Now that
the American journalist Richard
Miniter claims in his book that the US government briefed Pakistan Army Chief General
Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani on Operation Geronimo almost six months before the
operation, here plugging the FORCE comment written within days of Osama bin
Laden’s killing. Even as the best analysts went to town gleefully castigating
Pakistan Army’s incompetence, FORCE insisted that Geronimo couldn’t have been planned
without its connivance. Pakistan Army gave up OBL because it no longer had any
use for him.
Osama
Bin Laden and Beyond
With
Afghanistan in his pocket, Kayani agreed to bin Laden’s dramatic killing
By Pravin Sawhney and Ghazala Wahab
To look forward beyond Osama bin Laden, it
is essential that the present be known. This is the hard part, as both the
United States and Pakistan, equally complicit in the bin Laden killing plot, are
hiding more than revealing. While stakes for both are high, the Pakistanis hold
better cards in the aftermath of bin Laden exit. For the US, it was important to
kill bin Laden in as spectacular fashion as he did the 9/11. This would boost
US’ chances of getting its boys home from Afghanistan earlier than expected. However,
the condition was that the Pakistan Army could not be trampled upon. This is
the reason for the song and dance by US President Barack Obama and his key
advisors absolving its dubious partner of insincerity.
In his opening announcement on bin
Laden killing, Obama did not forget to mention Pakistan’s cooperation in
counter-terrorism. His chief counter-terrorism advisor, John Brennan, while standing
before cameras within 48 hours of bin Laden killing, refused to accuse Pakistan
of anything; much out of context, he noted that Pakistan, since 9/11 had
captured and killed more terrorists than any country. Once the domestic heat built
upon the Pakistan Army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani and his ISI buddy, Lt.
General Shuja Pasha for complicity or incompetence, the US National Security
Advisor, Tom Donilon decided to forego his Sunday holiday on May 8 and appeared
on five of six US talk shows. He hammered the single point that the US had no
information to suggest that Pakistani security establishment knew of bin Laden’s
whereabouts in their midst.
Regarding incompetence, the US has
put out stories of their radar-evading helicopters and brilliant
human-intelligence that led to bin Laden. This theory has been seconded by
former Pakistan Army chief, General Pervez Musharraf, who disclosed that
Pakistani air defence systems on the Afghanistan front are weak if not non-existent.
Contrary to the Abraham Lincoln wisdom that you cannot fool all people all the time,
the US and Pakistan seems to have pulled the feat, at least for now. However, FORCE,
which has followed the story, has a different view of what happened. With minor
variations on details, we believe that the Pakistan Army (ISI is a part of it,
and not an independent entity) has sold a stone for a precious diamond; Osama bin
Laden had not only outlived his usefulness, but was an impediment in the
follow-on plot of reconciliation with the Taliban in Afghanistan. He had to be
dispensed with.
While it may be true that the US got
a vague lead on bin Laden six months ago through a Guantanamo detainee, it
could not have zeroed-in on to bi Laden’s house in Abbottabad without Kayani’s
complicity. The story about CIA hiring a neighbourhood house to watch bin Laden’s
activities is simply incredible. It would also be wrong to suggest that Kayani
succumbed to the US pressure to confirm bin Laden’s abode; had he wanted he
could have moved bin Laden and his entourage to another place. Osama bin Laden
was moved to the military cantonment under Kayani’s (then, ISI chief) watch six
years ago, to be used as a triumph card subsequently against the US. Another
reason was to maintain a watch and hold on the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, the
leader of the Quetta Shura, who had sacrificed Afghanistan for bin Laden’s
friendship. During the protracted banishment, once friends, bin Laden and
Mullah Omar drifted apart ideologically. Osama bin Laden propagated global
Jihad while Mullah Omar was fighting to regain Afghanistan from the US (reports
emerging after bin Laden’s killing clearly suggest that the two had not
communicated since years).
Washington, with overstretched
military capabilities amidst a recession, and with NATO allies threatening to
quit the war, wanted an honourable exit from Afghanistan. The way out for the US
was to have a reconciliation government (Hamid Karzai and Taliban) in
Afghanistan, an invisible US military presence to keep the Taliban and
Pakistani misadventures in check, and to be part of a regional assistance
effort for Afghanistan. While Pakistan has an essential role in the formation
of the reconciliation Afghanistan government, the CIA with proven predator
capability and in cooperation (whatever possible) with the ISI would maintain
US intelligence footprint in Pakistan. It is not a coincidence that the US
overall forces commander, General David Petraeus will be the new CIA chief.
Four recent events settled the
Afghanistan chessboard with the US, Pakistan, Taliban and Karzai as key
players. The first was the unprecedented April 16 meeting in Kabul in which
Kayani and Shuja Pasha took Premier Yusuf Raza Gilani to meet President Karzai.
Until now the two sides were talking separately with the US; it was time to
settle Afghanistan, politically and from security perspective, face-to-face.
Once the future of Afghanistan was agreed in which both Karzai and Mullah Omar
would have prominent roles, it was time to free senior Taliban leaders from
captivity. Within days, news came of the Kandahar jail break-out where 450 Talibans
helped themselves to freedom. This was assurance for Mullah Omar that he was
onboard. These developments pleased Kayani so much that the usually reticent Pakistan
Army chief could not suppress his glee during his April 23 visit to Kakul
Military Academy; stone throw from bin Laden’s house. His remarks that Pakistan
had broken the back of terrorism sounded out of context on that day. The final
event was curtains for bin Laden. To make it dramatic, the US insisted that bin
Laden had to die in his present house; he could not be shifted elsewhere. With so
much in his pocket, Kayani agreed. He could not be unaware of the risks he was
taking; his own and his army’s reputation was at stake. After all, he would
have delivered Afghanistan to Pakistan.
It will be a while before frayed
nerves in the US and Pakistan calm down. The US Congress needs to know why an
unreliable ally should be rewarded, just as Pakistanis are asking hard
questions about the holy cow, its army. The coming months will see a lot. The
formation of the Afghanistan reconciliation government, the announcement of a quick
US drawdown of troops from the war zone, financial and military assistance for
Pakistan, and release of US armed drones for the Pakistan Army to name a few.
Where does this leave India which has invested over USD1.3 billion in
development in Afghanistan and had hoped that the US military presence would
remain in the war torn country long enough for a regional effort to emerge. The
latter will still happen, but having been fence-sitters, India will be sidelined
by Pakistan, China and Iran for the regional role in Afghanistan.
Key words: Osama bin Laden, Barack Obama,
Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Afghanistan, Shuja Pasha, ISI, Global Jihad, Abbottabad,
US-Pakistan relations
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