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Bush voices concern over ISI role
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Pakistan denies as CIA accuses agency of backing militants
By Sami Abraham
WASHINGTON: US President George W Bush expressed his concern and some annoyance with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani over the role of the ISI in Pakistan.
Defence Minister, Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar, who was also present at the meeting, told The News. He said President Bush expressed concern that certain elements in the ISI were leaking information to the terrorists before they could be hit by the US or Pakistani forces. This is a cause of concern for the US side, he added.
Talking exclusively to this correspondent, Ahmed Mukhtar said the meeting otherwise was held in good atmosphere, and the US administration looked committed to support the civilian set-up.
President Bush also asked who is controlling the ISI, the minister said, indicating that Bush was probably aware of the fiasco created by the failed attempt by the Ministry of Interior to take control of the ISI through a notification shortly before PM Gilani arrived in Washington.
Another source said President Bush agreed with the Pakistani point of view that all parties in the Afghan conflict, the Nato forces, Pakistan and Afghanistan should take equal responsibility of meeting the terrorist threats.
The US president agreed that specific tasks must be identified for each party to meet and then the performance of each party should be assessed. Accusations against each other should not be levelled publicly, the source quoted President Bush as saying.
AP/AFP add: Meanwhile, the CIA has confronted senior Pakistani officials with evidence showing that members of the countrys spy service have deepened their ties with some militant groups responsible for a surge of violence in Afghanistan, possibly including the suicide bombing this month of the Indian Embassy in Kabul, The New York Times reported.
A top CIA official travelled to Islamabad this month with new information about ties between Pakistans Inter-Services Intelligence agency and militants operating in Pakistans tribal areas, the newspaper said on its Web site late Tuesday. Its sources were American military and intelligence officials it did not identify.
On the other hand, Pakistans military rejected the malicious report that a top CIA official visiting this month confronted Islamabad over ties between the ISI and militants. We reject this report. This is unfounded, baseless and malicious, chief Pakistani military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said.
I would like to emphasise here that ISI is a premier intelligence agency which has caught or apprehended maximum al-Qaeda operatives including those who were linked with criminals and responsible for attacking the US mainland on September 11, 2001, Abbas said.
The Times said the CIA assessment pointed to links between the ISI and the militant network led by Jalaluddin Haqqani, which American officials believe maintains close ties to senior figures of al-Qaeda in Pakistans tribal areas. The CIA has depended heavily on the ISI for information about militants in Pakistan.
The visit to Pakistan by the CIA official, Stephen R Kappes, the agencys deputy director, was described by several American military and intelligence officials in interviews in recent days, the Times said. Some of those who were interviewed said they welcomed the decision by the CIA to take a harder line towards the ISIs dealings with militant groups.
Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani is in Washington meeting with Bush administration officials. In an interview broadcast Tuesday on PBS television show The News Hour With JimLehrer, Gilani said that to say that some in the ISI are sympathetic to the militants, this is not believable. ... We will not allow that.
CIA spokeswoman Marie Harf refused to comment on the Times report late Tuesday. The newspaper said it was unclear whether CIA officials have concluded that contacts between the ISI and militant groups are blessed at the highest levels of Pakistans spy service and military or are carried out by rogue elements of Pakistans security apparatus.
Kappes made his secret visit to Pakistan on July 12, joining Adm Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for meetings with senior Pakistani civilian and military leaders, the Times said.
Muhammad Saleh Zaafir from Washington adds: Interior Advisor to Prime Minister, Rehman Malik, has emphatically refuted the allegations levelled by The New York Times that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had connections with the terrorists.
Talking to the News Wednesday, Rehman said the Indian propaganda is an effort to malign Pakistans supreme agency, the ISI, which has played a commendable role in curbing terrorism in all its manifestations.
The interior advisor said the Pakistan government has informed the American authorities about Indias clandestine contact with the terrorists, including Baitullah Mehsud, and their hideouts in the tribal areas of Pakistan.
Rehman advised the Indian government to refrain from fanning terrorist activities in the areas of sensitive nature. He said India should not mislead the world and withdraw its support to the terrorists in the region.
