Another smack on ISI: CIA was in Abbotsabad for months

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MPA (400+ posts)
CIA watched Osama from nearby safe house

Updated at: 1108 PST, Friday, May 06, 2011
ABBOTTABAD/NEW YORK: Extensive surveillance of Osama bin Laden's hideout from a nearby CIA safe house in Abbottabad led to his killing in a Navy SEALs operation, US officials said, a revelation likely to further embarrass Pakistan's spy agency and strain ties.

The US officials, quoted by the Washington Post on Friday, said the safe house was the base for an intelligence-gathering operation that began after bin Laden's compound was discovered last August, and which was so exhaustive that the CIA asked Congress to reallocate tens of millions of dollars to fund it.

"The CIA's job was to find and fix," the Post quoted one US official as saying. "The intelligence work was as complete as it was going to be, and it was the military's turn to finish the target."

US officials told the New York Times that intelligence gathered from computer files and documents seized at his compound showed that bin Laden had for years directly orchestrated al Qaeda attacks from the Pakistani town.

The fact that bin Laden was found in a garrison town -- his compound was a stone's throw away from a major military academy -- has embarrassed Pakistan and the covert raid by US commandos that led to his killing has angered its military.

On Thursday, the Pakistan army threatened to halt counter-terrorism cooperation with the United States, if it conducted another, similar unilateral strike.

A major Islamist party in Pakistan, Jamaat-e-Islami, called for mass protests on Friday against what it called a violation of sovereignty by the US raid. It also urged the government to end support for US battles against militants.

A senior Pakistani security official also charged that US troops had killed the unarmed al Qaeda leader in "cold blood".

The criticism from Pakistan is likely to fray a relationship that Washington deems vital to defeating the al Qaeda movement that bin Laden led and winning its war in neighboring Afghanistan.

A US acknowledgment that bin Laden was unarmed when shot in the head -- as well as the sea burial of his body, a rare practice in Islam -- have also drawn criticism in the Arab world and Europe, where some have warned of a backlash.

Few Americans appear to have any qualms about how bin Laden was killed, and on Thursday, scores of people cheered President Barack Obama during a visit to New York's Ground Zero, site of the twin towers al Qaeda leveled on September 11, 2001, to comfort a city still scarred by attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people.

Obama said the killing of bin Laden "sent a message around the world, but also sent a message here back home, that when we say we will never forget, we mean what we say.

FRAYED TIES

Friction between Washington and Pakistan has focused on the role of Pakistan's top security service, the ISI or Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate.

Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir denied Pakistani forces or the ISI aided al Qaeda. "The critique of the ISI is not only unwarranted, it cannot be validated," he said.

Lobbyists for Pakistan in Washington have launched an intense campaign on Capitol Hill to counter accusations that Islamabad deliberately gave refuge to bin Laden.

But many Americans are questioning how the al Qaeda leader could live for years in a Pakistani town teeming with military personnel, 50 km (31 miles) from the capital, Islamabad. Two US lawmakers have also complained about the billions in US civilian and military aid to impoverished Pakistan.

Seeking to repair ties, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Rome on Thursday that Washington was still anxious to maintain its alliance with Islamabad.

The Pakistani army and spy agency have supplied intelligence to the United States, arrested al Qaeda figures and taken on militants in areas bordering Afghanistan.

"It is not always an easy relationship," Clinton said. "But, on the other hand, it is a productive one for both our countries and we are going to continue to cooperate between our governments, our militaries, our law-enforcement agencies."

But Pakistan's army, facing rare criticism at home over the US operation, warned the United States it would risk this cooperation if it conducted another assault.

Chief of Staff General Ashfaq Kayani "made it clear that any similar action violating the sovereignty of Pakistan will warrant a review on the level of military/intelligence cooperation with the United States", the army said.

It was unclear if such attacks included drone strikes which the US military regularly conducts against militants along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. Pakistan has denied harbouring any members of al Qaeda.

The army also said it would conduct an investigation into failures by its intelligence to detect the world's most wanted man in its own backyard.

CIA SURVEILLANCE

The CIA had spent several months monitoring bin Laden's hideout, watching and photographing residents and visitors from a rented house nearby, according to US officials quoted in the New York Times and Washington Post.

Observing from behind mirrored glass, CIA officers used cameras with telephoto lenses and infrared imaging equipment to study the compound, and they used sensitive eavesdropping equipment to try to pick up voices from inside the house and to intercept cellphone calls, the New York Times said. A satellite used radar to search for possible escape tunnels.

The US administration has refused to be drawn on details on the raid, but, in a further sign of fractious relations between the allies, senior Pakistani security officials told Reuters that US accounts had been misleading.

In Washington, people familiar with the latest US government reporting on the raid said on Thursday that only one of four principal targets shot to death by US commandos was involved in any hostile fire.

As the elite Navy SEALs moved in on a guest house inside bin Laden's compound, they were met with fire and shot a man in the guest house. He proved to be Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, an al Qaeda courier US intelligence agencies had long been tracking.

The commandos then entered the main residence, where they killed another courier and a son of bin Laden, the sources said. They finally shot and killed the al Qaeda leader in a top-floor room after having earlier fired at him as he poked his head out of a door or over a balcony.

