Why U.S. mistrusts Pakistan’s powerful spy agency

ISLAMABAD/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – In 2003 or 2004,  Pakis-tani intelligence agents trailed a suspected militant  courier to a house in the picturesque hill town of Abbotta-bad  in northern Pakistan. There, the agents determined that the courier would make contact with one of the world’s most wanted men, Abu Faraj al-Libbi, who had succeeded Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Muhammad as al Qaeda operations chief a few months  earlier. Agents from Pakistan’s powerful and mysterious Inter-Services Intelligence agency, known as the ISI, raided a  house but failed to find al-Libbi, a senior Pakistani  intelligence official told Reuters this week.

Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf later wrote in  his memoirs that an interrogation of the courier revealed that  al-Libbi used three houses in Abbottabad, which sits some 50 km  (30 miles) northeast of Islamabad. The intelligence official  said that one of those houses may have been in the same  compound where on May 1 U.S. special forces killed al Qaeda  leader Osama bin Laden.

It’s a good story. But is it true? Pakistan’s foreign  ministry this week used the earlier operation as evidence of  Pakistan’s commitment to the fight against terrorism. You see, Islamabad seemed to be pointing out, we were nabbing bad guys  seven years ago in the very neighborhood where you got bin  Laden.

Ahmed Shuja Pasha

But U.S. Department of Defense satellite photos show that  in 2004 the site where bin Laden was found this week was  nothing but an empty field. A U.S. official briefed on the bin  Laden operation told Reuters he had heard nothing to indicate  there had been an earlier Pakistani raid.

There are other reasons to puzzle. Pakistan’s foreign  ministry says that Abbottabad, home to several military  installations, has been under surveillance since 2003. If  that’s true, then why didn’t the ISI uncover bin Laden, who  U.S. officials say has been living with his family and  entourage in a well-guarded compound for years? The answer to that question goes to the heart of the  troubled relationship between Pakistan and the United States.  Washington has long believed that Islamabad, and especially the  ISI, play a double game on terrorism, saying one thing but  doing another.

MARRIAGE OF CONVENIENCE
Since 9/11 the United States has relied on Pakistan’s  military to fight al Qaeda and Taliban forces in the  mountainous badlands along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan.  President George W. Bush forged a close personal relationship  with military leader Musharraf.

But U.S. officials have also grown frustrated with  Pakistan. While Islamabad has been instrumental in catching  second-tier and lower ranked al Qaeda and Taliban leaders, and  several operatives identified as al Qaeda “number threes” have  either been captured or killed, the topmost leaders – bin Laden  and his Egyptian deputy Ayman al Zawahiri — have consistently  eluded capture.

The ISI, which backed the Taliban when the group came to  power in Afghanistan in the mid-1990s, seemed to turn a blind  eye — or perhaps even helped — as Taliban and al-Qaeda  members fled into Pakistan during the U.S invasion of  Afghanistan after 9/11, according to U.S. officials.
Washington also believes the agency protected  Abdul Qadeer  Khan, lionized as the “father” of Pakistan’s bomb, who was  arrested in 2004 for selling nuclear secrets to Iran, Libya and  North Korea.

And when Kashmiri militants attacked the Indian city of  Mumbai in 2008, killing 166 people, New Delhi accused the ISI  of controlling and coordinating the strikes. A key militant suspect captured by the Americans later told investigators that  ISI officers had helped plan and finance the attack. Pakistan  denies any active ISI connection to the Mumbai attacks and  often points to the hundreds of troops killed in action against  militants as proof of its commitment to fighting terrorism.

But over the past few years Washington has grown  increasingly suspicious-and ready to criticize Pakistan. The  U.S. military used association with the spy agency as one of  the issues they would question Guantanamo Bay prisoners about  to see if they had links to militants, according to WikiLeaks  documents  made available last month to the New York Times.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said last July that  she believed that Pakistani officials knew where bin Laden was  holed up. On a visit to Pakistan just days before the  Abbottabad raid, Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S.  Military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, accused the ISI of  maintaining links with the Taliban.

As the CIA gathered enough evidence to make the case that  bin Laden was in Abbottabad, U.S. intel chiefs decided that  Pakistan should be kept in the dark. When U.S. Navy Seals roped  down from helicopters into the compound where bin Laden was  hiding, U.S. officials insist, Pakistan’s military and intel  bosses were blissfully unaware of what was happening in the  middle of their country.

