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  • 3
    May
    2012
    1:49pm, EDT

    Bin Laden fretted about al-Qaida affiliates' missteps, letters show

    Newly released documents seized in the 2011 raid on Osama bin Laden's compound show bin Laden had ordered al-Qaida to assassinate President Barack Obama or General David Petraeus. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    By Mike Brunker
    msnbc.com

    In letters from his hideout in Pakistan written in the five years before his death, Osama bin Laden fretted about dysfunction among the far-flung affiliate organizations in his terrorist network, according to documents seized during the U.S. military’s raid on his compound that that were released on Thursday. 

    Seventeen declassified letters seized in last year's raid on bin Laden's compound by U.S. Navy SEALs were posted online Thursday by the U.S. Army's Combating Terrorism Center, accompanying its analysis of their contents titled, "Letters from Abbottabad: Bin Ladin Sidelined?" The letters -- 175 pages in Arabic -- probably represent only a small fraction of materials taken from the compound, the center’s distinguished chair, retired Gen. John Abizaid, said in a note published with the translations.


    U.S. intelligence analysts have spent countless hours poring over the vast stash of computerized and paper data seized during the raid that killed bin Laden, as NBC News’ Jim Miklaszewski and Robert Windrem reported earlier this week.

    The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point has published the declassified documents that offer a fresh look inside the mind of Osama bin Laden. NBC's Bob Windrem and Roger Cressey discuss.

    But the letters released Thursday, which were written between September 2006 and April 2011, add new nuances to the previous reports. 

    Among other things, they show the al-Qaida founder was troubled by the actions of other Islamist groups that aligned themselves with his terrorist network.

    As Associated Press reporter Kimberly Dozier puts it:

    The documents show dark days for al-Qaida and its hunkered-down leader after years of attacks by the United States and what bin Laden saw as bumbling within his own organization and its terrorist allies.

    The so-called affiliate organizations – including al-Qaida in Iraq, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula; the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (Student Movement of Pakistan); and the Somalia-based Harakat al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen – were of particular concern to bin Laden. 

    In the words of the report’s authors: 

    Rather than a source of strength, bin Ladin was burdened by what he viewed as the incompetence of the “affiliates,” including their lack of political acumen to win public support, their media campaigns and their poorly planned operations which resulted in the unnecessary deaths of thousands of Muslims. 

    "I plan to release a statement that we are starting a new phase to correct (the mistakes) we made," bin Laden wrote in 2010. "In doing so, we shall reclaim, God willing, the trust of a large segment of those who lost their trust in the jihadis."

    Nothing in the papers points directly to al-Qaida sympathizers in Pakistan's government. Bin Laden described "trusted Pakistani brothers" but didn't identify any Pakistani government or military officials who might have been aware of or complicit in his hiding in Abbottabad. 

    Watch World News videos on msnbc.com

    The letters also indicate that American Adam Gadahn played a much greater role in al-Qaida than has been acknowledged by U.S. authorities, who have often dismissed him as a propagandist and spokesman. In fact, Gadahn appeared to act as an adviser to bin Laden and in one letter urged that al-Qaida disassociate itself from al-Qaida in Iraq. 

    One letter also outlined Gadahn’s views of U.S. news organizations as part of a discussion of how al-Qaida might go about publicizing the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on the U.S.

    Related stories

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    He indicated a particular dislike of Fox News, writing, “Let her die in her anger”; said MSNBC-TV appeared to be “good and neutral a bit,” while complaining about the firing of Keith Olbermann; said CNN appeared to be aligned with the U.S. government but was better in its Arabic reports; and made flattering comments about CBS and ABC.

    NBC News senior investigative producer Robert Windrem contributed to this report.

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    211 comments

    So add terrorists to the long list of people who have enough sense to dislike FOX news.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, al-qaida, featured, osama-bin-laden-letters
  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    6:05pm, EDT

    U.S. official acknowledges drone strikes, says civilian deaths 'exceedingly rare'

    Counterterrorism advisor Jon Brennan outlined the use of drones, arguing that it's legal and has reduced the ability of al-Qaida to attack the U.S. NBC News senior investigative producer Bob Windrem and The National Journal's Yochi Dreazen discuss.

