Monday, July 8, 2013

Pakistan's Bin Laden dossier

Do you really believe that the Pakistani government had no indication that Osama Bin Laden had taken refuge there and remained undetected until he was killed by U.S. special forces in May of 2011?

You shouldn't given past revelations that Pakistan's Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) had worked with both the Taliban and Al Qaeda to bring Afghanistan into Pakistan's orbit of influence.

On Monday Al Jazeera published a report which was commissioned to investigate not only the raid on Bin Laden in Abbottabad but how he managed to elude detection.     




On the night of May 1, 2011, US special forces launched a raid deep into Pakistani territory to capture or kill al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden. On President Barack Obama’s orders, US soldiers flew via helicopter to the Pakistani army garrison town of Abbottabad, where their intelligence indicated he was hiding out. In the process of raiding the compound, Bin Laden and four others were killed. Several people were wounded. Pakistan’s military and political leaders were furious at the unilateral action by the United States, and set up a Commission to examine both “how the US was able to execute a hostile military mission which lasted around three hours deep inside Pakistan”, and how Pakistan’s “intelligence establishment apparently had no idea that an international fugitive of the renown or notoriety of [Osama bin Laden] was residing in [Abbottabad]”.



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