toward the former. We pay attention here on Rantburg.
The author also states that Laden was cut off from al-Qaeda at the time of his killing and was not running the terrorist group and no useful intelligence information was found from his compound.
"No, no! He was retired. A gentleman farmer, you know. Wasn't hurting anybody..."
This comes as earlier reports suggested that the former chief of Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence
...the Pak military intelligence agency that controls the military -- heads of ISI typically get promoted into the Chief of Army Staff position. It serves as a general command center for favored turban groups such as Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad, tries to influence the politix of neighboring countries, and carries out a (usually) low-level war against India in Kashmir...
(ISI) Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha knew of Osama bin Laden's hideout in Pakistain.
I never had any doubt that he did.
The founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
Hafiz Muhammad Saeed
...who would be wearing a canvas jacket with very long sleeves anyplace but Pakistain...
was also reportedly in regular contact with the slain al Qaeda chief in Pakistain.
The word you're probably looking for is "colleagues."
Osama bin Laden was rubbed out during a raid conducted by US commandos in May 2011 in the garrison city of Abbottabad.
Link


Great White North
Canada's former ambassador to AFG sez PAK is a state sponsor of terrorism
2014-04-04
[Jihad Watch] Alexander is right, of course. It has been obvious for years that the Pakistanis have been aiding the same jihadists that the U.S. government has been giving them billions of dollars to fight. The New York Times reported on that at length back in 2008. And recently we learned that Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the head of the ISI, the Pakistani government's spy service, knew the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden, and apparently so did many other top officials in the Pakistani government. Those who are surprised by what Chris Alexander says probably also think that Islam is a Religion of Peace that has been hijacked by a Tiny Minority of Extremists.

We need some politicians like Chris Alexander in the U.S., instead of the ones we have, who keep insisting that Pakistan is our reliable friend and ally.
Finally hearing the truth is indeed refreshing.
Link


India-Pakistan
What Pakistan Knew About Bin Laden
2014-03-19
The excerpt is just a small chunk. Many thanks to Paul D.
[NY Times] It took more than three years before the depth of Pakistain's relationship with Al Qaeda was thrust into the open and the world learned where Bin Laden had been hiding, just a few hundred yards from Pakistain's top military academy. In May 2011, I drove with a Pak colleague down a road in Abbottabad
... A pleasant city located only 30 convenient miles from Islamabad. The city is noted for its nice weather and good schools. It is the site of Pakistain's military academy, which was within comfortable walking distance of the residence of the late Osama bin Laden....
until we were stopped by the Pak military. We left our car and walked down a side street, past several walled houses and then along a dirt path until there it was: the late Osama bin Laden
... who doesn't live anywhere anymore...
's house, a three-story concrete building, mostly concealed behind concrete walls as high as 18 feet, topped with rusting strands of barbed wire. This was where Bin Laden hid for nearly six years, and where, 30 hours earlier, Navy SEAL commandos shot him dead in a top-floor bedroom.

After a decade of reporting in Afghanistan and Pakistain and tracking Bin Laden, I was fascinated to see where and how he hid. He had dispensed with the large entourage that surrounded him in Afghanistan. For nearly eight years, he relied on just two trusted Paks, whom American Sherlocks described as a courier and his brother.

People knew that the house was strange, and one local rumor had it that it was a place where maimed Taliban from Wazoo recuperated. I was told this by Musharraf's former civilian intelligence chief, who had himself been accused of having a hand in hiding Bin Laden in Abbottabad. He denied any involvement, but he did not absolve local intelligence agents, who would have checked the house. All over the country, Pakistain's various intelligence agencies -- the ISI, the Intelligence Bureau and Military Intelligence -- keep safe houses for undercover operations. They use residential houses, often in quiet, secure neighborhoods, where they lodge people for interrogation or simply enforced seclusion. Detainees have been questioned by American interrogators in such places and sometimes held for months. Leaders of banned Death Eater groups are often placed in protective custody in this way. Others, including Taliban leaders who took refuge in Pakistain after their fall in Afghanistan in 2001, lived under a looser arrangement, with their own guards but also known to their Pak handlers, former Pak officials told me. Because of Pakistain's long practice of covertly supporting Death Eater groups, coppers -- who have been warned off or even demoted for getting in the way of ISI operations -- have learned to leave such safe houses alone.

