Abbottabad residents startled by events
ISI is THAT good?They say they had no idea that the fortress-like compound in a quiet neighborhood housed Osama bin Laden, the most wanted man in the world.
ISI is THAT good?They say they had no idea that the fortress-like compound in a quiet neighborhood housed Osama bin Laden, the most wanted man in the world.
Airavat wrote: Posted on The News 3 Hours ago:
ABBOTTABAD: Three loud blasts were heard near the Pakistan Military Academy (PMA) Kakul Road late Sunday night and a military helicopter also crashed. Sources told Geo News that heavy firing was heard in the area before the chopper crashed.
Windowpanes of the nearby buildings and houses were smashed due to the intensity of the blasts, the sources said. Eyewitnesses said first sound of heavy firing was heard and then there was a huge blast. Fire erupted at the scene of the occurrence and according to latest reports police and fire brigade teams were rushing towards the blast scene. Security forces cordoned off the entire area and military helicopters were also hovering over the area.
Powell commited the the orginal sin while working for president Bush . He has many "old friends" in that region, inc Mushy . This naturally makes him cautious to mention their names because sooner or latter his own name will pop up in assoication with these "goodfellas". I think he is the man responsible for Kunduz air lift as he did not want NA to capture Kabul.RajeshA wrote:Just heard Colin Powell in the Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer on CNN!
Colin Powell too seemed uneasy about putting any blame on Pakistanis, saying "we don't know as yet!"
The ticker line on the Times now is thatramana wrote:To me the odd thing is the total silence from Pindi and I'Bad.
And that was before the bin Laden killing raised alarm bells on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers are unlikely to want to fork over up to $3 billion a year in aid to a suspect partner.
“Before we send another dime, we need to know whether Pakistan truly stands with us in the fight against terrorism,” said Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), a member of the appropriations subcommittee that oversees foreign operations. “Until Congress and the American public are assured that the Pakistani government is not shielding terrorists, financial aid to Pakistan should be suspended.”
Cutting off diplomatic ties is another matter, though.
A State Department official who spoke on background with HuffPost said that while “the easy temptation is to suggest this drives an enormous wedge into the relationship,” both sides are taking caution not to jeopardize counterterrorism and intelligence-sharing efforts that are still bearing fruit.
“The idea that [bin Laden’s killing] means it’s more or less over, we can go home now -- that’s a reaction I have not heard” in the diplomatic headquarters in Foggy Bottom, the official said.
Still, much will hinge on what happens in neighboring Afghanistan as U.S. troop levels begin to draw down, and whether Afghan President Hamid Karzai can reconcile with the Taliban on both sides of the porous border. “It’s a little too early to tell,” what the long-term prognosis for the relationship is, the official said.
Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said “things will be awkward” for some time. “It will remain one of the most fraught and difficult bilateral relationship that exists in the world today,” he said.
Prem wrote:Powell commited the the orginal sin while working for president Bush . He has many "old friends" in that region, inc Mushy . This naturally makes him cautious to mention their names because sooner or latter his own name will pop up in assoication with these "goodfellas". I think he is the man responsible for Kunduz air lift as he did not want NA to capture Kabul.RajeshA wrote:Just heard Colin Powell in the Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer on CNN!
Colin Powell too seemed uneasy about putting any blame on Pakistanis, saying "we don't know as yet!"
"At same time Pakistan has been responsible for capturing and killing more terrorists in pakistan than any other country," he said.
The killing of Osama bin Laden deep inside Pakistan in an American operation, almost in plain sight in a medium-sized city that hosts numerous Pakistani forces, seems certain to further inflame tensions between the United States and Pakistan and raise significant questions about whether elements of the Pakistani spy agency knew the whereabouts of the leader of Al Qaeda.
The presence of Bin Laden in Pakistan, something Pakistani officials have long dismissed, goes to the heart of the lack of trust Washington has felt over the last 10 years with its contentious ally, the Pakistani military and its powerful spy partner, the Inter-Services Intelligence agency.
