Bilal_Mushi
Minister (2k+ posts)
New rifts take place between CIA, ISI
New rifts take place between CIA, ISI
A new rift has taken place between the CIA and ISI after the leakage of Top CIA spys name.
A similar case had taken place back in December 2001 when the CIA had to withdraw its station chief in Islamabad after a newspaper had published his name.
A United States official said that (this time) the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had no plans to withdraw its station chief from Islamabad after his name was allegedly divulged in a Pakistani newspaper.
The publication of the name came amid severe tensions between the two countries, with Pakistan complaining of "unilateralism" after a US raid last week that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil.
According to the US officials, the move appeared to be aimed at disrupting the work of the US spy agency in the aftermath of the Bin Laden raid.
The CIA and US State Department declined to comment on the fate of the station chief in Islamabad. But State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, "Counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan is in our national security interest. It has yielded results, tangible results, over the last decade.
The New York Times said that the relationship between the ISI Chief, General Ahmed Shuja Pasha and the CIA station chief was quite strained. It said that both were engaged in a clash on the issue of Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistanis back in January.
http://www.dunyanews.tv/index.php?key=Q2F0SUQ9MiNOaWQ9MjU3NjU=
New rifts take place between CIA, ISI

A new rift has taken place between the CIA and ISI after the leakage of Top CIA spys name.
A similar case had taken place back in December 2001 when the CIA had to withdraw its station chief in Islamabad after a newspaper had published his name.
A United States official said that (this time) the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had no plans to withdraw its station chief from Islamabad after his name was allegedly divulged in a Pakistani newspaper.
The publication of the name came amid severe tensions between the two countries, with Pakistan complaining of "unilateralism" after a US raid last week that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil.
According to the US officials, the move appeared to be aimed at disrupting the work of the US spy agency in the aftermath of the Bin Laden raid.
The CIA and US State Department declined to comment on the fate of the station chief in Islamabad. But State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, "Counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan is in our national security interest. It has yielded results, tangible results, over the last decade.
The New York Times said that the relationship between the ISI Chief, General Ahmed Shuja Pasha and the CIA station chief was quite strained. It said that both were engaged in a clash on the issue of Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistanis back in January.
http://www.dunyanews.tv/index.php?key=Q2F0SUQ9MiNOaWQ9MjU3NjU=