The split over how to handle gunnies is not just between the ISI and the local police; the intelligence service itself is compartmentalized. In 2007, a former senior intelligence official who worked on tracking members of Al Qaeda after Sept. 11 told me that while one part of the ISI was engaged in hunting down Death Eaters, another part continued to work with them.

Soon after the Navy SEAL raid on Bin Laden's house, a Pak official told me that the United States had direct evidence that the ISI chief, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, knew of Bin Laden's presence in Abbottabad. The information came from a senior United States official, and I guessed that the Americans had intercepted a phone call of Pasha's or one about him in the days after the raid. "He knew of Osama's whereabouts, yes," the Pak official told me. The official was surprised to learn this and said the Americans were even more so. Pasha had been an energetic opponent of the Taliban and an open and cooperative counterpart for the Americans at the ISI. "Pasha was always their blue-eyed boy," the official said. But in the weeks and months after the raid, Pasha and the ISI press office strenuously denied that they had any knowledge of Bin Laden's presence in Abbottabad.

Colleagues at The Times began questioning officials in Washington about which high-ranking officials in Pakistain might also have been aware of Bin Laden's whereabouts, but everyone suddenly clammed up. It was as if a decision had been made to contain the damage to the relationship between the two governments. "There's no smoking gun," officials in the B.O. regime began to say.

The haul of handwritten notes, letters, computer files and other information collected from Bin Laden's house during the raid suggested otherwise, however. It revealed regular correspondence between Bin Laden and a string of Death Eater leaders who must have known he was living in Pakistain, including Hafiz Muhammad Saeed
...who would be wearing a canvas jacket with very long sleeves anyplace but Pakistain...
, the founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
, a pro-Kashmiri group that has also been active in Afghanistan, and Mullah Omar
... a minor Pashtun commander in the war against the Soviets who made good as leader of the Taliban. As ruler of Afghanistan, he took the title Leader of the Faithful. The imposition of Pashtunkhwa on the nation institutionalized ignorance and brutality in a country already notable for its own fair share of ignorance and brutality...
of the Taliban. Saeed and Omar are two of the ISI's most important and loyal Death Eater leaders. Both are protected by the agency. Both cooperate closely with it, restraining their followers from attacking the Pak state and coordinating with Pakistain's greater strategic plans. Any correspondence the two men had with Bin Laden would probably have been known to their ISI handlers.

Bin Laden did not rely only on correspondence. He occasionally traveled to meet aides and fellow Death Eaters, one Pak security official told me. "Osama was moving around," he said, adding that he heard so from jihadi sources. "You cannot run a movement without contact with people." Bin Laden traveled in plain sight, his convoys always knowingly waved through any security checkpoints.

In 2009, Bin Laden reportedly traveled to Pakistain's tribal areas to meet with the Death Eater leader Qari Saifullah Akhtar. Informally referred to as the "father of jihad," Akhtar is considered one of the ISI's most valuable assets. According to a Pak intelligence source, he was the commander accused of trying to kill Bhutto on her return in 2007, and he is credited with driving Mullah Omar out of Afghanistan on the back of a cycle of violence in 2001 and moving Bin Laden out of harm's way just minutes before American missile strikes on his camp in 1998. After the Sept. 11 attacks, he was detained several times in Pakistain. Yet he was never prosecuted and was quietly released each time by the ISI.
Link


India-Pakistan
Report reveals Pasha's admission of Pak-US 'understanding' on drones
2013-07-10
[Dawn] Pakistain reached an understanding with the United States on drone strikes targeting Islamist Death Eaters and the attacks can be useful, according to leaked remarks from a former intelligence chief.

