Six weeks before the killing of Osama Bin Laden, on 16 March
2011, a CIA’s private contractor Raymond Davis, who had previously worked for
Erik Prince’s infamous Blackwater security firm, was released from a prison in
Lahore and was secretly flown to the US.
On 27 January 2011, Raymond Davis had killed two armed men
on a busy street in Lahore, who, according to the inside
sources [1] of Pakistan’s intelligence, were its “assets.” Minutes after
the shooting, an SUV rushing to Davis’ aid from the American consulate in
Lahore had crushed another bystander to death.
Recently, Raymond Davis has published his memoirs titled:
“The Contractor: How I landed in a Pakistani prison and ignited a diplomatic
crisis,” in which he has narrated all the gory details of the shooting, his
time in prison and the subsequent release under a settlement with victims’
families, but has painstakingly avoided any mention to his role as the CIA’s
acting station
chief [2] in Islamabad or to his job of tracking Osama Bin Laden’s
couriers.
In his last year’s May
5 report [3], Greg Miller of the Washington Post posited that Mark Kelton,
the CIA station chief in Islamabad at the time of Bin Laden’s killing in
Abbottabad, was poisoned by Pakistan’s military intelligence due to Kelton’s
role in the assassination of Bin Laden.
It should be remembered here that Mark Kelton succeeded
Jonathan Bank in January 2011, after the latter’s name was made public by
Pakistan’s military intelligence due to Bank’s “suspicious activities,” and
Raymond Davis worked as CIA’s acting station chief during the interim period.
On the fateful day of 27 January 2011, when Raymond Davis
was doing his usual job of tracking Bin Laden’s whereabouts, Pakistan’s
intelligence sent two hired muggers to harass him in order to make him desist
from his unwanted activities; and in a fit of rage, Raymond Davis, who had been
chased and harassed several times before by Pakistan’s intelligence operatives,
shot both “muggers” dead.
In his April
2013 article [4] for the New York Times, Mark Mazzetti writes: “By the time
Raymond Davis moved into a safe house with a handful of other C.I.A. officers
and contractors in late 2010, the bulk of the agency’s officers in Lahore were
focused on investigating the growth of Lashkar-e-Taiba.
“To get more of its spies into Pakistan, the C.I.A. had
exploited the arcane rules in place for approving visas for Americans. The
State Department, the C.I.A. and the Pentagon all had separate channels to
request visas for their personnel, and all of them led to the desk of Husain
Haqqani, Pakistan’s pro-American ambassador in Washington.
“Haqqani had orders from Islamabad to be lenient in
approving the visas, because many of the Americans coming to Pakistan were — at
least officially — going to be administering millions of dollars in foreign-aid
money. By the time of the Lahore killings, in early 2011, so many Americans
were operating inside Pakistan under both legitimate and false identities that
even the U.S. Embassy didn’t have accurate records of their identities and
whereabouts.”
Although Mark Mazzetti has scrupulously avoided mentioning
the role played by Raymond Davis and his team in locating the couriers of Bin
Laden in his article and he has even tried to distract attention to Lashkar-e-Taiba,
but the timing of the surge of CIA operatives in Pakistan, “late 2010 and early
2011,” is telling here, because those were exactly the months when the CIA was
tracking Bin Laden’s whereabouts.
More to the point, in his March
10 article [5] for the Washington Post, Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s
ambassador to the US at the time of Osama Bin Laden’s execution in May 2011,
has confessed to the role played by the Zardari Administration in facilitating
the killing of Bin Laden.
Husain Haqqani identified then-president Asif Ali Zardari as
his “civilian leader” and revealed in the article: “In November 2011, I was
forced to resign as ambassador after Pakistan’s military-intelligence apparatus
gained the upper hand in the country’s perennial power struggle. Among the
security establishment’s grievances against me was the charge that I had
facilitated the presence of large numbers of CIA operatives who helped track
down bin Laden without the knowledge of Pakistan’s army, even though I had
acted under the authorization of Pakistan’s elected civilian leaders.”