    By Michael Isikoff
    NBC News

    White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan on Monday spoke openly -- and at great length -- about what has long been one of the government’s most controversial official secrets:  the use of remotely piloted drones to kill suspected terrorists.

    In doing so, he became the first U.S. government official to acknowledge that the drone strikes sometimes kill innocent people, though he characterized such deaths as  “exceedingly rare.” But a new analysis by an independent Washington think tank estimates that more than 300 civilians have been killed by drones since President Barack Obama took office.

    In a major speech on the anniversary of Osama bin Laden’s death during a raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, by U.S. Navy SEALs, Brennan proclaimed that al-Qaida is now "on the path to its destruction."  But the headline was what he had to say about the drone program — long a forbidden subject for senior U.S. officials  — and how the U.S. government uses it.


    “The United States conducts targeted strikes against specific al-Qaida terrorists, sometimes using remotely piloted aircraft, often referred to publicly as drones,” said Brennan, in his speech at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a Washington, D.C., foreign policy think tank.  

    While it has been openly reported in the press for years, the use by the CIA of pilotless drones to kill members of al-Qaida has long been officially classified,  prompting government officials to talk obliquely about “lethal operations” and “removal” of terrorists. They have done so even as Obama has dramatically escalated the number of such attacks and made them the central component of the administration’s counterterrorism efforts.

    Saul Loeb / Getty Images

    White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan in a May 2, 2011, file photo.

    One U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told NBC News that the speech represents “a pretty big sea change for us” in terms of what officials will now be permitted to talk about. But the official said that while Brennan’s speech had been carefully vetted throughout the U.S. intelligence and national security community, there had been no formal declassification of the drone program. “The president can declassify anything he wants,” said the official, adding that Brennan – as the representative of the president — can speak about anything his boss wants him to discuss.   

    Under Obama, there have been an estimated 250 drone strikes in northwest Pakistan that have killed as many as 2,345 people, according to an analysis by the New America Foundation, a Washington think tank that closely tracks the program. Such strikes have generated a storm of protest in Pakistan and stepped up demands by the Pakistani government to halt them.   

    In what he described as an effort to be more open with the American people, Brennan on Monday described an elaborate process under which senior government officials select targets for drone strikes. They must first determine whether a prospective target is a bona fide member of al-Qaida or “associated forces” and poses a “significant threat” to U.S. interests.  The “lethal action” strikes are not used for “punishing terrorists for past crimes” or “seeking vengeance.” Instead, they are used to “stop plots” and “prevent future attacks,” citing as one example, targeting individuals  who possess “unique operational skills.”

    Read more reporting by Michael Isikoff in 'The Isikoff Files'

    Brennan  said the use of drones gives U.S. intelligence agencies the ability to use “laser-like” precision against the terrorists. But he acknowledged that "innocent civilians have been killed in these strikes." He said such instances have been "exceedingly rare, but it has happened.

    “When it does, it pains us and we regret it deeply, as we do any time innocents are killed in war," he added. 

    That passage of his speech alone was significant. In June 2011, Brennan said that in the previous year of operations in the government’s then-unspecified program to eliminate al-Qaida members, “There hasn’t been a single collateral death because of the exceptional proficiency, precision of the capabilities we’ve been able to develop.”   

    Brennan later changed that statement in response to questions by the New York Times, spurred in part by  reports about a May 6 strike in Pakistan that  hit a religious school, an adjourning restaurant and a house, killing 18 people. Although 12 militants were allegedly killed, British and Pakistani journalists on the scene reported that six civilians also died in the strike.

    In Brennan’s adjusted statement last year, he said, “Fortunately, for more than a year, due to our discretion and precision, the U.S. government has not found credible evidence of collateral deaths resulting from U.S. counterterrorism operations outside of Afghanistan or Iraq.”

