-Caveat Lector-

Another good linque
http://www.idsa-india.org/an-feb00-2.html

>From http://fas.org/irp/world/pakistan/isi/

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Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence [ISI]

The Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence [ISI] was founded in
1948 by a British army officer, Maj Gen R Cawthome, then Deputy Chief
of Staff in Pakistan Army. Field Marshal Ayub Khan, the president of
Pakistan in the 1950s, expanded the role of ISI in safeguarding
Pakistan's interests, monitoring opposition politicians, and
sustaining military rule in Pakistan.

The ISI is tasked with collection of of foreing and domestic
intelligence; co-ordination of intelligence functions of the three
military services; surveillance over its cadre, foreigners, the
media, politically active segments of Pakistani society, diplomats of
other countries accredited to Pakistan and Pakistani diplomats
serving outside the country; the interception and monitoring of
communications; and the conduct of covert offensive operations.

The ISI has become a state within a state, answerable neither to the
leadership of the army, nor to the President or the Prime Minister.
The result is there has been no real supervision of the ISI, and
corruption, narcotics, and big money have all come into play, further
complicating the political scenario. Drug money is used by ISI to
finance not only the Afghanistan war, but also the proxy war against
India in Punjab and Kashmir.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee deals with all problems bearing
on the military aspects of state security and is charged with
integrating and coordinating the three services. Affiliated with the
committee are the offices of the engineer in chief, the director
general of medical service, the Director of Inter-Services Public
Relations, and the Director of Inter- Services Intelligence.  Staffed
by hundreds of civilian and military officers, and thousands of other
workers, the agency's headquarters is located in Islamabad. The ISI
reportedly has a total of about 10,000 officers and staff members, a
number which does not include informants and assets. It is reportedly
organized into between six and eight divisions:

Joint Intelligence X (JIX) serves as the secretariat which co-
ordinates and provides administrative support to the other ISI wings
and field organisations. It also prepares intelligence estimates and
threat assessments.
The Joint Intelligence Bureau (JIB), responsible for political
intelligence, was the most powerful component of the organisation
during the late 1980s. The JIB consists of three subsections, with
one subsection devoted to operations against India.
The Joint Counter Intelligence Bureau (JCIB) is responsible for field
surveillance of Pakistani diplomats stationed abroad, as well as for
conducting intelligence operations in the Middle East, South Asia,
China, Afghanistan and the Muslim republics of the former Soviet
Union.
Joint Intelligence / North (JIN) is responsible for Jammu and Kashmir
operations, including infiltration, exfilteration, propaganda and
other clandestine operations.
Joint Intelligence Miscellaneous (JIM) conducts espionage in foreign countries, 
including offensive intelligence operations.
The Joint Signal Intelligence Bureau (JSIB), which includes Deputy Directors for 
Wireless, Monitoring and Photos, operates a chain of signals intelligence collection 
stations along the border with India, and provide commu
nication support to militants operating in Kashmir.
Joint Intelligence Technical

In addition to these main elements, ISI also includes a separate explosives section 
and a chemical warfare section. Published reports provide contradictory indications as 
to the relative size of these organizational eleme
nts, suggesting that either JIX is the largest, or that the Joint Intelligence Bureau 
is the lrgest with some sixty percent of the total staff. The Bank of Credit and 
Commerce International (BCCI) is the ISI's main intern
ational financial vehicle.  The Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence is of 
particular importance at the joint services level. The directorate's importance 
derives from the fact that the agency is charged with manag
ing covert operations outside of Pakistan -- whether in Afghanistan, Kashmir, or 
farther afield. The ISI supplies weapons, training, advice and planning assistance to 
terrorists in Punjab and Kashmir, as well as the separ
atist movements in the Northeast frontier areas of India.

The 1965 war in Kashmir provoked a major crisis in intelligence. When the war started 
there was a complete collapse of the operations of all the intellience agencies, which 
had been largely devoted to domestic investigati
ve work such as tapping telephone conversations and chasing political suspects. The 
ISI after the commencement of the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war was apparently unable to 
locate an Indian armoured division due to its preoccupa
tion with political affairs. Ayub Khan set up a committee headed by General Yahya Khan 
to examine the working of the agencies.