Pakistain publicly condemns US missile attacks on Taliban and al Qaeda operatives as a violation of its illusory sovereignty, but the new revelations are the latest sign of double-dealing in private.

They come in findings of a Pak investigation into how al Qaeda leader the late Osama bin Laden
... who used to be alive but now he's not...
evaded detection for nearly a decade, which were published by the Al-Jazeera
... an Arab news network headquartered in Qatar, notorious for carrying al-Qaeda press releases. The name means the Peninsula, as in the Arabian Peninsula. In recent years it has settled in to become slightly less biased than MSNBC, in about the same category as BBC or CBS...
news network Monday.

Ahmed Shuja Pasha, who headed Pakistain's premier Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency at the time of bin Laden's killing in 2011, told Sherlocks that drone strikes had their uses.

"The DG (director general) said there were no written agreements. There was a political understanding," the report said.

The Americans had been asked to stop drone strikes because they caused civilian casualties, but "it was easier to say no to them in the beginning, but 'now it was more difficult' to do so," it quoted the former spymaster as saying.

"Admittedly the drone attacks had their utility, but they represented a breach of national illusory sovereignty. They were legal according to American law but illegal according to international law," the report quoted the ISI chief as saying.
Link


India-Pakistan
'Legal help to Hafiz Saeed will strengthen Indian allegations'
2013-03-30
[Pak Daily Times] The Lahore High Court was told on Friday that any legal assistance to Jamaat-ud-Dawa
...the front organization of Lashkar-e-Taiba...
chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed
...who would be wearing a canvas jacket with very long sleeves anyplace but Pakistain...
in a case in the US would strengthen Indian claims against Pakistain.

LHC Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial postponed for April 29 the hearing of petition moved by Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, who has sought direction to the federal government to defend him in a US court which issued summons to him, former ISI chiefs and other officials on a lawsuit filed by the relatives of US nationals killed in Mumbai attacks.

On Friday, Advocate Ahmer Bilal Soofi, amicus curie (friend of court), argued that the state could interfere only when a citizen is tossed in the clink
Book 'im, Mahmoud!
in a foreign country. He said that in cases like Mumbai attacks, the government had no role to play. Earlier, Soofi had said that the United Nations
...aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society...
had unanimously passed a resolution against terrorism, and Pakistain being a member country was bound to implement its resolutions.

He said that India had filed a lawsuit in a US court to establish Pakistain's link with al Qaeda, and providing legal assistance to Hafiz Muhammad Saeed at the government level would strengthen the allegations of the neighbouring country. Meanwhile,
...back at the Council of Boskone, Helmuth had turned a paler shade of blue. Star-A-Star had struck again...
Hafiz Muhammad Saeed's counsel, AK Dogar, while referring to the killing of American national Rabbi Gavriel Noah Holtzberg and his wife Rivka by gunnies at the Chhabad House in Mumbai, said their son Moshe and other people have filed nine claims against banned outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
, naming Hafiz Muhammad Saeed as its head, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, Azam Cheema and Sajid Majid as well as the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), its former DGs Lt Gen Nadeem Taj and Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha and two other people, Major Iqbal and Major Samir Ali, who they allege are part of the ISI.
Link


India-Pakistan
Mumbai attacks case: India 'disappointed' at US immunity for ISI
2012-12-20
[Dawn] India on Wednesday called a declaration that Pakistain’s intelligence service and former chiefs enjoy immunity in a case related to the 2008 Mumbai attacks a “serious disappointment”.

The Indian government has long alleged that the Inter-Services Intelligence agency was behind the Islamist attacks which left 166 people dead – an accusation denied by Islamabad.

The Indian statement was in response to an affidavit filed in a US court earlier in the week in which the US government said Pakistain’s ISI and its former chiefs, Ahmed Shuja Pasha and Nadeem Taj, “enjoy immunity” in the Mumbai attacks.

The US affidavit is “a matter of deep and abiding concern”, the Indian government statement said, noting Washington has publicly said it is committed to bringing “those responsible for the Mumbai terror attacks to justice”.

