Pubdate: Tue, 09 Oct 2001
Source: Slate (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 Microsoft Corporation
Contact: http://slate.msn.com/code/fray/theFray.asp
Website: http://slate.msn.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/982
Author: Ken Silverstein
Note: Silverstein, a contributing editor of Harper's and Mother Jones, is 
the author of Private Warriors.

WHEN OSAMA MET THE TALIBAN

Who Introduced Them? Our Intelligence "Allies," Pakistan's Interservices 
Intelligence Agency.

As commandos and U.S. infantry enter Afghanistan and fan out in search of 
Osama Bin Laden and members of his al-Qaida group, they'll need timely and 
accurate intelligence to complete their mission.

Most agree that their best source will be agents of the Interservices 
Intelligence Agency, Pakistan's powerful spy organization.

Yet the ISI is such an utterly unreliable ally that on Sunday, just hours 
after U.S. and British planes launched their first attacks on Afghanistan, 
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf sacked the head of the agency, who he 
apparently suspected of being too close to militant Islamic groups.

Indeed, the reason the ISI is in a position to lead American troops to Bin 
Laden's tent is that it has longstanding ties to al-Qaida's leader.

It was the ISI that initially introduced Bin Laden to the Taliban, and at 
least until very recently the agency has remained close to both.

That's only the beginning of the ISI's awful resume.

The agency has also sponsored heroin smuggling and a variety of militant 
organizations that have committed acts of terror in the Indian state of 
Kashmir, which Pakistan claims.

More troubling from a practical standpoint, many ISI officers are deeply 
hostile to the West and make no secret of their friendship with Bin Laden. 
As one person familiar with the agency, and who asked to remain anonymous, 
says, "If the ISI is going to be our eyes and ears in Afghanistan, I 
suggest that we watch our back."

Established by the British in 1948, the ISI has a long and checkered 
history of dirty tricks, leading one Pakistani newspaper to call it "our 
secret godfathers." During the 1977-88 dictatorship of Gen. Zia ul-Haq, the 
agency played a key role in crushing internal dissent.

The ISI is widely believed to have played a role in Pakistan's efforts to 
procure foreign nuclear and missile technology from China and North Korea. 
Pakistan's success in that endeavor led Congress in 1990 to bar military 
and economic aid to Islamabad-sanctions that the United States dropped in 
late September in return for support from Musharraf, who took power in a 
coup two years ago.

The ISI worked with the CIA during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan to 
distribute weaponry to the anti-Soviet mujahideen fighters.

Since Pakistan's goal was to have an Islamic state on its northern border, 
it made sure that the most radical elements got most of the goods.

The ISI's favorite freedom fighter was Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the Islamic 
militant who in 1991 supported Saddam Hussein in the Gulf War and who as 
prime minister of Afghanistan in the early 1990s oversaw the destruction of 
Kabul. "Pakistan began employing Islamic extremism as a tool during the 
jihad," says Charles Santos, a former political adviser to the U.N. Special 
Mission to Afghanistan. "They've been refining it as an approach ever 
since, but they lost a handle on it. You can't refine extremism."

When Tony Blair presented his case against Bin Laden to Parliament last 
week, he accused al-Qaida's leader of drug trafficking in collaboration 
with the Taliban. What he didn't mention was that the ISI has also been a 
partner in the trade, another practice that dates to the anti-Soviet jihad. 
In his book Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil & Fundamentalism in Central Asia, 
Ahmed Rashid says that in one instance, the agency's entire staff in the 
border town of Quetta was fired because it had turned to heroin trafficking 
to finance the war and enrich themselves.

The ISI's involvement in the drug trade has apparently decreased in recent 
years, but elements within the agency still have dirty hands.

The same goes for members of the armed forces.

In 1997, a Pakistani air force officer was arrested in New York after he 
tried to sell $2 million worth of heroin to an undercover DEA agent.

He smuggled the heroin into the country on a Pakistani military plane that 
had come to the United States to fetch spare parts for F-16 fighters.

In recent years, the ISI has devoted much of its time-and a $1 billion 
budget-to backing the Taliban. It played a key role in the group's rise to 
power, culminating in its capture of Kabul in 1996, and since then has 
supported the Taliban's war against the Northern Alliance, the group 
Washington hopes to use as front-line troops in Afghanistan. According to a 
July 2001 report from Human Rights Watch, the ISI has been "bankrolling 
Taliban military operations S arranging training for its fighters, planning 
and directing offensives, providing and facilitating shipments of 
ammunition and fuel, and on several occasions apparently directly providing 
combat support."

