http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9438/pub_detail.asp

 

May 5, 2011


Double-Dealing Allies Start to Show Their True Mentality


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.119/author_detail.asp>
Amir Taheri

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110505_PakistanArmyTruck.jpg

 

An army truck patrols in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

 

Does anyone swallow the Pakistani government's claim that Osama bin Laden
lived in that Abbottabad villa for at least six years without anyone getting
wind?

 

As it happens, I know Abbottabad rather well, having visited it on several
occasions since 1971. 

 

Situated in the lower recesses of the Pakistani uplands, the small town was
used for centuries to keep a watch on the Khyber Pass. The British, who
liked to recruit soldiers from the nearby Pathan and Punjab regions, built a
garrison town there -- and then a military school to train Pathan and
Punjabi non-commissioned officers, the backbone of the colonial army. (A
fictionalized version of the town appears in Rudyard Kipling's "Kim.") 

 

With independence, the school became a full-fledged military college, the
Pakistani West Point. In 1962, the dictator Muhammad Ayub Khan simply
confiscated all land in and around Abbottabad on behalf of the army. Part of
the land was distributed among senior army officers, who built sumptuous
villas to benefit from the area's superb climate and magical environment. 

 

Today, anybody who's somebody in the Pakistani high command owns a villa
there -- including Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, head of the Pakistani armed forces.
Like former President Pervez Musharraf, Kayani graduated from the town's
military academy, just 200 yards from bin Laden's villa. 

 

Far from living in a cave, bin Laden chose to live in the nicest place in
Pakistan. There, he had the added advantage of being protected by his
friends in the Pakistani military intelligence, the Inter-Services
Intelligence directorate, while being just an hour's drive from the capital
Islamabad. Bin Laden and the ISI go back a long away -- to 1982, in fact. 

 

A Baluch who isn't familiar with Pushtun and Punjabi languages, President
Assaf Ali Zardari might not have known about bin Laden's presence in
Abbottabad. But it is hard to believe that the army didn't know. In
Abbottabad, a town cordoned off by army checkpoints, almost everyone is a
soldier or related to a soldier. 

 

President Obama might pretend that the Pakistanis didn't know that bin Laden
had been a "guest" in the heart of their army for six years. In private,
however, Obama would do well to tell the Pakistanis to let the FBI have a
look at the ISI's address book -- which would tell Washington where other al
Qaeda and Taliban bad guys are. 

 

To start with, we have Ayman al-Zawahiri, bin Laden's No. 2. I wouldn't be
surprised if he, too, had been living close to the Pakistani West Point. 

 

Then we have Mullah Muhammad Omar, the Taliban's commander-of-the-faithful.
He is unlikely to be in Abbottabad. But what about Quetta, the capital of
the Wild West province of Baluchistan? Over the last 10 years, Omar has
presided over several sessions of the Taliban's secret leadership, generally
known as the Quetta Council. 

 

 

http://morganinterviews.zoomshare.com/files/Sirajuddin.jpg

 

Serajuddin Haqqani.

 

The Haqqani brothers, Jalaleddin and Serajeddin, head another network at
odds with the Kabul government -- and they have worked with the ISI since
1980. The siblings own several businesses and properties in Abu Dhabi but
are assumed to be living in Pakistan, probably in or around Peshawar. 

 

All in all, a dozen "hard cases" keep the big pot of Afghanistan, and the
smaller pot of al Qaeda, on the boil with a mixture of terrorism and
propaganda. Without at least tacit support from the ISI, none of them would
last a week. 

 

But why is Pakistan behaving in this way? Well, that's another story.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/index.php> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing Editor Amir Taheri writes for the  <http://www.nypost.com/> NY
Post and the
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704431404575067193404330842.h
tml?mod=googlenews_wsj> Wall Street Journal. His latest book is
<http://www.amazon.com/Persian-Night-under-Khomeinist-Revolution/dp/15940324
08> The Persian Night: Iran Under the Khomeinist Revolution.

 



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