+  According to military sources, Musharraf has already given a
go-ahead to the Judge Advocate General Branch of the Pakistan Army to
initiate proceedings against two colonels, three majors and a captain,
detained for the past two years. The officers are Colonel Khalid
Mahmood Abbasi from the Corps of Signals, Lt Col Ghaffar Babar
Saffarzai, pilot of the Army Aviation Command, Major Adil Qadoos Khan
from the Kohat Signals Corps, Major Ataullah Khan Mahmood from the
Judge Advocate General Branch, Major Rohail Faraz, HQ 2-Corps
(Infantry) and Captain Dr Usman Zafar.+

Dak Bangla:
http://dakbangla.blogspot.com/2005/02/pakistan-musharraf-jihadi.html

18/02/2005

Musharraf-Jihadi Confrontation Within Army Reaching Boiling Point
Amir Mir

LAHORE, February 18: The growing influence of various militant groups
within the Pakistan Army, the Air Force, the Inter Services
Intelligence and the Police department has set alarm bells ringing for
the Pakistani military ruler General Pervez Musharraf as the ongoing
confrontation between Islamists and the reformists within these
institutions has apparently reached boiling point.

As things stand, it appears that the Pakistan Army is divided into two
groups â the Islamic fundamentalist generals and jawans and the
relatively liberal ones. The split has sharpened because of
Musharraf's attempts to give his Army a liberal outlook acceptable to
the US.

As many as 30 officers of the Pakistan Army and the Pakistan Air Force
(PAF) are facing the death penalty in several court martial
proceedings in the Kharian Army Cantonment, about 72 km from
Islamabad. They have been charged with involvement in two failed
assassination bids on General Musharraf in Rawalpindi on December 11
and December 25, 2003 respectively.

After the two attempts, speculation regarding the involvement of
military officers had been doing the rounds, which were later
confirmed by Musharraf in an interview to a private TV channel. Since
then, several officers of the Pakistan Army and the PAF had been
sentenced to death (between October-December 2004) for plotting a coup
against Musharraf and planning his assassination.

Military sources say these sentences were handed down in line with
Musharraf's new strategy to deal with 'internal rebellion' with an
iron hand. Political analysts say the court martial proceedings only
confirmed what had been conjecture till now: Islamic extremists and
their ideological partners in the garrison are acting in unison to
eradicate the key American ally in the US-led war against terror.

Musharraf had survived the second attempt when two suicide bombers
rammed bomb-laden cars into his motorcade two km from his Army
residence in Rawalpindi, killing 16 people and injuring 54 others on
December 25, 2003.

During investigations, it was found that a Pakistani national
considered to be a key contact for the top Al Qaeda leadership wove a
web of fundamentalists from the Pakistani jihadi groups, the Pakistan
Army, the PAF, the ISI and the police to execute the Rawalpindi
assassination attempts against Musharraf.

A few days later, security agencies arrested one Mohammad Naeem of the
Special Branch, Capital Police, Islamabad, for the attempts. Naeem had
received a call on his cell phone a few minutes before the suicide
attacks which made him a suspect. The call was tracked to the cell
phone of Mohammad Jameel, one of the two suicide car attackers and a
Jaish-e-Mohammad activist from Balakot in Azad Kashmir.

The other suicide bomber was identified as Hazir Sultan, a Harkat
al-Jehad al-Islami operative from Afghanistan's Panjshir valley. It is
now known that the two suicide car bombers who nearly missed the
presidential motorcade were getting live information on Musharraf's
movement through another police official of Rawalpindi's Civil Lines
police station.

Naeem was deployed at the Convention Center in Islamabad where
Musharraf had gone to preside over a function. The investigators
believe that Naeem contacted Jameel on his cell phone and gave him the
precise location of the presidential convoy.

Investigators believe that the assassination attempts could not have
been just the handiwork of some outsiders and could have involved
those in the General's close circles who have turned against him for
his U-turn on Pakistan's Afghan and Kashmir policies.

Interestingly, the two suicide bombers were linked to the ISI before
they went to fight in Afghanistan against the Northern Alliance.
Jameel was a resident of Torarh in Poonch district, Azad Kashmir. His
identity was established when detectives recovered his national
identity card. Post 9/11, Jameel and Sultan were captured by the
Northern Alliance and were among the several hundred Pakistani jihadis
released after negotiations with Islamabad. On their return, their
intelligence masters set them free and could have instigated them to
launch the suicide attack.