Through its ties to the Taliban, the ISI developed deep links to Osama Bin 
Laden, who first came to Afghanistan to fight the Soviets and funded some 
of the agency's training camps for mujahideen fighters.

According to Rashid, the ISI introduced Bin Laden to Taliban leaders in 
1996-the same year that the Taliban took power and that Bin Laden issued 
his first jihad against the United States. By his account, Pakistan's goal 
was to convince the Taliban to let Bin Laden run training camps for 
ISI-backed Kashmiri militants.

The Taliban agreed.

In return, Bin Laden built a home for its leader, Mullah Omar, and funded 
some of its other top officials.

The ISI's other chief preoccupation has been Kashmir, which both India and 
Pakistan claim.

Kashmir is Hindu India's only majority Muslim state, and New Delhi's heavy 
hand has sparked legitimate grievances. However, most Kashmiris seem to 
oppose Pakistani control as well, instead favoring an independent state.

For the past decade, Pakistan has fought a proxy war in Kashmir, using 
rebels-mostly locals but with a healthy contingent of Arab radicals-trained 
in Afghanistan to attack military and civilian targets.

Though Islamabad maintains that it offers only moral and diplomatic support 
to the Kashmiri radicals, few take such claims seriously. "Pakistan's 
military government, headed by Gen. Pervez Musharraf, continued previous 
Pakistani Government support of the Kashmir insurgency, and Kashmiri 
militant groups continued to operate in Pakistan, raising funds and 
recruiting new cadre," says the State Department's Patterns of Global 
Terrorism report released last April.

Other observers are more forthright in describing Pakistan's relationship 
to the militants. "The ISI is the source of support for some of the 
groups," says Patricia Gossman, a human rights consultant who has traveled 
widely in Kashmir. "It's an ISI operation." And in early October, former 
CIA counterterrorism chief Vincent Cannistraro told a House committee that 
ISI personnel are directly training separatist fighters at camps in 
Afghanistan that are used to provide Islamabad "plausible deniability" 
about its role in Kashmir.

On Oct. 1, terrorists believed to be backed by the ISI carried out a 
suicide attack at the state legislature in Kashmir that killed 38 people. 
Four days later, the State Department named a militant group called the 
Harakat ul-Mujahidin as one of 28 "Foreign Terrorist Organizations," along 
with groups such as al-Qaida, the Abu Nidal Organization, Algeria's Armed 
Islamic Group, and Hezbollah. The State Department says the HUM is "active 
in Pakistan without discouragement by the Government" and charges that its 
secretary-general, Fazlur Rehman Khalil, signed one of Bin Laden's fatwas 
that "call[ed] for attacks on U.S. and Western interest." In 1998, weeks 
after Bin Laden's operatives bombed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, 
the United States fired 70 cruise missiles at terrorist training camps in 
Afghanistan run by Bin Laden and his allies.

One of the primary targets was a facility run for the HUM (then known as 
the Harakat ul-Ansar) in the province of Khost.

Beyond its own nasty history, many in the ISI loathe the United States. 
They view America as an unreliable and duplicitous ally, being especially 
resentful of the 1990 sanctions, which came one year after the Soviets 
pulled out of Afghanistan. Furthermore, the ISI is dominated by Pashtuns, 
the same tribe that is the Taliban's base of support across the border in 
Afghanistan. Partly because of its family, clan, and business ties to the 
Taliban, the ISI, even more than Pakistani society in general, has become 
increasingly enamored of radical Islam in recent years.

The ISI has occasionally assisted the United States-for example, it turned 
over to American authorities Ramzi Yousef, who fled to Pakistan after he 
planned the 1993 World Trade Center bombing-but it has repeatedly refused 
to cooperate in apprehending Bin Laden. In an interview in 1999, Bin Laden 
obliquely expressed gratitude to his ISI friends, saying, "There are some 
governmental departments, which, by the Grace of God, respond to the 
Islamic sentiments of the masses in Pakistan. This is reflected in sympathy 
and cooperation. However, some governmental departments fell into the trap 
of the infidels. We pray to God to return them to the right path."

In an interview in Islamabad a few weeks ago, Hamid Gul, a former head of 
the ISI and ardent Taliban supporter, suggested that his old agency won't 
be offering much help to the United States in the days ahead. "If you can't 
even find the terrorists in your own country, what makes you think you can 
find Osama in Afghanistan?" he gloated. "Your soldiers are going to come 
out of Afghanistan bloodied and empty-handed."
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