“The decision of the US authorities in this case is a cause of serious disappointment,” said the Indian statement.

The New York federal court is hearing a case filed by US survivors of the Mumbai attacks and family members of the victims against Pasha, Taj and other ISI officials.

Leaders of the Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
(LeT) orc group, including its founder Mohammed Hafiz Muhammad Saeed
...who would be wearing a canvas jacket with very long sleeves anyplace but Pakistain...
, are also named in the suit. India has accused Pakistain’s ISI of collaborating with the LeT to mount the attacks.

The US government insisted in its affidavit that Pakistain must take steps to dismantle the LeT and support India’s efforts to counter orc threats, according to the Press Trust of India (PTI).

But at the same time the affidavit said, “the ISI is entitled to immunity because it is part of a foreign state”, the PTI report stated.

India last month hanged Pak national Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving gunman of 10 attackers who raided targets including top hotels and a Mumbai railway station while holding elite Indian Special Forces at bay.
Link


India-Pakistan
China Concerned About Uyghur Rebels Operating In Pakistan
2012-06-10
Beijing believes militants train in Pakistan before crossing the border and launching attacks in Xinjiang

During his recent visit to Islamabad, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi asked the Pak government to take action against ethnic Uygur Islamic cut-throats present in its lawless tribal areas.

Pakistain and China have enjoyed friendly ties for six decades, but Beijing has recently expressed reservations over alleged links between Pak cut-throats and the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM). Chinese authorities are said to be concerned about presence of the ETIM cut-throats in Pak territory, where they say the fighters are being trained before they cross into Xinjiang to carry out beturbanned goon attacks. But they did not discuss the issue publicly to ensure they don't embarrass Pakistain. The ETIM is also described as the Turkistani Islamic Party (TIP).

In an April 5 statement, Chinese Ministry of Public Security published a list of six beturbanned goons with their profiles, saying they were operating in South Asia, without naming Pakistain. According to the Chinese list, Nurmemet Memetmin, who was described as the "commander of the ETIM", was sentenced to 10 years in prison in a "South Asian country", but he escaped in 2006 and has been planning new attacks against China, including the late July attacks on civilians in Kashgar. After the Kashgar attacks, Chinese authorities had invited then Inter-Services Intelligence chief Lt Gen (r) Ahmed Shuja Pasha to Beijing in August and told him the cut-throats had allegedly been trained in Pakistain's tribal areas.

The ETIM network has weakened significantly in recent years after a crackdown by Pak authorities and killing of many of its top leaders in drone strikes
In March, Xinjiang governor Nur Bekri had warned China was facing a network of cut-throats entrenched in neighboring countries, Chinese media reported. Asked about the ETIM's Pakistain connection, Bekri said: "We have certainly discovered that East Turkistan [Islamic Movement] activists and beturbanned goons in our neighboring states have a thousand and one links". In the past, China blamed Xinjiang's violence on ETIM, Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HT), and World Uyghur Congress leader Rebia Kadeer, but it never implicated other countries, especially not its all-weather friend Pakistain.

Xinjiang, which borders Pakistain and Afghanistan, is home to ethnic Uygurs, a Turkic-speaking and largely Moslem people who make up about 40 percent of the region's population. Founded in 1997, the ETIM is fighting to liberate the Moslem-majority Xinjiang province (also called East Turkestan) from China. The Chinese government says such groups - linked with Al Qaeda -are responsible for unrest in the province.

In the most serious incident of violence in decades, 197 people were killed and about 1,700 others injured on July 5, 2009, when riots between Uygur and Han ethnic groups erupted in the regional capital of Urumqi. Analysts say the riots shattered the authoritarian Communist Party's claims of harmony and unity among dozens of ethnic groups in China.

