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Revealed: the British Pakistani general at the centre of new Bin Laden death conspiracy

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A UK-based former senior officer in the Pakistan Army has been accused of being a supergrass who sold the secret location of Osama bin Laden to the CIA.

Retired Brigadier Usman Khalid, a British citizen, has been named as the informant whose tip-off led to the assassination of the world’s most wanted man in 2011.

His family have told The Telegraph of their anger that their father - who died a year ago after living in London for 35 years - has been publicly identified as the source of the leak.

And they have denied that Brigadier Khalid was the man responsible.

Speculation about the identity of the unnamed informant has been rife following the publication of an article by Seymour Hersh, the Pulitzer Prize-winning US journalist, in the London Review of Books earlier this month.

The official version of events - immortalised in the film Zero Dark 30 starring Jessica Chastain - claimed that bin Laden had been tracked to his hideout after a female CIA agent identified his courier.

The White House and CIA have always maintained that their own intelligence agents pieced together the information that led to the Navy Seals raid.

Mr Hersh's version of events could scarcely be more different. Mr Hersh claimed that Bin Laden was being held prisoner by the Pakistani intelligence agency - the ISI - in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad.

He claimed that an unnamed senior officer in the Pakistani army had been the “walk-in” who provided details of the secret hideout in exchange for a substantial amount of a $25 million bounty.

According to Mr Hersh’s account, the supergrass was supposed to also have been rewarded with US citizenship and to be alive and well in America.

In a bizarre twist, the unnamed officer has now been identified in Pakistani media - citing military sources - as Brigadier Khalid.

However, his family believe he has been wrongly implicated because of his outspoken views on Pakistani politics.

The retired brigadier claimed political asylum in Britain after resigning from a 25 year career in the army in protest at the execution in 1979 of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the former prime minister and father of Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007.

Brigadier Khalid died last year of cancer at the age of 79.

Speaking exclusively to The Telegraph, his son, Abid Khalid said: “It simply doesn’t make sense. At the time that this was supposed to have happened, he was suffering from cancer and in and out of hospital.

“My father hadn’t visited the USA since 1976 and had lived in the UK since 1979 so there was no question of him of his family getting American citizenship. He had no contact with the CIA and knew nothing about Osama Bin Laden, other than what he read in the newspapers, just like everyone else.

“He was politically very vocal, so he was an easy target.”

The family also denied claims that their father had played a role in persuading a Pakistan doctor - Dr Shakhil Ahmed - to set up a fake polio vaccination drive as part of a CIA ploy to surreptitiously acquire DNA evidence of Bin Laden’s presence in Abbottabad.

“My father was an honourable and patriotic man,” said Abid Khalid. “He was also a caring, family man and would be horrified to be linked to the fake polio vaccination programme.

“He would have been devastated to have been linked to anything which would put the lives of innocent people, especially children at risk, especially in the country he loved.”

Critics have accused Mr Hersh - the investigative journalist who uncovered the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War and the Abu Ghraib Iraqi prison scandal - of allowing himself to be used to vent conspiracy theories. They have also queried the quality of his reporting, saying that has relied too much on one US intelligence source, whom they say appears to have known little about the inner workings of the operation to find Bin Laden,

The White House described his claims that Pakistan co-operated with the US to kill the former al-Qaeda leader as “inaccurate and baseless”.

However, since the publication of the article further allegations have emerged to support at least some of his assertions.

On Sunday it was reported that Germany’s foreign intelligence agency helped the CIA track down bin Laden.

The BND spy service - the German equivalent of MI6 - was said to have provided a tip-off that he was hiding in Pakistan, with the knowledge of Pakistani security services.

Mr Hersh declined to comment on the comments by Brigadier Khalid’s family. It is understood that he claims the source of the tip-off about Bin Laden’s whereabouts was not the same person identified by the Pakistani newspaper, The News.

In 2013, the London Review of Books published another widely-contested article by Mr Hersh, in which he cited anonymous intelligence sources blaming the Nusra Front jihadist group rather than the Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad for the August 2013 sarin gas attack in Ghouta, Damascus.

Revealed: the British Pakistani general at the centre of new Bin Laden death conspiracy - Telegraph
 
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Just more speculation and rubbish. A brigadier is not a general ....
A Brigadier is a one star General,check your facts.The story may have some element of truth ,A man who resigns from the army because that rat bhutto was sent to hell can be expected to sell his country out
 
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A Brigadier is a one star General,check your facts.The story may have some element of truth ,A man who resigns from the army because that rat bhutto was sent to hell can be expected to sell his country out

Dude, be realistic. The man lived in London for 35 years. How could he possibly know where Bin Ladin was? The only way it would be possible was if some one else in the Military or ISI told him
 
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This brigadier has been known to my family for over 30 years but I only had email communication with him. He was not the most straightforward person I knew.

Dude, be realistic. The man lived in London for 35 years. How could he possibly know where Bin Ladin was? The only way it would be possible was if some one else in the Military or ISI told him

I had heard he was former ISI ... He was active right up until his death and was in communication with many serving military and intelligence types but I never found him to be particularly reliable. Of course I only had email communication with him and that was concerning the publication of my book but I refused his offer knowing his background and the likely mess that would get me into.
 
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This brigadier has been known to my family for over 30 years but I only had email communication with him. He was not the most straightforward person I knew.



I had heard he was former ISI ...

I don't know the guy from Adam, obviously and he could very well be the guy. But the timeline makes it unlikely that it was him. I just don't see how a guy who was out of the service more than 3 decades ago could still have contacts who would confide in him. All his peers would have retired. Even his subordinates would be hitting the retirement age by now. That's what makes it kinda hard to believe that this is the guy.
 