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“The fundamental challenge is: How does the West treat Pakistan from now on?” said Amrullah Saleh, the former intelligence director for Afghanistan and a fierce foe of Pakistan.
Still, it was too soon to say whether Bin Laden’s presence in Abbottabad reflected Pakistani complicity or incompetence.
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At the very least, Bin Laden’s death in Pakistan now will be highly embarrassing to the country’s military and intelligence establishment.
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General Kayani appears to be less enthusiastic about the alliance with the United States because he is under pressure from his senior generals, according to Pakistani officials who keep in touch with the military. About half of the 11 corps commanders, the generals who make up the senior command, have questioned the wisdom of the alliance, according to the officials. Some of the younger mid-ranking officers — majors and captains — seem to have more sympathy for the militants than enthusiasm for the idea of fighting them, they said.
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Another major irritant has been the failure of the Pakistani military to heed the calls of the United States to quash the Qaeda-linked militants known as the Haqqani network, which is given a free hand by the Pakistanis in North Waziristan.
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Bin Laden was an irritant, too, now removed. American officials have speculated over the last few years whether some Pakistani officials in the spy agency knew the whereabouts of Bin Laden. When asked, many Pakistani ISI officials nearly always gave the same answer: Bin Laden was dead. Or they insisted that they did not know where he was.
From what I am hearing this house is actually in the general Cantonment area, though outside the physical military academy.John wrote:Lets recap it looks like he was literally holed up literally in a fortress.
The compound in Abbottabad was 4 km's from a military base with radar installations, which indicates some sort of sat/ground observation done by US forces for a year to get around it.
There were multiple military checkpoints in the city .
The compound itself had 2 walls, barbed wire,5 armored suvs etc.
The house was purchased 10 years ago (so was it planned out as part of Sept 11?) and he likely moved there after Tora Bora.
Karza now looks like a genius since he was saying his intel reported that he was in Islamabad.
Despite the experience of the post-9/11 age, Washington continues to view Al Qaeda as the most serious threat to the US. Similarly, Britain's MI5 speaks of as many as 30 'active plots' in the UK, most of which have links back to Al Qaeda in Pakistan. In the process, the real devil -- Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence -- is studiedly ignored
In all this, there is a studied neglect of the realities of the ground, particularly of the fact that Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) -- as an organ of the country's military and political establishment -- has been, and remains, the principal source of the impetus, the infrastructure and the organisational networks of Islamist terrorism across the world. Historically, it is now common knowledge, it was the ISI that created virtually the entire structure of Islamist terrorist groupings behind the global jihad, which has now proliferated in new areas through the agency of various proxies. This includes Al Qaeda, and the entire spectrum of affiliates that continues to operate, with varying degrees of freedom, from Pakistani soil more than six-and-a-half years after 9/11.
The reality is, there is no such thing as Islamist terrorism. To understand the position correctly, we need to recognise that there is only ISI terror that has been dubbed as 'Islamist terror'. What we have, on the ground, is the proliferation of Pakistani terrorism, strategically compounded across new areas of disorder by networks loosely affiliated with their Pakistani sources. If Pakistani state support to so-called Islamist terrorism ended today, it would not be long before the various terrorist groups atrophied and withered away, lacking safe havens, institutional support and training infrastructure, and the vast ideological resources that have been brought to bear on the so-called global jihad. This does not, of course, mean that no Islamist terrorist incident whatsoever would then be possible.
They know it since they were part of the team during inceptionKarna_A wrote:
The Taliban, Al Keeda are just front and back ends of ISI. Slowly this realization is dawning on West.
This explain the Biryani etc for terroists and not grass for them. He most probably practice " islamist terrorist devo bhava". From now on people like him be titled PDF=Pathetic Demented(dhimmi) Fools of Indian Secular School.putnanja wrote:Eye on UP polls, Digvijay slams Osama's sea burial
[According to an agency report, Singh said, "However big a criminal one might be, his religious traditions should be respected while burying him."..
Is it the popular sentiment among Indians, or only among UPites, or only among muslims? If they implied "among muslims", is TOI/Digvijay saying that most of Indian muslims support Osama, even though many muslim leaders have welcomed his killing?
