ISI denies it unmasked CIA chief

Islamabad, Dec 18: Pakistan’s top spy agency denied speculation on Saturday that it helped unmask the CIA’s station chief in Islamabad in retaliation for a New York City lawsuit linking Pakistan’s intelligence chief to the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai.
The CIA ordered its station chief out of Pakistan because his life was threatened after a Pakistani lawsuit revealed his name. His recall comes at a delicate time, as the White House presses Islamabad to rid its lawless tribal regions of safe havens for militants fighting in Afghanistan, where the U.S. is grappling with an exit strategy.
The station chief’s name was revealed by a Pakistani man threatening to sue the CIA over the deaths of his son and brother in a 2009 US missile strike. The attorney involved with the legal complaint said he learned the name from Pakistani journalists. Pakistan’s spy agencies have kept ties to a number of Pakistani journalists as a way to influence coverage.
Questions have arisen as to whether a civil lawsuit filed last month in Brooklyn in connection with the 2008 Mumbai attacks may have raised tensions with Pakistan and spurred it to retaliate. The lawsuit lists Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the head of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, as a defendant and accuses the ISI of nurturing terrorists involved in the Mumbai attacks, which left 166 people dead.
A Pakistani intelligence official dismissed any claims of ISI involvement in exposing the CIA official as “a slur.” He declined to offer any comment on the Brooklyn lawsuit and said it was entirely possible Pakistani journalists simply figured out the station chief’s identity on their own.
Such “unfounded stories can create differences between the two organizations,” the Pakistani intelligence official warned.
He also said the CIA has not directly accused the ISI of any wrongdoing in the matter. Like other intelligence officials, he requested anonymity because of the sensitive nature of his work and because he is not authorized to speak to media on the record.
The Associated Press learned about the station chief’s removal on Thursday but held the story until he was out of the region.
The CIA’s work is unusually difficult in Pakistan, an important but at times capricious counterterrorism ally.
The station chief in Islamabad operates as a virtual military commander in the US war against Al Qaeda and other militant groups hidden along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The chief runs the Predator drone program targeting terrorists and handles some of the CIA’s most urgent and sensitive tips.
The station chief also collaborates closely with Pakistani intelligence. The alliance has led to strikes on key militant leaders but has also been marred by spats between the two agencies. During the first term of President George W. Bush’s administration, Pakistan almost expelled a previous CIA station chief in a dispute about intelligence sharing. AP

Lastupdate on : Sat, 18 Dec 2010 21:30:00 Mecca time
Lastupdate on : Sat, 18 Dec 2010 18:30:00 GMT
Lastupdate on : Sun, 19 Dec 2010 00:00:00 IST


  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • TwitThis
  • Mixx
  • Technorati
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • Google
  • LinkedIn
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Print News
  • YahooMyWeb

Enter the Security code exactly as you see it in the image security code is CaSe SeNsItIvE(Cookies must be enabled)
  • MORE FROM NEWS

  • Kashmir

Families of torture death victims await justice

KASHMIR UNREST 2010

UMER MAQBOOL DAR

Srinagar, Dec 18: At a time, when report of website “Wikileaks” about torture of detainees in the Valley has created ripples across the globe, justice continues to elude the families who lost their kith More



  • Srinagar City

Finally, gutted TRC building to be reconstructed

Govt top brass visits site, work to commence soon

ARIF SHAFI WANI

Srinagar, Dec 18: After five years of inordinate delay, the state government has finally decided to start work on reconstruction of the gutted Tourist Reception Centre with an added utility of serving More




  • Jammu

Website on crime to be launched soon: DGP

Jammu, Dec 18: Director General of Police, Kuldeep Khoda disclosed that Jammu and Kashmir Police would soon launch a website with full details of crime related cases and progress made thereon vis-a-vis More



  • News in Brief

Boy hurt in blast

Srinagar: A boy was injured in a blast in Sogam area of North Kashmir’s Kupwara district, police said. Ten-year-old Owais, son of Bashir Ahmad Lone of Lone Mohalla, Sogam in the frontier district More



  • Business

Omar reviews works at DDB Kulgam

Announces further additional funds for district

GK NEWS NETWORK

Kulgam, Dec.18: Appreciating Kulgam District Administration for executing development works to the extent of 64 per cent of the available funds, the Chief Minister, Omar Abdullah hoped that the targets More



  • News

Congress Plenary session begins today

Right-Wing Radicalism To Be Focus

PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

New Delhi, Dec 18: Communalism, especially right-wing radicalism, is expected to be the focal point of the draft political resolution coming in the two-day Congress Plenary session beginning here tomorrow More



ADD
Designed Developed and Maintaned By Imobisoft Ltd /Algosol Software Solutions