Some suspect Pakistan knew more than it’s letting on. But  the Pakistani intelligence official, who asked to remain  anonymous so that he could speak candidly, told Reuters that the Americans had acted alone and without any Pakistani  assistance or permission.

The reality is Washington long ago learned to play its own  double game. It works with Islamabad when it can and uses Pakistani assets when it’s useful but is ever more careful  about revealing what it’s up to.
“On the one hand, you can’t not deal with the ISI… There  definitely is the cooperation between the two agencies in terms  of personnel working on joint projects and the day-to-day  intelligence sharing,” says Kamran Bokhari, Middle East and  South Asia director for global intelligence firm STRATFOR. But  “there is this perception on the part of the American officials  working with their counterparts in the ISI, there is the  likelihood that some of these people might be working with the  other side. Or somehow the information we’re sharing could leak  out… It’s the issue of perception and suspicion.”
The killing of bin Laden exposes just how dysfunctional the  relationship has become. The fact that bin Laden seems to have  lived for years in a town an hour’s drive from Islamabad has U.S. congressmen demanding to know why Washing-ton is paying $1  billion a year in aid to Pakistan. Many of the hardest  questions are directed at the ISI. Did it know bin Laden was  there? Was it helping him? Is it rotten to the core or is it  just a few sympathizers?
What’s clear is that the spy agency America must work with  in one of the world’s most volatile and dangerous regions  remains an enigma to outsiders.

GENERAL PASHA

ISI chief Lieutenant General Ahmed Shuja Pasha visited  Washington on April 11, just weeks before bin Laden was killed.  Pasha, 59, became ISI chief in September 2008, two months  before the Mumbai attacks. Before his promotion, he was in  charge of military operations against Islamic militants in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. He is considered close to  Pakistan military chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, himself a  long-time ISI chief.
A slight man who wastes neither words nor movements, Pasha  speaks softly and is able to project bland anonymity even as he  sizes up his companions and surroundings. In an off-the-record interview with Reuters last year, he spoke deliberately and  quietly but seemed to enjoy verbal sparring. There was none of  the bombast many Pakistani officials put on.

Pasha, seen by U.S. officials as something of a right-wing  nationalist, and CIA Director Leon Panetta, who was in the  final stages of planning the raid on Osama’s compound, had  plenty to talk about in Washington. Joint intelligence  operations have been plagued by disputes, most notably the case  of Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor who shot dead two Pakistanis  in Lahore in January. Davis was released from jail earlier this  year after the victims’ families were paid “blood money” by the  United States, a custom sanctioned under Islam and common in  Pakistan.

Then there are the Mumbai attacks. Pasha and other alleged  ISI officers were named as defendants in a U.S. lawsuit filed  late last year by families of Americans killed in the attacks.  The lawsuit contends that the ISI men were involved with  Lashkar-e-Taiba, an anti-India militant group, in planning and  orchestrating the attacks.

An Indian government report seen by Reuters states that  David Headley, a Pakistani-American militant who was allied  with Lashkar-e-Taiba and who was arrested in the United States  last year, told Indian interrogators while under FBI  supervision that ISI officers had been involved in plotting the  attack and paid him $25,000 to help fund it.

Pakistan’s government said it will “strongly contest” the  case and shortly after the lawsuit was filed Pakistani media  named the undercover head of the CIA’s Islamabad station,  forcing him to leave the country.

TECHNIQUE OF WAR
The ISI’s ties to Islamist militancy are very much by  design.
The Pakistan Army’s humiliating surrender to India in Dhaka  in 1971 led to the carving up of the country into two parts,  one West Pakistan and the other Bangladesh. The defeat had two  major effects: it convinced the Pakistan military that it could  not beat its larger neighbor through conventional means alone,  a realization that gave birth to its use of Islamist militant  groups as proxies to try to bleed India; and it forced  successive Pakistani governments to turn to Islam as a means of  uniting the territory it had left.
These shifts, well underway when the Soviet Union invaded  Afghanistan in 1979, suited the United States at first. Working  with its Saudi Arabian ally, Washington ploughed money and  weapons into the jihad against the Soviets and turned a blind  eye to the excesses of Pakistan’s military ruler, General Zia  ul-Haq, who had seized power in 1977 and hanged former Prime  Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1979.