The ISI has been deeply involved in domestic politics and, has kept track of the 
incumbent regime's opponents. Prior to the imposition of Martial Law in 1958, ISI 
reported to the Commander-in-Chief of the Army (C-in-C). W
hen martial Law was promulgated in 1958 all the intelligence agencies fell under the 
direct control of the President and Chief Martial Law Administrator, and the three 
intelligence agencies began competing to demonstrate
their loyalty to Ayub Khan and his government. The ISI and the MI became extremely 
active during the l964 presidential election keeping politicians, particularly the 
East Pakistanis, under surveillance.

The ISI became even more deeply involved in domestic politics under General Yahya 
Khan, notably in East Pakistan, where operations were mounted to ensure that no 
political party should get an overall majority in the gener
al election. An amount of Rs 29 lac was expended for this purpose, and attempts were 
made to infiltrate the inner circles of the Awami League. The operation was a complete 
disaster.

Mr. Bhutto promoted General Zia-Ul-Haq in part because the Director of ISI, General 
Gulam Jilani Khan, was actively promoting him. General Zia, in return, retained 
General Jilani as head of ISI after his scheduled retirem
ent. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto established the Federal Security Force and gave it 
wide-ranging powers to counter the influence of ISI, but the force was abolished when 
the military regime of Zia ul-Haq seized power in 1977. Whe
n the regime was unpopular with the military and the president (as was Benazir 
Bhutto's first government), the agency helped topple it by working with opposition 
political parties.

The ISI became much more effective under the leadership of Hameed Gul. The 1990 
elections are widely believed to be rigged. The Islami Jamhoori Ittehad [IJI] party 
was a conglomerate formed of nine mainly rightist parties
 by the ISI under Lt General Hameed Gul to ensure the defeat of Bhutto's Pakistan 
People's Party (PPP) in the polls. Gul denies this, claiming that the ISI's political 
cell created by Z.A. Bhutto only 'monitored' the elec
tions.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan made Pakistan a country of paramount geostrategic 
importance. In a matter of days, the United States declared Pakistan a "frontline 
state" against Soviet aggression and offered to reopen
 aid and military assistance deliveries. For the remainder of Zia's tenure, the United 
States generally ignored Pakistan's developing nuclear program. Pakistan's top 
national security agency, the Army's Directorate for In
ter- Services Intelligence, monitored the activities of and provided advice and 
support to the mujahidin, and commandos from the Army's Special Services Group helped 
guide the operations inside Afghanistan. The ISI traine
d about 83,000 Afghan Mujahideen between 1983 to 1997 and dispatched them to 
Afghanistan. Pakistan paid a price for its activities. Afghan and Soviet forces 
conducted raids against mujahidin bases inside Pakistan, and a c
ampaign of terror bombings and sabotage in Pakistan's cities, guided by Afghan 
intelligence agents, caused hundreds of casualties. In 1987 some 90 percent of the 777 
terrorist incidents recorded worldwide took place in Pa
kistan.

The ISI continued to actively participate in Afghan Civil War, supporting the Talibaan 
in their fight against the Rabbani government.

ISI has been engaged in covertly supporting the Kashmiri Mujahideen in their fight 
against the Indian authorities in Kashmir. Reportedly "Operation Tupac" was the 
designation of the three part action plan for the liberati
on of Kashmir, initiated by President Zia Ul Haq in 1988 after the failure of 
"Operation Gibraltar." The designation is derived from Tupac Amru, the 18th century 
prince who led the war of liberation in Uruguay against the
 Spanish rule.