    Brennan did not give any details on Monday about how rare civilian deaths have been. But according to the analysis by the New America Foundation, which relies heavily on local media and other reports from observers in Pakistan, about 17 percent of those who have been killed by drones since the program effectively began in 2004 were “non-militants.”  The foundation estimated that the  “non-military fatality rate” has since dropped to about 13 percent under Obama – as drone strikes have become more frequent and more precise.

    Those numbers translate to 471 civilian deaths, including 309 under Obama.

    Human rights groups — who have challenged the administration to be more open about its drone program — were not satisfied with the new details provided by Brennan’s speech.

    “It is not enough that care is taken to avoid harm to innocent civilians,” said Raha Wala, an official with Human Rights First. “Brennan's assertion that any 'member' of al-Qaida or 'associated forces' is legally targetable is wrong. Under the laws of armed conflict, only members of the enemy's armed forces, or those directly participating in hostilities or who perform a continuous combat function, may be targeted.”

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    430 comments

    Well blah, blah, blah. When you are fighting a war innocent people are going to die. When are the President and his people going to understand that what is secret must be kept secret (such as not announcing that it was Navy Seals who went in and got Osama). There was no reason for them to say we hav …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, obama, featured, counterterrorism, drones, john-brennan
  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    4:24am, EDT

    Did rogue spies or 'Pakistani Blackwater' shield Osama bin Laden?

    AP, file

    Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden is seen in an image taken from a video found at his walled compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. The first anniversary of bin Laden's killing by U.S. Navy SEALs is on Tuesday.

    By Amna Nawaz, NBC News Correspondent

    ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan -- A year after Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Pakistan, one key question has yet to be answered: how did the world's most wanted man manage to move and live, undetected, in this country for so long?

    Journalists, analysts, and others have been working to fill in the narrative holes over the last 12 months. Leaked and strategically released nuggets of information have helped to paint a vague picture of what life was like inside the Abbottabad compound where bin Laden spent his final years, living with three of his wives, and several children and grandchildren. We've learned of the austere conditions inside the home, the restricted lifestyle led by all inside, and the discipline with which the head of al-Qaida communicated with a trusted few. But the crucial questions -- how he got to that compound in the first place and who helped him to do so -- remain unanswered.

    Kamran Bokhari, vice-president for Middle Eastern and South Asian Affairs at Stratfor, a global intelligence company, believes the idea that bin Laden moved around without a network of individuals organizing his transportation and logistics is simply not possible.

    "If you're a six-foot-five Arab, and the most wanted man on the planet, you can't just walk into a place like Pakistan without support," Bokhari said. "So what's the nature of that support?"


    U.S. officials publicly state they have no evidence that any Pakistani institutional leaders had any knowledge of bin Laden's presence here, nor played any role in helping to move him. Privately, however, some admit that the deep mistrust between the two nations has led to strong, lingering suspicions within many in the U.S. that Pakistan's premier intelligence agency -- Inter-Services Intelligence, or the ISI -- must have known, at some level.

    Slideshow: After the raid: Inside bin Laden's compound

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images

    U.S. forces found and killed the al-Qaida leader in the affluent Pakistani town of Abbottabad, where he had been living in a large compound.

    Launch slideshow

    "There are deep suspicions on both sides," says retired General Mahmud Ali Durrani, a former national security advisor and ambassador to the United States. "I think the biggest concern in the U.S., if I put it in a phrase, is that Pakistan is hunting with the hounds and running with the hares. That is the perception."

    Panetta recalls nail-biting moments of bin Laden raid

    That perception has not been helped by what seem to be Pakistan's action priorities over the last year. The prevailing public dialogue among military and government officials in the immediate raid aftermath focused on how the U.S. had managed to breach Pakistan's borders, not how bin Laden had. The Pakistani doctor who ran a fake vaccination program in Abbottabad for the CIA in an effort to secure DNA samples from inside the bin Laden compound was swiftly tracked down, arrested, and remains in detention, possibly to stand trial for treason. Authorities quietly began work after dark to demolish the compound in February, keeping press behind a security cordon half a mile away, and after a year in custody, the widows and their families were shuttled out of their house in the dead of night and deported to Saudi Arabia.