Many Pakistanis blame the current problems in Pakistan in  part on Washington’s penchant for supporting military rulers.  It did the same in 2001 when it threw it its lot with Musharraf  following the attacks on New York and Washington. By then, the  rebellion in Indian Kashmir had been going since 1989, and U.S.  officials back in 2001 made little secret that they knew the  army was training, arming and funding militants to fight  there.
That attitude changed after India and Pakistan nearly went  to war following the December 2001 attack on India’s  parliament, which New Delhi blamed on Pakistan-based militant  groups — a charge Islamabad denied. Musharraf began to rein in  the Kashmiri militant groups, restricting their activity across  the Line of Control which divides the Indian and Pakistani  parts of Kashmir. But he was juggling the two challenges which  continue to defy his successor as head of the army, General  Ashfaq Kayani — reining in the militant groups enough to  prevent an international backlash on Pakistan, while giving  them enough space to operate to avoid domestic fall-out at  home.

The ISI has never really tried to hide the fact that it  sees terrorism as part of its arsenal. When Guantanamo  interrogation documents appearing to label the Pakistani  security agency as an entity supporting terrorism were  published recently, a former ISI head, Lt. General Asad  Durrani, wrote that terrorism “is a technique of war, and  therefore an instrument of policy.”
Critics believe that elements of the ISI — perhaps an old  guard that learned the Islamization lessons of General Zia  ul-Haq a little too well — maintain an influence within the  organization. “It is no secret that Pakistan’s army and foreign  intelligence service, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)  directorate, actively cultivated a vast array of Islamist  militants – both local and foreign, from the early 1980s until  at least the events of Sept. 11, 2001 – as instruments of  foreign policy,” STRATFOR wrote in an analysis posted on its  website this week.

LIST OF GRIEVANCES

That legacy is at the heart of Washington’s growing  mistrust of the ISI.
Take the agency’s ties to the powerful Afghan militant  group headed by Jalaluddin Haqqani, which has inflicted heavy  casualties on U.S. forces in the region.
“We sometimes say: You are controlling — you, Pasha —  you’re controlling Haqqani,” one U.S. official said, speaking  to Reuters on condition of anonymity.

“Well, Pasha will come back and say … ‘No, we are in  contact with them.’ Well, what does that really mean?”
“I don’t know but I’d like our experts to sit down and work  out: Is this something where he is trying (to), as he would put  it, know more about what a terrorist group in his country is  doing. Or as we would put it, to manipulate these people as the  forward soldiers of Pakistani influence in Afghanistan.”
When U.S. Joint Chiefs head Admiral Mike Mullen visited  Islamabad last month he was just as blunt.

“Haqqani is supporting, funding, training fighters that are  killing Americans and killing coalition partners. And I have a  sacred obligation to do all I can to make sure that doesn’t  happen,” Mullen told a Pakistani newspaper.
“So that’s at the core — it’s not the only thing — but  that’s at the core that I think is the most difficult part of  the relationship.”

Just across the border in Afghanistan, Major General John  Campbell reaches into a bag and pulls out a thick stack of  cards with the names and photos of coalition forces killed in  the nearly year-long period since he’s been on the job. Many of  the men in the photos were killed by Haqqani fighters.
“I carry these around so I never forget their sacrifice,”  Campbell said, speaking to a small group of reporters at U.S.  Forward Operating Base Salerno in Khost province.

“There are guys in Pakistan that have sanctuary that are  coming across the border and killing Americans… we gotta  engage the Pakistanis to do something about that,” he said.

Campbell calls the Haqqani network the most lethal threat  to Afghanistan, where U.S. forces are entrenched in a near  decade-old war.

“The Haqqani piece, it’s sort of like a Mafia-syndicate.  And I don’t know at what level they’re tied into the ISI — I  don’t. But there’s places … that you just see that there’s  collusion up and down the border,” he said.

DRONE WARS

Another contentious subject discussed on Pasha’s trip to  Washington was the use of missile-firing drones to attack  suspected militant camps on Pakistani territory.

Once Obama moved into the White House, the drone program  begun by the Bush Administration not only continued, but  according to several officials, increased. Sometimes drone  strikes in the tribal areas of Pakistan took place several  times in a single week.