According to a report compiled by the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) of India in 
1995, ISI spent about Rs 2.4 crore per month to sponsor its activities in Jammu and 
Kashmir. Although all groups reportedly received arm
s and training from Pakistan, the pro-Pakistani groups were reputed to be favored by 
the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence. As of May 1996, at least six major 
militant organizations, and several smaller ones, ope
rated in Kashmir. Their forces were variously estimated at between 5,000 and 10,000 
armed men. They were roughly divided between those who support independence and those 
who support accession to Pakistan. The oldest and m
ost widely known militant organization, the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), 
spearheaded the movement for an independent Kashmir. Its student wing is the Jammu and 
Kashmir Students Liberation Front (JKSLF). A la
rge number of other militant organizations have emerged since 1989, some of which also 
support independence, others of which support Kashmir's accession to Pakistan. The 
most powerful of the pro-Pakistani groups is the He
zb-ul-Mujahedin. The other major groups are Harakat-ul Ansar, a group which reportedly 
has a large number of non-Kashmiris in it, Al Umar, Al Barq, Muslim Janbaz Force and 
Lashkar-e Toiba, which is also made up largely of
 fighters from Afghanistan and Pakistan. According to press reports, several hundred 
fighters from Afghanistan and other Muslim countries have also joined some of the 
militant groups or have formed their own. The Harakat
ul-Ansar group, a powerful militant organization which first emerged in 1993, is said 
to be made up largely of non-Kashmiris.

ISI has been reported to operate training camps near the border of Bangladesh where 
members of separatist groups of the northeastern states, known as the "United 
Liberation Front Of Seven Sisters" [ULFOSS] are trained wit
h military equipment and terrorist activities. These groups include the National 
Security Council of Nagaland [NSCN], People's Liberation Army [PLA], United Liberation 
Front of Assam [ULFA], and North East Students Organi
zation [NESO].

ISI was said to have intensified its activities in the southern Indian States of 
Hyderabad, Bangalore, Cochin, Kojhikode, Bhatkal, and Gulbarga. In Andhra Pradesh the 
Ittehadul Musalmeen and the Hijbul Mujahideen are clai
med to be involved in subversive activities promoted by ISI. And Koyalapattinam, a 
village in Tamil Nadu, was said to be the common center of operations of ISI and the 
Liberation Tigers.

In October 2001, Lieutenant General Ahsanul Haq was named the new Director General of 
the ISI.

Sources and Methods

The ISI Role in Pakistan's Politics - Dr. Bindanda M. Chengappa Strategic Analysis 
February 2000 Vol. XXIII No. 11 (pp.1857-1878)
Pakistan's ISI Trying To Revive Militancy in Punjab Bangalore Deccan Herald, 28 July 
1999
Daily Describes Activities of ISI in India by Wilson John, The Pioneer (Delhi), 30 
June 1999
ISI and its Chicanery in Exporting Terrorism by Maj Gen YASHWANT DEVA AVSM (Retd): The 
Indian Defence Review, � 1997 by Lancer Publishers & Distributors.
Role of the Military in Politics in Pakistan by Armughan Javaid
The Aristocrat and the General by Indranil Banerjie SAPRA INDIA MONTHLY Bulletin 
Jun-Oct 1996
The Game Of Foxes: J-K Intelligence War by Manoj Joshi Times Of India, July 16, 1994
Pan-Islamic Fundementalism Exporting Terror, India Today, May 15, 1994
Pan-Islamic forces funding militancy by Ritu Sarin The Indian Express September 28, 
1996
"This Secret Agency's Name is Infamous" by Sunil Sharma New Delhi JANSATTA 27 Nov 94 
page 1 -- ISI Said Behind Widespread Terror, Violence -- Infamous Past, Active Present 
: JPRS-NEA-94-059 : 27 November 1994
"How Intelligence Agencies Run Our Politics" by Altaf Gauhar The Nation 17 Aug 97 p 4 
[Pakistan: Writer Exposes ISI's Role in Politics : FBIS-NES-97-230 : 18 Aug 1997]
"In This Way, The Net of ISI is Spread" by Priyaranjan Bharati New Delhi JANSATTA 27 
Nov 94 page 1 [ISI Said Behind Widespread Terror, Violence -- Power, Influence 
Increasing: JPRS-NEA-94-059: 27 November 1994]
"How to retaliate against this proxy-war" by Kranti Kumar Sharma Delhi Jansatta 30 Jan 
97 p 4 [Article Views Pakistani `Spy' Activities: FBIS-NES-97-021 : 30 Jan 1997]





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