    The wives and children of Osama bin Laden are taken to a chartered flight out of Islamabad after being deported to Saudi Arabia.

    Pakistan did immediately launch a formal commission with wide-reaching powers soon after the raid, pledging to investigate both the U.S. border breach and bin Laden's presence here. The Abbottabad Commission, as it's come to be known here, has enjoyed unparalleled access to anyone and everyone associated directly or peripherally with either issue, interviewing over 100 witnesses over the last year, including bin Laden's widows, the detained doctor who worked for the CIA, and high-level Pakistani officials.  But there is no working deadline and expectations vary as to how blunt and definitive an account commission members will be able to put forth.

    "Given how previous commissions in Pakistan have behaved, I'm not really hopeful that much will come out of this," Bokhari said. "This is not like the 9/11 Commission or anything similar elsewhere in other countries where there's a process and transparency and rule of law."

    Nearly a year after Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. forces, President Barack Obama spoke exclusively to NBC's Brian Williams inside the Situation Room and reflected on the raid. The full report airs Wed., May 2 at 9pm/8c on NBC's Rock Center.

    'Embarrassment'
    Durrani, who's been in touch with members of the commission, says the length of time it's taken for them to compile findings speaks to their determination to fulfill their mandate to the best of their ability.

    "If the report comes out tomorrow and it's a whitewash, then people will ask -- what have you done?" Durrani said. "They [the commission members] are keen to get to the bottom of this, to find out what happened, why it happened, who's at fault, and what needs to be done so we don't have such embarrassment and such issues in the future."

    Slideshow: World reacts to death of Osama bin Laden

    Arshad Butt / AP

    Osama bin Laden is dead following a military operation in Pakistan and the US has recovered his body, US President Barack Obama announced Sunday night.

    Launch slideshow

    Driving the investigators' query is a widely-held belief here in Pakistan that bin Laden was never here at all -- that the entire raid was an effort by the U.S. to defame and destabilize Pakistan's security establishment. Residents of Abbottabad with whom NBC News spoke reiterated that skepticism, saying they don't believe the U.S. claim that bin Laden was living in their midst, particularly in the absence of any evidence of his death.

    Low expectations
    Commission members have been reluctant to speak with the media until their findings are complete, but the head of the commission, retired Supreme Court Judge Javed Iqbal, confirmed to NBC News that one of the key issues his team is investigating is whether bin Laden was ever really here at all.

    PhotoBlog: Abbottabad -- One year after Osama bin Laden raid

    Despite low expectations for the pending report, Bokhari admits the commission is tasked with an enormously difficult job, one that will have repercussions for generations to come in the form of Pakistan's official narrative of this historic event.

    "This is the biggest event in recent history since the fall of the Soviet Union -- 9/11 and its impact, the killing of Osama bin Laden -- so I'm not surprised it's taken them this long to come up with a report," Bokhari said. "It may take decades before anybody can actually come up with a comprehensive view of what was really happening."

    Nearly one year after the death of Osama bin Laden, some Republicans are accusing the Obama administration of using the event for political gain. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports

     

    The few specifics that have emerged from Pakistan in the last year in effect lead to more questions officials here must attempt to answer, through the commission or otherwise.

    The U.S. moved quickly on the message-control front after the Abbottabad raid, releasing selective video clips and pieces of information from the "treasure trove" of evidence seized from bin Laden's compound. An NBC News team was given an exclusive briefing by a senior U.S. counterterrorism official on currently classified intelligence from the raid, including details of the role bin Laden played in al-Qaida from his hideout in Pakistan, who he was in touch with, and more on the life he lived within that compound. Those details will air on Discovery Channel on Tuesday as part of a one-hour special on the anniversary of the U.S. raid.