Experts on militancy confirm the presence of cut-throats of the ETIM in Pakistain's North and South Wazoo regions where several other foreign and international beturbanned goon groups, such as the Al Qaeda, Islamic Jihad
...created after many members of the Egyptian Moslem Brotherhood decided the organization was becoming too moderate. Operations were conducted out of Egypt until 1981 when the group was exiled after the liquidation of President Anwar Sadat. They worked out of Gaza until they were exiled to Lebanon in 1987, where they clove tightly to Hezbollah. In 1989 they moved to Damascus, where they remain a subsidiary of Hezbollah...
Union (IJU), the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the Islamic Army of Great Britannia and Ittehad-e-Jihad Islami also operate.

"There are dozens of Central Asian cut-throats living in the tribal region," said a beturbanned goon associated with Hafiz Gul Bahadur. "But it is very difficult for us to distinguish between the Uzbeks, Tajiks and Uyghurs because of similar facial features."

After Al Qaeda and the IMU, the ETIM is the third strongest foreign beturbanned goon outfit operating in Pakistain's tribal areas, says Aqeel Yousafzai, a Beautiful Downtown Peshawar-based analyst. "The number of ETIM cut-throats present in Pakistain has always been kept secret because it may hurt ties between China and Pakistain," Yousafzai wrote in his book 'Talibanisation'. According to his estimates, the number of Chinese cut-throats in FATA was 50 to 300 during 2007-08.

The influence of ETIM among jihadi groups is so strong that the movement's leader Abdul Shakoor Turkistani was rumored to be the late Osama bin Laden
... who was laid out deader than a mackerel, right next to the mackerel...
's successor after his death in May 2011, said Muhammad Amir Rana, director of Pak Institute of Peace Studies (PIPS), an Islamabad-based think tank.

Rana said that the ETIM split into two factions last year. One concentrates on the separatist movement inside China, while a hard-line faction believes in a global jihad. Chinese cut-throats are also present in northern Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, he added.

But the ETIM network has weakened significantly in recent years after a crackdown by Pak authorities and killing of many of its top leaders in drone strikes. Last year, Pakistain handed over to China a handful of Uyghur cut-throats who were incarcerated
Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please!
by the security forces in the tribal areas.

ETIM chief Hassan Mashom was killed by Pak security forces in 2003. His successor, Abdul Haq Turkistani, was killed in a drone attack in May 2010. Abdul Haq, who is also known as Memetiming Memeti, became a member of Al Qaeda's executive council in 2005, according to the United States Treasury Department, which declared him a global terrorist in 2009.

"We believe the ETIM is not only an enemy of China but also an enemy of Pakistain," Interior Minister Rehman Malik
Pak politician, current Interior Minister under the Gilani administration. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. He later joined the Pak Peoples Party and was chief security officer to Bhutto. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Nawaz Sharif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men.
told media when Haq was killed.
Link


India-Pakistan
Pasha's efforts in war againt terror praised
2012-03-18
[Dawn] Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
held a meeting with the out-going Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha on Saturday, DawnNews reported.

During the meeting, the prime minister praised Pasha's efforts in the war against terrorism.

The ISI chief told Gilani that his services will always be available for the country in future.

Gen Pasha will retire after heading the spy agency for over three years on March 18.

The government has appointed Lt Gen Zahir ul Islam as the next head of the agency.
Link


India-Pakistan
ISI chief secretly meets Musharraf in Dubai: sources
2012-01-24
[Dawn] Lt General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the chief of the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), held a secret meeting with former President General (retired) Pervez Perv Musharraf
... former dictator of Pakistain, who was less dictatorial and corrupt than any Pak civilian government to date ...
in Dubai advising him not to visit Pakistain, sources told DawnNews on Monday.

"General Pasha, who has remained very close to the former president, held a meeting with him (Musharraf) in Dubai and advised him not to return to the country as the situation is not conducive for his return," said an insider while requesting anonymity from this correspondent.

The Senate on Monday also passed a resolution demanding the arrest of the former military ruler on his return. Interior Minister Rehman Malik
Pak politician, current Interior Minister under the Gilani administration. Malik is a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) intelligence officer who rose to head the FIA during Benazir Bhutto's second tenure. He later joined the Pak Peoples Party and was chief security officer to Bhutto. Malik was tossed from his FIA job in 1998 after documenting the breath-taking corruption of the Sharif family. By unhappy coincidence Näwaz Shärif became PM at just that moment and Malik moved to London one step ahead of the button men.
also announced that Musharraf would be placed in long-term storage the day he landed in Pakistain.