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I don't know the guy from Adam, obviously and he could very well be the guy. But the timeline makes it unlikely that it was him. I just don't see how a guy who was out of the service more than 3 decades ago could still have contacts who would confide in him. All his peers would have retired. Even his subordinates would be hitting the retirement age by now. That's what makes it kinda hard to believe that this is the guy.

You are probably right that he was out of touch with the decision makers in Pakistan but he was also close to the controversial Gen. Hamid Gul and I have a feeling this is where the story is eventually going to lead ...
 
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usman_khalid_3310614b.jpg



A UK-based former senior officer in the Pakistan Army has been accused of being a supergrass who sold the secret location of Osama bin Laden to the CIA.

Retired Brigadier Usman Khalid, a British citizen, has been named as the informant whose tip-off led to the assassination of the world’s most wanted man in 2011.

His family have told The Telegraph of their anger that their father - who died a year ago after living in London for 35 years - has been publicly identified as the source of the leak.

And they have denied that Brigadier Khalid was the man responsible.

Speculation about the identity of the unnamed informant has been rife following the publication of an article by Seymour Hersh, the Pulitzer Prize-winning US journalist, in the London Review of Books earlier this month.

The official version of events - immortalised in the film Zero Dark 30 starring Jessica Chastain - claimed that bin Laden had been tracked to his hideout after a female CIA agent identified his courier.

The White House and CIA have always maintained that their own intelligence agents pieced together the information that led to the Navy Seals raid.

Mr Hersh's version of events could scarcely be more different. Mr Hersh claimed that Bin Laden was being held prisoner by the Pakistani intelligence agency - the ISI - in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad.

He claimed that an unnamed senior officer in the Pakistani army had been the “walk-in” who provided details of the secret hideout in exchange for a substantial amount of a $25 million bounty.

According to Mr Hersh’s account, the supergrass was supposed to also have been rewarded with US citizenship and to be alive and well in America.

In a bizarre twist, the unnamed officer has now been identified in Pakistani media - citing military sources - as Brigadier Khalid.

However, his family believe he has been wrongly implicated because of his outspoken views on Pakistani politics.

The retired brigadier claimed political asylum in Britain after resigning from a 25 year career in the army in protest at the execution in 1979 of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the former prime minister and father of Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007.

Brigadier Khalid died last year of cancer at the age of 79.

Speaking exclusively to The Telegraph, his son, Abid Khalid said: “It simply doesn’t make sense. At the time that this was supposed to have happened, he was suffering from cancer and in and out of hospital.

“My father hadn’t visited the USA since 1976 and had lived in the UK since 1979 so there was no question of him of his family getting American citizenship. He had no contact with the CIA and knew nothing about Osama Bin Laden, other than what he read in the newspapers, just like everyone else.

“He was politically very vocal, so he was an easy target.”

The family also denied claims that their father had played a role in persuading a Pakistan doctor - Dr Shakhil Ahmed - to set up a fake polio vaccination drive as part of a CIA ploy to surreptitiously acquire DNA evidence of Bin Laden’s presence in Abbottabad.

“My father was an honourable and patriotic man,” said Abid Khalid. “He was also a caring, family man and would be horrified to be linked to the fake polio vaccination programme.

“He would have been devastated to have been linked to anything which would put the lives of innocent people, especially children at risk, especially in the country he loved.”

Critics have accused Mr Hersh - the investigative journalist who uncovered the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War and the Abu Ghraib Iraqi prison scandal - of allowing himself to be used to vent conspiracy theories. They have also queried the quality of his reporting, saying that has relied too much on one US intelligence source, whom they say appears to have known little about the inner workings of the operation to find Bin Laden,

The White House described his claims that Pakistan co-operated with the US to kill the former al-Qaeda leader as “inaccurate and baseless”.

However, since the publication of the article further allegations have emerged to support at least some of his assertions.

On Sunday it was reported that Germany’s foreign intelligence agency helped the CIA track down bin Laden.

The BND spy service - the German equivalent of MI6 - was said to have provided a tip-off that he was hiding in Pakistan, with the knowledge of Pakistani security services.

Mr Hersh declined to comment on the comments by Brigadier Khalid’s family. It is understood that he claims the source of the tip-off about Bin Laden’s whereabouts was not the same person identified by the Pakistani newspaper, The News.

In 2013, the London Review of Books published another widely-contested article by Mr Hersh, in which he cited anonymous intelligence sources blaming the Nusra Front jihadist group rather than the Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad for the August 2013 sarin gas attack in Ghouta, Damascus.

Revealed: the British Pakistani general at the centre of new Bin Laden death conspiracy - Telegraph
His age makes one thing clear he was not even service during that time he had retired long ago so another thing which proves news totally fake.
 
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You are probably right that he was out of touch with the decision makers in Pakistan but he was also close to the controversial Gen. Hamid Gul and I have a feeling this is where the story is eventually going to lead ...

The fact that he resigned because of Bhutto's hanging shows he was most probably a leftist. Hamid Gul is a hated figure in the leftist world, so I doubt he'd associate with him.
 
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The fact that he resigned because of Bhutto's hanging shows he was most probably a leftist. Hamid Gul is a hated figure in the leftist world, so I doubt he'd associate with him.

The connection between the two probably arose as Hamid Gul headed the ISI under Benazir Bhutto.
 
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@SBD-3 as i recall you were the one who posted the news link a report by Amir Mir accusing this man of wrongful......this man died of cancer, please tell me how on earth was he in a position to make that deal.....it was this other person that i mentioned about, a Lt.Col
 
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