ISLAMABAD: When former DG ISI Ahmed Shuja Pasha appeared before the Abbottabad Commission, he opened indiscriminate fire on all. The
former spy chief blasted Pervez Musharraf for caving in before
Americans, the political leadership for ignorance, indifference and its
lack of a reading culture, all security and intelligence agencies for
not performing diligently and journalists as being ‘heavily bribed with
money, women and alcohol’ for launching campaigns against the ISI. Pasha
admitted before the commission that the ISI had brutalised many, even
‘decent people’ but explained there are now ‘changes to its (ISI)
mindset, culture and methodology’. This followed a warning note as he
said that there were still people who continue criticising the ISI and
they ‘should fear the ISI’ as they were working against the national
interests. He told the commission that former PM Yusuf Raza Gilani’s
statement about a ‘state within state’ and asking who had given a visa
to Osama bin Laden angered the army beyond imagination. He said,
however, the PM only once asked him for a briefing during his entire
stint. The Defence Ministry, he continued, never sent a request for
information sharing. No one, including the defence minister, he said,
read policy documents on defence and there is no culture of reading
among the political leadership. A thinking process does not exist, hence
there is no formulation of any policy. The former spy chief also
made a rare admission of enforced disappearances notwithstanding the
fact ‘it (the ISI) had nolegal authority’ and sought detention powers
for the agency. He further disclosed that the US had pressurised
Pakistan through Saudi Arabia for the release of Dr Shakil Afridi but
failed in such attempts. Pasha admitted links with Haqqani network
that, he said, was a brain child of ISI and CIA created after the Soviet
invasion. Besides Pakistan, other countries like UK and Italy are also
in touch with them, he disclosed. The former spy chief also disclosed
that the CIA had infiltrated many foreign NGOs including Save the
Children that has ‘a history of involvement with the CIA’ and concluded
there were very few NGOs that could be termed totally ‘clean’. He said
the CIA director had personally requested him not to expose Save the
Children’s role in its activities in Pakistan. Below are the
highlights of his statement about different sections of society, foreign
organisations and its role other than the embarrassing intelligence
failure on fateful May 2, 2011 that has already been highlighted in the
media. Pasha’s views about political leadership: Calling into
question the role of former military ruler, Gen Pervez Musharraf, he
said Musharraf had caved in so promptly and so completely to the US
demands that Shamsi airbase was given to them for drone strikes against
people in Pakistan. Someone should have told the Americans that ‘enough
was enough’ but in vain and both the ‘political and military elite were
responsible for this lapse’. He said the Abbottabad incident was a
result of lack of capacity, inadequate knowledge and wrong attitude. For
example, he explained, no one, including the defence minister, had read
the basic documents concerning defence policy. There was simply no
culture of reading among the political leadership. Besides, ‘the
thinking process was also non-existent’. Accordingly, it was unable to
formulate any policy. He rejected the idea of putting ISI under
civilian control, saying an earlier attempt to bring under the Interior
Ministry was disastrous. The ISI reports to the president and the prime
minister, he said, saying information is shared on a demand basis but
has never received a demand from the Defence Ministry. The PM has
once asked for an update on the security situation, he disclosed, and
the DG ISI was only once summoned to brief him. Explaining the
indifference of provinces on intelligence sharing, Pasha blasted Sindh
and Punjab. He said that ISI knew foreign miscreants lived in Karachi’s
no-go area but police dare not venture there. The situation was
increasingly becoming true of Lahore and other cities of Punjab, he
said. The police protected in Lahore those who attacked the Qadianis in
2010 and even directed them to the hospital where the wounded were being
treated. No guards were assigned to the hospital for security despite
the information passed on by ISI as ‘venal political influence
intervened everywhere’. About Prime Minister Gilani’s statement in
the National Assembly asking who had given a six-year visa to Osama bin
Laden and his reference to ‘a state within a state’, Pasha said his
criticism was very unfair. ‘The anger in the military over such unfair
statements could not be described’. Harassment by ISI, media’s
suspicious activities and missing persons: Pasha accepted that agency’s
record was not without blemish, saying many ‘decent people’ had been
harmed by some of its errors. But the ISI learned from experiences, he
said, and reformed itself through ‘change to its mindset, culture and
methodology’. But he also warned that those who still criticise and fear
from the ISI are people ‘who should fear the ISI’ as they more often
than not were working against the national interest. About the role
of Pakistani media, Pasha said, journalists were also found involved in
the vilification campaign against the ISI launched by the US and many
journalists were ‘heavily bribed with money, women and alcohol.’ He said
the media was ‘practically bought up’ and nearly ‘every one of our
elite was purchasable.’ He also admitted that the ISI had arrested
people without any legal authority but justified this malpractice by
throwing blame on the police that, he said, leaked the information
provided to it. Accordingly, the ISI preferred to act alone and there is
a need to grant detention power to the agency, he explained. Criticised
all agencies: Pasha said all the intelligence agencies must be held to
account for their failure including Military Intelligence, Air Force
Intelligence, Naval Intelligence, Intelligence Bureau, Criminal
Investigation Department and the Special Branch. None of the said
agencies re-aligned their task in the aftermath of 9/11. Very little
coordination exists for terrorism-related information sharing with
military intelligence services, he disclosed. The police should have a
comparative advantage with respect to internal security since it has
tentacle down to the district level. The CID, Special Branch and the
police have advantage over the ISI because of their spread, area
coverage and local knowledge but nothing was done by them, he said. Most
of the officers posted in the IB are from police and do not know the
basics of intelligence, said Pasha who did not have any intelligence
experience either when appointed DG. He also failed to mention that same
is being practiced in the ISI that is run by the armed forces
notwithstanding the fact it is a civilian agency. Self-assuming role
of ISI as counter-terrorism agency: Admitting the fact that the
government never tasked the ISI to deal with counter-terrorism, Pasha
said the agency had assumed this responsibility ‘in response to the
dysfunctionality of the prevailing system and the ineffectiveness of
other state organs’. Another reason was the fact that the president so
often happens to be serving army chief, he said with reference to
repeated military intervention and realising the fact that Musharraf was
COAS-president by that time. Contacts with Haqqani network: Pasha
said it was jointly created by the CIA and ISI against the Soviet
occupation. The fighting core of this network had been placed under UN
sanctions, he explained, but its non-combatant members were not. The ISI
is in ‘contact with these non-sanctioned members’ who are responsible
for administrative and other matters, he said and justified this by
explaining that the UK, Italy and some other countries are also in touch
with them. Foreign NGOs as CIA’s agents: Pasha said CIA had a
history of using NGOs and there were 1300 foreign NGOs working in
Pakistan. There is clear evidence that CIA, he explained, uses them
including Save the Children that, he said, has a ‘history of involvement
with the CIA’. The CIA was extremely worried that its nexus with NGOs
might be publicly exposed, he said. In fact, Pasha continued, the CIA
director had personally requested him not to expose Save the Children’s
role in its activities in Pakistan. He said there were very few ‘clean’
foreign NGOs working in Pakistan. Pasha said it was not possible for the
ISI to track activities of all these NGOs and only the police could
undertake their monitoring and surveillance. |
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