During his detention in Afghanistan, Jameel had claimed to be a
Captain in the Pakistan Army. However, Pakistani authorities dispute
his claim, saying he might have done so to escape torture from his
Northern Alliance captors. Despite government denials, an exclusive
report of the United Press International on February 26, 2004 quoted a
US defence intelligence source as saying: "The man who tried to kill
General Pervez Musharraf in December 2003 was a spy in Pakistan's
Inter Services Intelligence agency."

Subsequent interrogation of the people arrested later led to the
arrest of many more officers of the Pakistan Army and PAF. Soldier
Muhammad Islam Siddiqi was the first Army personnel to be sentenced to
death on October 20, 2004 for the twin suicide attacks on Musharraf.
Charges against him included abetting a mutiny within the armed
forces; undergoing terrorism training at a Jaish-e-Mohammad camp and
maintaining links with those who had been advancing a plot to
eliminate General Musharraf.

After court martial proceedings in January 2005, three PAF servicemen
were sentenced to terms ranging from two to nine years for their
alleged Jaish links. Maulana Masood Azhar founded the Jaish after his
release in the IC-814 hijacking.

Nauman Khattak, 18, and Saeed Alam, 19, were sentenced to two years in
prison while the third airman, Munir Ahmed, was awarded a nine-year
sentence. Their parents have gone on to report that several dozen PAF
personnel are currently being tried for their links with Jaish.

In an alarming development, however, Mushtaq Ahmed, a PAF officer and
a key suspect in the Rawalpindi attacks on General Musharraf, escaped
from custody after facing court martial proceedings in which he was
convicted.

Initially, Federal Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed had
described Mushtaq Ahmed as a Jaish activist. However, PAF spokesman
Air Commodore Sarfaraz Ahmed confirmed that Mushtaq was a junior PAF
official. "I am only confirming the details of this specific court
martial because the media has been speculating about Mushtaq Ahmed,"
he was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, investigators fear that some khaki insiders may have aided
Mushtaq's escape, explaining why the nationwide manhunt has been
unsuccessful so far.

In yet another related development, the military top brass has decided
to try in a military court the six high-ranking Army officers arrested
in March 2003 on charges of conspiring to stage a coup against General
Pervez Musharraf while working in tandem with some Pakistan-based Al
Qaeda operatives.

Military sources believe that the court martial proceedings against
six senior officers of the Army and the PAF were meant to give a clear
message to extremist elements within the armed forces that the days of
the jihadis are over and all those having sympathies with jihadi
groups would be booted out.

According to military sources, Musharraf has already given a go-ahead
to the Judge Advocate General Branch of the Pakistan Army to initiate
proceedings against two colonels, three majors and a captain, detained
for the past two years. The officers are Colonel Khalid Mahmood Abbasi
from the Corps of Signals, Lt Col Ghaffar Babar Saffarzai, pilot of
the Army Aviation Command, Major Adil Qadoos Khan from the Kohat
Signals Corps, Major Ataullah Khan Mahmood from the Judge Advocate
General Branch, Major Rohail Faraz, HQ 2-Corps (Infantry) and Captain
Dr Usman Zafar.

All of them were arrested under the Army Act of 1952 and were linked
to the March 15, 2003 capture of Al Qaeda's chief operational
commander Khalid Sheikh Mohammad from the Rawalpindi residence of
Ahmad Abdul Qadoos, a member of the Jamaat-e-Islami. Those
interrogating the Army officers had been trying to unearth a group of
extremists involved in a conspiracy to stage an Army coup against
Musharraf.

The interrogators were also striving to ascertain whether Colonel
Abbasi was connected to Major Adil Qadoos, whose Kohat Cantonment
residence was raided by agencies before his March 2003 arrest â in a
sequence of rapid events set off by the capture of Khalid Sheikh
Mohammad.

Military sources did not rule out the possibility of Colonel Abbasi
also being questioned in connection with the February 20, 2003 mid-air
crash of the Pakistan Air Force Fokker F-27, which killed PAF Chief
Air Marshal Mushaf Ali Mir and 16 others. The plane was on its way
from Chaklala Airbase in Rawalpindi to Kohat Airbase when it
mysteriously crashed east of Kohat.

Amid all these developments in the armed forces, General Musharraf
sounded overconfident on January 12 when he told a private TV channel
that he was absolutely sure that no one from within the armed forces
was resentful of him and he feared no negative fallout from within the
Army as a result of his policies. - Courtesy: Weekly Tehelka, February
18-26, 2005 issue.

LINK
http://satribune.com/archives/200502/P1_mir.htm

-- 
Dak Bangla is a Bangladesh based South Asian Intelligence Scan Magazine.
URL: http://www.dakbangla.blogspot.com


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