How can you declare a friendly country that just helped kill the greatest evil a terrorist state?Acharya wrote:The ticker line on the Times now is thatramana wrote:To me the odd thing is the total silence from Pindi and I'Bad.
Pakistan is on the verge of being declared a terrorist state.
PakiPost: http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDe ... t=5/2/2011ramana wrote:Airavat wrote: Posted on The News 3 Hours ago:
ABBOTTABAD: Three loud blasts were heard near the Pakistan Military Academy (PMA) Kakul Road late Sunday night and a military helicopter also crashed. Sources told Geo News that heavy firing was heard in the area before the chopper crashed.
Windowpanes of the nearby buildings and houses were smashed due to the intensity of the blasts, the sources said. Eyewitnesses said first sound of heavy firing was heard and then there was a huge blast. Fire erupted at the scene of the occurrence and according to latest reports police and fire brigade teams were rushing towards the blast scene. Security forces cordoned off the entire area and military helicopters were also hovering over the area.
Airavat, Is there a link for this? So we can time stamp it.
can you please provide a brief summary?prithvi wrote:Wolf Blitzer has just screwed Paki Ambassador to US Haqqani... ..in CNN
prithvi wrote:Wolf Blitzer has just screwed Paki Ambassador to US Haqqani... ..in CNN
This confusion has to be exploited further by the Indian channels. Zaid H was saying the same thing and they had not prepared for this extraordinary global focus and scrutiny to this. They are numb and time is right to hit them harderramana wrote:All of last night Wolf Blitzer was spouting the line that TSP helped in the raid while all other channels were telling the truth!
Absolutely shamelessAnujan wrote:Paki Ambassador to US Haqqani says that ISI/Army was not supporting and sheltering Osama, but Pakistan society was. He used the word "Pakistan society"
That should read:UBanerjee wrote:
That is the compound map. Somebody can recreate it and get the dimension on the map and also get an idea what is the resolution of the Sat fotoNRao wrote:The printout, containing a picture, in front of Mrs. Clinton has been doctored - for good reason i would imagine.
Thanks.Nandu wrote:NRao, the note accompanying the photo release said it was a classified document that was masked out.
While I try to find the archived video of the interview... here is another Great Pakistani Laughter Show..putnanja wrote:can you please provide a brief summary?prithvi wrote:Wolf Blitzer has just screwed Paki Ambassador to US Haqqani... ..in CNN
SwamyG wrote:Who in US MSM will connect 9/11 and TSP ? That will be the day to celebrate.
They must be seriously praying Allah that the whole world forgets OBL immediately and forever.ramana wrote:To me the odd thing is the total silence from Pindi and I'Bad.
I suspect an immediate stage managed... Terrorist Attack in Pakistan..to draw some sympathy...to show they are also victim ...etc. etc... I am almost 100% sure of this..RamaY wrote:They must be seriously praying Allah that the whole world forgets OBL immediately and forever.ramana wrote:To me the odd thing is the total silence from Pindi and I'Bad.
Whoever trying to undermine Paki involvement in this operation are looking after Paki interests. IMHO, Pakis are neck deep in this operation and are the main culprits in selling out OBL for their fortunes. They did the same before to Taliban and they will do the same to any other internal/external player that trust them.
What if (like some post/er said) ISI moved OBL to that compound very recently? Probably his family is held there all these days. OBL has many wives and Unkil didn't go after rest of the family before....NRao wrote:Another winner:
Abbottabad residents startled by events
ISI is THAT good?They say they had no idea that the fortress-like compound in a quiet neighborhood housed Osama bin Laden, the most wanted man in the world.
This pic looks as if they are watching the raid LIVE
Apparently the Navy Seals had taken a boat load of material (computer, DVDs etc) from OBL hideout. It will probably reveal the minutest detail of Bin Laden network, his contacts, his past/future plans, his investments, investors, well wishers, beneficiaries etc. Quite possibly they would have also taken the tapes from the entry control camera if it existed.Ramana wrote:To me the odd thing is the total silence from Pindi and I'Bad.