Posted on 07/24/2004 10:22:28 AM PDT by Cronos
WASHINGTON: Pakistan's intelligence officials knew in advance about the 9/11 attacks, a well-known American analyst has said, based on a ''stunning document'' that he claims was given by a Pakistani source to the 9/11 Commission on the eve of the publication of its report.
The document, from a high-level, but anonymous Pakistani source, also claims that Osama bin Laden has been receiving periodic dialysis in a military hospital in Peshawar, says Arnaud de Borchgrave, editor-at-large of the news agency UPI.
''The imprints of every major act of international Islamist terrorism invariably passes through Pakistan, right from 9/11 - where virtually all the participants had trained, resided or met in, coordinated with, or received funding from or through Pakistan,'' Borchgrave cites the confidential document as saying.
But one does not have to go to Borchgrave's unnamed sources to find Pakistans involvement in terrorist activity leading to 9/11. The 9/11 commission report itself nails Pakistan in chapter after chapter, revealing that the Pakistani intelligence was in cahoots with the Taliban and al Qaeda, far more than Iran and Iraq ever were.
Among the inquiry commission's observations, quoted verbatim here
* ''Pak[istan's] intel[ligence service] is in bed with bin Laden and would warn him that the United States was getting ready for a bombing campaign'' quoting Richard Clarke
* ''Islamabad was behaving like a rogue state in two areas backing Taliban/bin Laden terror and provoking war with India'' - quoting NSC Bruce Riedel
* Pakistani intelligence officers reportedly introduced bin Laden to Taliban leaders in Kandahar -Commission's own observation.
* Pakistan's military intelligence service, known as the ISID (Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate), was the Taliban's primary patron - Commission's observation
* Pakistan helped nurture the Taliban. The Pakistani army and intelligence services, especially below the top ranks, have long been ambivalent about confronting Islamist extremists. Many in the government have sympathized with or provided support to the extremists - Commission's observation.
Hey thanks for the comments. That you were a researcher for him is interesting. Take care.
I consider it unlikely that the Pak army is treating Osama, because that would be dangerous for Musharef if he knows about it, and for the generals if he does not. They know we would take such a thing as a hostile act, and if caught with Osama, they would have to hand him over, and they don't want to do that and inflame their masses. So, they would not be likely to have Osama in a hospital getting dialysis. But, the report is credible, so it merits further investigation.
I could tell a few stories. He had some great contacts. He read about 6 languages, and he had magazine articles from all over the world cut out and filed in filing cabinets all over the place. That allowed him to be able to piece together seemingly disparate events.
Well Indian papers have been saying for years that the Pakis were proliferating to Iran&South Korea-most people took it with a pinch of salt till 4 months ago.
India knows the pyschology of these beasts-we've been stuck with them for nearly 60yrs-THe US Pak relationship is nothing but a one-night stand-which are renowned for the mutual pleasure it gives&also the high risk of STD transmission.
Another reason that Bush is treading lightly in the region. He, and his team, know that this problem will not be solved in a few months. Furthermore, they realize that the US armed forces might be called upon to liberate several more countries, including Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. To liberate all these countries simultaneously would require a huge standing army, which the US does not possess. Better to liberate these countries one at a time, turn them into allies, and husband resources for the next one.
Pakistan plays both ends against the middle, plus hopes to tilt the US against India. Huge Muslim population, same old, same old...large, restless, testosterone driven youth...lousy jobs, nothing to get up for but blaming America for everything from soup to nuts. Maybe what we need to invent is a device that destroys nuclear bombs in their bunkers. Maybe that 300,000 ton MOAB the pentagon mentioned last week? Or a magnetic pulsing device we could fire at missiles and not only destroy them, but evaporate or negate any nuclear elements.
.....a Hunka Hunka Burnin' Love.......
Look how he parses it.."in any military hospital .....how about a regular hospital.
And technically, Pakistani Kashmir is not a "part" of Pakistan. Or as you say, a private clinic, connected to AQKhan or someone.
Bump. Thanks. The original is far more damning than the TOI.
Another home run by Arno.
Hah! Neither are the New York Times, LA Times, or Washington Post, but I don't believe their every dotted i and crossed t, either. Most democratic countries have newspapers that follow political party lines and are always ranting about something or other with very little journalistic integrity. I lived in Europe a number of years, and believe me, the things these folks would write about the opposition party or another country (like the USA) would spin your head around. And just for the record, Indian papers write all kinds of sordid things about the Paki's--some true, some bald-faced lies. It helps them sell, as the Indians themselves eat this crap up.
The Saudi regime seems very, very brittle. AQ seems to believe so. The US must be ready, in this case to secure the oil fields and facilities if things go badly for the regime. Maybe Jordan, Egypt and the Gulf states could contribute some police and garrison troops if and when the house of Saud collapses.
Pakistan is another case entirely. AQ leadership is enjoying its last redout in their "frontier" region. It has a huge population that cannot really be "controlled" by anyone. Certainly the US does not want to get involved in occupying Pakistan, but AQ must be dealt with and they are hiding in country. The answer here might be to back Musharak for a while, as long as he co-operates in apprehending AQ leaders and operatives. How much co-operation is forthcoming right now is open for debate.
As for Mushie, I don't trust him, but what are the choices? He is walking a tightrope himself. I heard a while ago that his wife was in Washington house shopping. Evidently he has his escape route in place in case things go bad. Pakistan is a failed state. Iran, Syria, and Saudi are borderline. Afghanistan and Iraq were rogue states pre US intervention. When you step back and take a look at the whole picture, I'm not sure if the only thing that will work in the long run is massive nuclear surgery.
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