US officials originally spoke of a 40-minute firefight. The White House has blamed the "fog of war" for the changing accounts.

Obama visited New York to say he had made good on a 10-year-old promise by his predecessor, George W. Bush, who declared at the smoldering wreckage of the World Trade Center three days after the September 11 attacks, "The people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."

"We have been waiting for this for 10 years. It puts a little more American pride in people," said Al Fiammetta, 57, a safety engineer who said he had cleared debris at Ground Zero.

Obama signaled in an interview with the CBS television program "60 Minutes" that bin Laden's death confirmed his commitment to begin drawing down troops in Afghanistan in July. "We don't need to have a perpetual footprint of the size that we have now," he said in a published excerpt. (Reuters)



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crankthskunk

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Comedy of errors continues, now it is been claimed that CIA was renting the house in Abbotabad and monitoring OBL for months with state of the art Equipment. ISI was sleeping?

I doubt it. These news confirming that it is a joint operation. Pakistan is taking blame and destroying it image for the sake of US to claim the plaudits. The time line, disclosure that there was no movie of the operation inside the house. Makes the picture of meeting in the White House another set up to claim hands on approach by the President and his team.

No picture, no video, no body, excellent set up.You should believe it, because we say so. Sums it up. This is going to be even bigger a conspiracy than the 9/11, it is a Guarantee.

I am getting convince day by day, Pakistan knew everything, it is all staged drama.

Osama bin Laden monitored for months before raid

News that US intelligence conducted extensive surveillance of Bin Laden's compound has embarrassed Pakistan military



Revelations that American spies monitored Osama bin Laden from a safehouse for months before last Sunday's special forces raid have caused further consternation inside Pakistan, where the military is already fighting angry criticism.

CIA agents sequestered in a rented house conducted extensive surveillance on Bin Laden's hideout using an arsenal of high-tech surveillance equipment including telephoto lenses, eavesdropping equipment and radars to detect possible escape tunnels, US media reported on Friday .

It was the CIA's most sensitive operation in a decade, so intense that the spy agency had to seek tens of millions of dollars in emergency funding last autumn.

The news came as a further embarrassment to Pakistan's beleaguered military, which is being criticised for failing to locate Bin Laden in Abbottabad, a garrison town that is home to Pakistan's top military academy.

Now it seems that Inter-Services Intelligence also failed to detect a CIA team that, like Bin Laden, was operating under its nose. "It increases their discomfort and makes them look even more incompetent," said Najam Sethi, a prominent analyst.

OnFriday night Newsweek, citing official sources, said the ISI chief, General Shuja Pasha was about to resign in the wake of the furore.

The CIA set up its Abbottabad safehouse sometime after August after identifying the compound where bin Laden's courier, a man identified by the US as Sheikh Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, was living. A US team rented near the hideout with a mission to "find and fix" Bin Laden, according to the Washington Post.

The spies took pains to avoid detection by their Pakistani counterparts – raising further questions for Pakistan about how easily the CIA can operate in their country. "They have the run of the place, which is why the ISI is so upset," said Sethi.

Revelation of the operation casts new light on American handling of the furore surrounding Raymond Davis, an American spy who shot two Pakistanis in Lahore last January. It is now clear that while the CIA was battling with its largest public controversy in Pakistan for years, it was also engaged in its most sensitive covert operation.

Michael Scheuer, a former head of the Bin Laden team at the CIA, said: "We are very good at what we do. Abbottabad is a challenge but it's not like Moscow or Prague where we ran observation posts for years and years. It's part of our MO [modus operandi]."

Scheuer said that since 2001 the CIA has made a concerted effort to recruit Pakistani-Americans, or Americans whose physical features help them resemble locals from Middle Eastern and South Asian countries, enabling them to blend in.

The agency has also recruited ethnic Pashtuns to work in the borderlands tracking al-Qaida and Taliban suspects and acquiring targets for the controversial drone strikes, according to a former CIA officer who has worked in Pakistan.

Some of the Pashtuns are directly employed by the CIA, he said, while others are "cut-outs" – spies hired through a third party who are ignorant of the identity of their paymaster.

But it is unlikely non-Americans were involved in the Abbottabad operation, Scheuer said. "I doubt they were local nationals. This is something we clearly want to do ourselves," he said.

But despite the intense surveillance effort the CIA was unable to obtain a photograph of Bin Laden or a recording of the voice of the mysterious man, presumed to be the al-Qaida leader, who lived on the second and third floors of the house.

The CIA is now analysing computer disks seized in the Navy Seals raid on Bin Laden's house for evidence of planned attacks on the US. But few Pakistanis believe it was really his house.

A YouGov poll conducted shortly after the attack found that 66% of Pakistanis think the person killed was not Bin Laden and 75% disapproved of the US raid. Opinion about Bin Laden himself was more evenly divided – 35% viewed him as a mass murderer of Muslims while 42% disagreed.

Meanwhile, the CIA resumed the hunt for the remainder of the al-Qaida leadership in Pakistan on Friday with its first drone strike since Bin Laden's death. A series of drone-fired missiles killed 15 people in a vehicle, a house and a restaurant in North Waziristan, according to reports.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/06/osama-bin-laden-monitored-months-before-raid