May 2nd, 2011
09:29 PM ET

Some Pakistani officials must have known Osama bin Laden's whereabouts

Editor's Note: This is the third of three posts from Fareed Zakaria on the 
death of Osama bin Laden. The other posts are Al Qaeda is dead and Bin Laden's 
death: Vindication of U.S. military and of counterterrorism strategy.  You can 
follow Fareed on Facebook and Twitter for timely analysis of global events.

Osama bin Laden was not killed in a remote cave in Waziristan.  He was living 
in a large compound near Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, in the city of 
Abbottabad, which houses a prestigious Pakistani military academy.

It is beyond belief that there could be a compound like bin Laden's in that 
location without some elements of the Pakistani military knowing about it.

The house was eight times the size of the surrounding houses. It was newly 
constructed. And according to a senior Obama administration official, even 
though the compound was valued at about $1 million, no telephone lines ran into 
it.

All of this should have attracted the attention of the Pakistani authorities in 
some way or another. The fact that it didn't makes it very difficult to believe 
that there was not some Pakistani knowledge of Osama bin Laden's whereabouts.

>From the beginning, the Afghan government argued that top al Qaeda leadership 
>was not in Afghanistan - was not even in Waziristan - but was instead in urban 
>Pakistani cities like Quetta. Afghan President Hamid Karzai told me that Osama 
>bin Laden would be found in a Pakistani city. He turned out to be right.

This raises two points. The first point is on the fundamental issue of whether 
the Pakistani military has truly decided to cooperate in the war against 
terrorism, al Qaeda and Islamic extremism or whether it is playing a selective 
game. I think this is just one more powerful piece of evidence that Pakistan is 
engaged in a fairly selective kind of cooperation with the United States.

The second point is more broadly that these terrorist networks really rely 
either on state support or the total absence of a state to thrive. Look at 
where al Qaeda has been able to remain active. In a world in which governments 
are pursuing it, where its funds are being tracked, where its people are on 
visa watch lists, al Qaeda is able to thrive in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen and 
that's about it.

Why? In Yemen and Somalia you have the absence of the state. The state does not 
control vast swathes of territory. Al Qaeda can set itself up as long as the 
local warlord or chieftain is willing to accommodate it.

In the Pakistani case, I am left with the conclusion that there was some level 
of state support for al Qaeda. It may not have been at the highest levels. It 
may have been just certain elements of the state. It's difficult to tell. But 
the idea that you could have the kind of compound necessary to house bin Laden 
in the middle of a Pakistani city near a concentration of Pakistani officers 
suggests that there was some state involvement in protecting bin Laden.

President George W. Bush focused a great deal on the state-sponsored element of 
terrorism. This focus got a bad name because President Bush ended up fingering 
the wrong state in Iraq. But the basic point that terrorist networks cannot 
achieve scale or enduring power without some involvement of a state is 
fundamentally true.

Without a state sponsor, terrorist networks have much less capacity to acquire 
weapons of mass destruction, to engage in multinational operations, to fund 
projects for years on end and, most importantly, to have some kind of a base.

That's why Osama bin Laden went to Afghanistan and paid the Taliban's bills for 
so long. He needed a physical base where the local government would be 
cooperative.

When the local government in Afghanistan became uncooperative, he moved to the 
place where he found a more receptive political environment. This ironically 
turned out to just miles from Islamabad.

I invite you to share your thoughts below and to follow me on Facebook and 
Twitter.




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