Bush voices concern over ISI role
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Pakistan denies as CIA accuses agency of backing militants
By Sami Abraham
WASHINGTON: US President George W Bush expressed his concern and some annoyance with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani over the role of the ISI in Pakistan.
Defence Minister, Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar, who was also present at the meeting, told The News. He said President Bush expressed concern that certain elements in the ISI were leaking information to the terrorists before they could be hit by the US or Pakistani forces. This is a cause of concern for the US side, he added.
Talking exclusively to this correspondent, Ahmed Mukhtar said the meeting otherwise was held in good atmosphere, and the US administration looked committed to support the civilian set-up.
President Bush also asked who is controlling the ISI, the minister said, indicating that Bush was probably aware of the fiasco created by the failed attempt by the Ministry of Interior to take control of the ISI through a notification shortly before PM Gilani arrived in Washington.
Another source said President Bush agreed with the Pakistani point of view that all parties in the Afghan conflict, the Nato forces, Pakistan and Afghanistan should take equal responsibility of meeting the terrorist threats.
The US president agreed that specific tasks must be identified for each party to meet and then the performance of each party should be assessed. Accusations against each other should not be levelled publicly, the source quoted President Bush as saying.
AP/AFP add: Meanwhile, the CIA has confronted senior Pakistani officials with evidence showing that members of the countrys spy service have deepened their ties with some militant groups responsible for a surge of violence in Afghanistan, possibly including the suicide bombing this month of the Indian Embassy in Kabul, The New York Times reported.
A top CIA official travelled to Islamabad this month with new information about ties between Pakistans Inter-Services Intelligence agency and militants operating in Pakistans tribal areas, the newspaper said on its Web site late Tuesday. Its sources were American military and intelligence officials it did not identify.
On the other hand, Pakistans military rejected the malicious report that a top CIA official visiting this month confronted Islamabad over ties between the ISI and militants. We reject this report. This is unfounded, baseless and malicious, chief Pakistani military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said.
I would like to emphasise here that ISI is a premier intelligence agency which has caught or apprehended maximum al-Qaeda operatives including those who were linked with criminals and responsible for attacking the US mainland on September 11, 2001, Abbas said.
The Times said the CIA assessment pointed to links between the ISI and the militant network led by Jalaluddin Haqqani, which American officials believe maintains close ties to senior figures of al-Qaeda in Pakistans tribal areas. The CIA has depended heavily on the ISI for information about militants in Pakistan.
The visit to Pakistan by the CIA official, Stephen R Kappes, the agencys deputy director, was described by several American military and intelligence officials in interviews in recent days, the Times said. Some of those who were interviewed said they welcomed the decision by the CIA to take a harder line towards the ISIs dealings with militant groups.
Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani is in Washington meeting with Bush administration officials. In an interview broadcast Tuesday on PBS television show The News Hour With JimLehrer, Gilani said that to say that some in the ISI are sympathetic to the militants, this is not believable. ... We will not allow that.
CIA spokeswoman Marie Harf refused to comment on the Times report late Tuesday. The newspaper said it was unclear whether CIA officials have concluded that contacts between the ISI and militant groups are blessed at the highest levels of Pakistans spy service and military or are carried out by rogue elements of Pakistans security apparatus.
Kappes made his secret visit to Pakistan on July 12, joining Adm Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for meetings with senior Pakistani civilian and military leaders, the Times said.
Muhammad Saleh Zaafir from Washington adds: Interior Advisor to Prime Minister, Rehman Malik, has emphatically refuted the allegations levelled by The New York Times that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had connections with the terrorists.
Talking to the News Wednesday, Rehman said the Indian propaganda is an effort to malign Pakistans supreme agency, the ISI, which has played a commendable role in curbing terrorism in all its manifestations.
The interior advisor said the Pakistan government has informed the American authorities about Indias clandestine contact with the terrorists, including Baitullah Mehsud, and their hideouts in the tribal areas of Pakistan.
Rehman advised the Indian government to refrain from fanning terrorist activities in the areas of sensitive nature. He said India should not mislead the world and withdraw its support to the terrorists in the region.
Bush voices concern over ISI role