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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, October 30, 2001 |
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'ISI has links with Al-Qaeda'
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, OCT. 29. In what would be music to many ears in India
and at the same time not coming as a major revelation to some,
U.S. administration officials are saying that the ISI of Pakistan
has had an indirect but longstanding relationship with the Al-
Qaeda of Osama bin Laden and in the process was turning a blind
eye to the growing nexus between the Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
In a front page story, The New York Times argues that Pakistan's
ISI even used the Al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan to train
terrorists for covert operations in India. The American fears
over the ISI's dealings with the Kashmiri militant groups and the
Taliban were such that the U.S. Secret Service opposed a plan by
the then President, Mr. Bill Clinton, to visit Pakistan in 2000.
``The fear was that Pakistan security forces were so badly
penetrated by terrorists that extremist groups possibly including
the Al-Qaeda would learn of the President's travel route from
sympathisers within the ISI and try to shoot down his plane,''
The New York Times says. Mr. Clinton overruled his Secret Service
and visited Islamabad but not before many elaborate and evasive
measures were put in place for that brief trip.
Much of what the report says is something the Indian officials
have been telling successive U.S. administrations. And in the
recent past - in the aftermath of the September 11 terror attacks
- New Delhi has been telling the Bush administration that the Al-
Qaeda's and Osama's handwritings are all over Jammu and Kashmir.
That being the case, many in India are simply appalled that the
Bush administration had taken the Pakistan President, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, as a lead player in a campaign against terrorism.
In fact, even now the point is being made here that Gen
Musharraf's idea to go along with the U.S. does not have the
solid backing of the ISI and that U.S. officials are sufficiently
convinced - and concerned - that the depth of support for the
American war against the Taliban and the Al-Qaeda remained
uncertain at the best.
That said, if Islamabad has now joined ranks with Washington it
is because of the belated realisation that the Taliban had been
completely coopted by Osama. ``I think the Pakistanis realised as
time went on they had made a bad deal. But they couldn't find an
easy way out of it,'' a State Department official has told The
Times.
What The Times report has done is to nail Islamabad to not only
the Al-Qaeda - direct or indirect - but also a firsthand link
between the Pakistani ISI and the terrorists operating in Jammu
and Kashmir. Pakistan has repeatedly denied that any such link
exists and has often tried to pass off the terrorist goings-on in
Jammu and Kashmir as a local phenomenon.
Equally telling is the fact that the proposal of a senior Clinton
administration official to step up efforts to isolate Afghanistan
from countries such as Pakistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates not only fell on deaf ears but some like
Islamabad managed to come up with stalling tactics which agencies
such as the Central Intelligence Agency ``fell for''.
That tactic has to do with the CIA equipping and financing a
special commando force in Pakistan to go after and capture Osama.
``But this was going nowhere. The ISI never intended to go after
Osama. We got completely snookered,'' the former official said.
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Section : International Previous : Pak. media won't buy 'Indian hand' theory Next : Taliban using civilians as human shields: Rumsfeld | |
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