This confessional statement by Ambassador Haqqani lends
further credence to Seymour Hersh’s account of the execution of Bin Laden in
his book and article titled: The
Killing of Osama Bin Laden [6], which was published in the London Review of
Books in May 2015.
According to Hersh, the initial tentative plan of the Obama
Administration regarding the disclosure of the execution of Bin Laden to the
press was that he had been killed in a drone strike in the Hindu Kush Mountains
on the Afghan side of the border. But the operation didn’t go as planned
because a Black Hawk helicopter crashed in Bin Laden’s Abbottabad compound and
the whole town now knew that an operation is underway and several social media
users based in Abbottabad live-tweeted the whole incident on Twitter.
Therefore, the initial plan was abandoned and the Obama
Administration had to go public within hours of the operation with a hurriedly
cooked up story. This fact explains so many contradictions and discrepancies in
the official account of the story, the biggest being that the United States
Navy Seals conducted a raid deep inside Pakistan’s territory on a garrison town
without the permission of Pakistani authorities.
Moreover, according to a May 2015 AFP
report [7], Pakistan’s military sources had confirmed that there was a
Pakistani defector who had met several times with Jonathan Bank, the CIA’s
then-station chief in Islamabad, as a consequence of which, Pakistan’s
intelligence disclosed Bank’s name to local newspapers and he had to leave
Pakistan in a hurry in December 2010 because his cover was blown.
Seymour Hersh has posited in his investigative report on the
Bin Laden operation in Abbottabad that the Saudi royal family had asked
Pakistan as a favor to keep Bin Laden under protective custody, because he was
a scion of a powerful Saudi-Yemeni Bin Laden Group and it was simply
inconceivable for the Saudis to hand him over to the US.
But once the Pakistani walk-in colonel, as stated in the
aforementioned AFP report, had told then-CIA station chief in Islamabad, Jonathan
Bank, that a high-value al-Qaeda leader had been hiding in a safe house in
Abbottabad under the protective custody of Pakistan’s military intelligence,
and after that, when the CIA obtained further proof in the form of Bin Laden’s
DNA through the fake vaccination program carried out by Dr. Shakil Afridi, then
it was no longer possible for Pakistan’s military authorities to deny the
whereabouts of Bin Laden.
In his book, Seymour Hersh has already postulated various
theories that why it was not possible for Pakistan’s military authorities to
simply hand Bin Laden over to the US, one being that the Americans wanted to
catch Bin Laden themselves in order to gain maximum political mileage for
Obama’s presidential campaign slated for next year.
Here, let me only add that in May 2011, Pakistan had a
US-friendly Zardari Administration in power. And as Ambassador Haqqani pointed out
in his Washington Post article that then-army chief, Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, and
the former head of military intelligence, Shuja Pasha, had been complicit in
harboring Bin Laden, thus it cannot be ruled out that Pakistan’s military
authorities might still have had strong objections to the US Navy Seals
conducting a raid deep inside Pakistan’s territory on a garrison town.
But Pakistan’s civilian administration under then-president
Asif Ali Zardari had persuaded the military authorities to order the Pakistan
Air Force and air defense systems to stand down during the operation.
Ambassador Haqqani’s role in this saga ruffled the feathers of Pakistan’s
military’s top brass to an extent that Husain Haqqani was later implicated in a
criminal case regarding his memo to Admiral Mike Mullen and eventually
Ambassador Haqqani had to resign in November 2011, just six months after the
Operation Neptune Spear.
Finally, although Seymour Hersh claimed in his account of
the story that Pakistan’s military authorities were also on-board months before
the operation, let me clarify, however, that according to the inside sources of
Pakistan’s military, only Pakistan’s civilian administration under the
pro-American Zardari Administration was on-board, and military authorities, who
were instrumental in harboring Bin Laden and his family for five years, were
intimated only at the eleventh hour in order to preempt the likelihood of Bin Laden’s
escape from the custody of his facilitators in Pakistan’s military
intelligence.
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