U.S officials, as well as counter-terrorism officials from  European countries with a history of Islamic militant activity,  said that they had no doubt that the drone campaign was  seriously damaging the ability of al Qaeda’s central operation,  as well as affiliated groups like the Pakistani and Afghan  Taliban, to continue to use Pakistan as a safe haven.

But the increasingly obvious use of drones made it far more  difficult for either the CIA or its erstwhile Pakistani  partners, ISI, to pretend that the operation was secret and  that Pakistani officials were unaware of it. Since last  October, the tacit cooperation between the CIA and ISI which  had helped protect and even nurture the CIA’s drone program,  began to fray, and came close to breaking point.

Before Pasha visited CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia,  last month, Pakistani intelligence sources leaked ferocious  complaints about the CIA in general and the drone program in  particular, suggesting that the agency, its operatives and its  operations inside Pakistan were out of control and that if  necessary, Pakistan would take forcible steps to curb them —  including stopping drone attacks and limiting the presence of  CIA operatives in Pakistan.

When Pasha arrived at CIA HQ, U.S. officials said, the  demands leaked by the Pakistanis to the media were much scaled  down, with Pasha asking Panetta that the US give Pakistan more  notice about drone operations, supply Pakistan with its own  fleet of drones (a proposal which the United States had agreed  to but which had subsequently stalled) and that the agency  would curb the numbers of its personnel in Pakistan.

U.S. officials said that the Obama administration agreed to  at least some measure of greater notification to the Pakistani  authorities about CIA activities, though insisted any  concessions were quite limited.
Just weeks later, Obama failed to notify Pakistan in  advance about the biggest  U.S. counter-terrorist operation in  living memory, conducted on Pakistani soil.

LEARNING FROM HISTORY
It was different the first time U.S. forces went after bin  Laden.
Washington’s first attempt to kill the al Qaeda leader came  in August 1998. President Bill Clinton launched 66 cruise  missiles from the Arabian Sea at camps in Khost in eastern  Afghanistan to kill the group’s top brass in retaliation for  the suicide bombings on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
The CIA had received word that al Qaeda’s leadership was  due to meet. But Bin Laden canceled the meeting and several  U.S. officials said at the time they believed the ISI had  tipped him off. The U.S. military informed their Pakistani  counterparts about 90 minutes before the missiles entered  Pakistan’s airspace, just in case they mistook them for an  Indian attack.
Then U.S. Secretary of State William Cohen came to suspect  bin Laden escaped because he was tipped off. Four days before  the operation, the State Department issued a public warning  about a “very serious threat” and ordered hundreds of  nonessential U.S. personnel and dependents out of Pakistan.  Some U.S. officials said the Taliban could have passed the word  to bin Laden on an ISI tip.
Other former officials have disputed the notion of a  security breach, saying bin Laden had plenty of notice that the  United States intended to retaliate following the bombings in  Africa.

WHAT’S NEXT?

Now that the U.S. has finally killed bin Laden, what will  change?
The Pakistani intelligence official acknowledged that bin  Laden’s presence in Pakistan will cause more problems with the  United States.

“It looks bad,” he said. “It’s pretty  embarrassing.” But he denied that Pakistan had been hiding bin  Laden, and noted that the CIA had struggled to find bin Laden  for years as well.

Perhaps. But the last few days are unlikely to convince the  CIA and other U.S. agencies to trust their Pakistani  counterparts with any kind of secrets or partnership.

Recent personnel changes at the top of the Obama  Administration also do not bode well for salvaging the  relationship.

Panetta, a former Congressman and senior White House  official, is a political operator who officials say at least  got on cordially, if not well, with ISI chief Pasha. But  Panetta is being reassigned to take over from Robert Gates as  Secretary of Defense.  His replacement at the CIA will be  General David Petraeus, the commander of U.S. military  operations in neighboring Afghanistan.

The biggest issue on Petraeus’s agenda will be dealing with  Pakistan’s ISI. The U.S. general’s relationship with Pakistani  Army chief of Staff Kayani, Pasha’s immediate superior, is  publicly perceived to be so unfriendly that it has become a  topic of discussion on Pakistani TV talk shows.
“I think it is going to be a very strained and difficult  relationship,” said Bruce Riedel, a former adviser to Obama on  Afghanistan and Pakistan. He characterized the attitude on both  sides as “mutual distrust.”

After a decade of American involvement in Afghanistan,  experts say that Petraeus and Pakistani intelligence officials  know each other well enough not to like each other.