The sources claim that Pasha strictly advised Musharraf to not to return.

It is yet not clear whether the meeting was held on the directions of the ruling Pakistain People's Party government or if it was a private meeting. However the sources insist that it was a private meeting between the two.

The sources also claim that Pasha enjoys a long history of relations with the former dictator.

In 2008, during the last year of Musharraf as president, Pasha was appointed to the key posting of Director General (DG) of Military Operations Directorate. Later General Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
, after becoming the chief of Army Staff, promoted him as Lt Gen and appointed him the chief of the ISI.

Currently two important cases against Pervez Musharraf have been registered in Pakistain. An Anti Terrorists Court (ATC) in Rawalpindi has already declared Musharraf a proclaimed offender in the Benazir Bhutto
... 11th Prime Minister of Pakistain in two non-consecutive terms from 1988 until 1990 and 1993 until 1996. She was the daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, founder of the Pakistain People's Party, who was murdered at the instigation of General Ayub Khan. She was murdered in her turn by person or persons unknown while campaigning in late 2007. Suspects include, to note just a few, Baitullah Mehsud, General Pervez Musharraf, the ISI, al-Qaeda in Pakistain, and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, who shows remarkably little curiosity about who done her in...
murder case. Musharraf was also nominated in Akbar Bugti's murder case in Balochistan
...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it...

The sources also claim that Musharraf, after meeting with the ISI Chief, called a meeting of his party on January 25th for revisiting his decision to return to Pakistain.
Link


India-Pakistan
Gilani reacts to military bullying
2012-01-16
[Dawn] Pakistain's prime minister on Sunday rejected a demand by the country's powerful army chief that he clarify or retract his criticism of the army and the spy agency last week, likely raising tensions further in a festering row with the military.

"The prime minister ... is answerable to parliament," Yusuf Raza Gilani
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
told news hounds in the central city of Vehari. "I will not answer to a person. I am answerable to parliament."

Gilani last week criticized Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
and the director general of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shuja Pasha for filing court papers in a case involving a mysterious memo that has pitted the military against the civilian government.

In an interview with Chinese media, Gilani said the filings were "unconstitutional", infuriating the military's high command, who issued a stern blurb on Wednesday.

"There can be no allegation more serious than what the honourable prime minister has levelled," it said.

"This has very serious ramifications with potentially grievous consequences for the country."

Gilani's comments were in response to a journalist's question about media reports Saturday night that Kayani was infuriated by Gilani's criticisms.

The army chief complained to Zardari and demanded that Gilani's comments be clarified or withdrawn, a military source told Rooters on Saturday.

Gilani, however, showed no signs of backing down.

"What I said was not an accusation," he told news hounds. "We want there to be respect for the constitution, rule of law, and all institutions to work within their limits. I said just one thing, that rules and procedures were not followed. And that was the defence secretary's fault, for which we removed him from his post."
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India-Pakistan
Kayani says Gilani's criticisms 'divisive'
2012-01-16
[Dawn] Pakistain's army chief is furious with the prime minister for statements criticising the army and has demanded that they be clarified or withdrawn, a senior military source told Rooters on Saturday.

"The army chief complained to the president about the prime minister's statements, and said they needed to be either clarified or withdrawn," the source told Rooters.

"He said such statements were divisive
...politicians call things divisive when when the other side sez something they don't like. Their own statements are never "divisive," they're "principled"..
and made the country more vulnerable."

That tension has raised fears for the stability of the nuclear-armed country and exposed a struggle between the government and the military, which has ousted three civilian governments in coups since independence in 1947 and has ruled the nation for more than half of its history.

There are no signs yet that a coup is being seriously considered, however, reflecting the changed political calculations in Pakistain since civilans took power in 2008.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
this week criticized Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
and the director general of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency Lieutenant-General Ahmed Shuja Pasha for filing court papers in a case involving a mysterious memo that has pitted the military against the civilian government.

In an interview with Chinese media, Gilani said the filings were "unconstitutional," infuriating the military's high command, who issued a stern blurb.

"There can be no allegation more serious than what the honorable prime minister has levelled," it said.

"This has very serious ramifications with potentially grievous consequences for the country."

Gilani further infuriated the army on Wednesday by sacking the defence secretary, retired Lieutenant General Naeem Khalid Lodhi, for "gross misconduct and illegal action which created misunderstanding" between institutions.

Lodhi was the most senior civil servant responsible for military affairs, a post usually seen as the military's main advocate in the civilian bureaucracy.

As angry as Kayani is, the source said, the council of senior military commanders is even more angry, the source said.

"There is a lot of pressure by the main corps commanders on the army chief regarding the statements of the prime minister." the source said.

The military, which sets foreign and security policies, drew rare public criticism after US special forces killed al Qaeda leader the late Osama bin Laden
... who now dances with worms...
on Pak soil in a raid in May 2011, an act seen by many Paks as a violation of illusory sovereignty.

Paks rallied behind the military after a November 26 cross-border NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A single organization with differing goals, equipment, language, doctrine, and organization....
air attack killed 24 Pak soldiers on the frontier with Afghanistan, driving ties with Washington to their lowest point in years.

The army's fury is cause for serious concern for the civilian government, and Gilani and President Asif Ali President Ten Percent Zardari
... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ...
went on a charm offensive on Saturday.

"Our government and parliament, and above all our patriotic people, have stood fully behind our brave armed forces and security personnel," Gilani said at a cabinet defence committee meeting also attended by Kayani.

"It has been my government's policy to allow and enable all state institutions to play their role in their respective domains," he added.

Earlier, Zardari met Kayani in a similar attempt to mend fences.

"The current security situation was discussed," a presidential front man said, without giving any details.

Pakistain's politicians and media pundits have been abuzz with rumours of a possible coup since the memo controversy erupted in October.

The disputed memo -- allegedly from Zardari's government, seeking US help in reining in the generals -- has pushed relations between the civilian leadership and the military, to their lowest point since the last military coup in 1999.

The latest crisis also troubles Washington, which wants smooth ties between civilian and military leaders so that Pakistain can help efforts to stabilise neighbouring Afghanistan, a top priority for President Barack Obama.
Ready to Rule from Day One...
Gilani's office denied a report
No, no! Certainly not!
on Friday that the prime minister this week called the British High Commissioner in Islamabad, expressing concerns that the army might be about to mount a coup, and asking for London to support the government.

An official at the high commission also denied the report.
Link


India-Pakistan
Memo a 'pack of lies': interior ministry
2011-12-27
[Dawn] The ministry of interior submitted an affidavit to the Supreme Court on Monday, in response to the statements submitted by Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
and DG ISI General Ahmed Shuja Pasha in the 'memogate' case.

According to DawnNews, the interior ministry told the apex court in the 18-page reply that the Army chief did not immediately inform the prime minister of details regarding the memo scandal.

The government also said that DG ISI General Shuja Pasha should have first informed PM Gilani of his meeting with US-based businessman Mansoor Ijaz.

The affidavit filed by Secretary Interior Khawaja Siddique Akbar raised constitutional and legal questions over the Army chief and DG ISI's responses to the memo issue.

According to details, General Kayani informed the PM of General Pasha's meeting with Ijaz after a delay of 20 days. Kayani met with the prime minister on November 13, while his meeting with Pasha took place on October 24.

Similarly, in reply to DG ISI Pasha's statement, the federal government was of the view that according to the rules and regulations the ISI chief should have informed the prime minister of the issue before anyone else.

The reply also calls Ijaz's allegations "a pack of lies." Moreover, it goes on to say that a "piece of paper" does not pose a threat to the world's "eighth largest army."
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