    U.S. counterterror officials say that after years of drone strikes and other activities against the leaders of Al Qaida, the group is no longer able to pull off a major attack against U.S. interests, such as 9/11. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

    But the details from within Pakistan have been few and far between. A rare piece of evidence -- a confidential interrogation report of bin Laden's youngest wife, Amal, obtained by NBC News -- did reveal some surprising details about the family's life on the run after the attacks of September 11.

    According to the report, Amal told investigators that the family scattered after 9/11, bouncing from house to house and place to place in Pakistan. In her complicated timeline, she moved across multiple residences in the southern mega-city of Karachi, then moved on to Peshawar to link up with her husband. From there, the family moved to Swat, then to Haripur, and finally settled in the Abbottabad home for about six years until the U.S. raid that killed her husband.

    On the anniversary of Osama bin Laden's death, there have been no signs of plotting by any terrorist groups, but officials say there is always a concern that homegrown terrorists could do something on their own. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    "These people are fanatics. They're ideological but keep in mind that they are also very professional at what they do," Bokhari explained. "They're in a business where if you make a small error in judgment it can easily translate to death for many people. There are people waiting for you to make a mistake. You have to be highly disciplined."

    Co-conspirators?
    But the pace of movement believed to have been followed by bin Laden and his family -- traversing entire provinces in Pakistan, and including rural, tribal, settled, and urban areas while remaining completely undetected -- would be difficult without some sort of network of support. Current and former Pakistani officials and analysts have offered up the possibility of "rogue or retired" elements from within Pakistan's military or intelligence establishment as possible facilitators or co-conspirators helping to hide bin Laden.

    Osama bin Laden's brother-in-law, Zakaria al-Sadah, spoke to NBC News in Islamabad in his first interview with an American television network. He said he is concerned for his sister, who was shot in the raid that killed the al-Qaida leader, and frustrated she and her children have been in custody ever since. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.  

    The nature of Pakistan's retired uniformed corps, many of whom stay involved with the work of the agencies long after they leave as the new leadership continues to make use of their experience and contacts, albeit in unofficial capacities and with limited authority. As the largest employer in Pakistan, it follows that the Pakistan army also has the largest pool of retirees, some of whom spent significant time working closely with and gaining the trust of jihadi groups in the 1980s and 1990s.

    "If it's a retired network of people, what I call the 'Pakistani Blackwater,' that's not that bad. It's bad, but not that bad," Bokhari said. "But if it's someone who's serving, or more than one person, then [Pakistan's leaders] have a leak in [their] system and that's terrifying. Anyone who's a very nationalistic, Pakistani leader who doesn't want al-Qaida or the CIA to be able to get into their house will want to get to the bottom of that."

    Bin Laden's widow's condition worsens, brother says

    As potentially worrying or damaging as some of the information in the commission's report may be for Pakistan's institutions, it is also widely believed that the organizations cannot survive without taking a hard look at their own potential faults, and admitting mistakes where they did occur. The military and intelligence establishments were already raked over the coals by the government and media after last year's raid in Abbottabad, and are now under the highest level of scrutiny in the country's history.

    January 16, 1997, nearly four years before the 9/11 terror attacks,  NBC Nightly News aired the first network television report on Osama Bin Laden.  NBC's Tom Brokaw referred to Bin Laden as "maybe the most dangerous man in the world."  NBC's Andrea Mitchell profiles Bin Laden who commanded a business empire dedicated to terrorism.

    A failure, at this point, to produce a credible, official version of events will only damage Pakistan, according to Durrani.

    "Pakistan wants to move forwards not backwards. They have to get to the bottom of this, in their own interest," he says. "If they don't, it will be another major issue buried in the sands of history. And people will forever be looking for answers."

    NBC's Fakhar Rehman contributed to this report from Abbottabad.

    500 comments

    Given that those who helped the US kill him were arrested for treason and Bin Laden remained in Pakistan without "being detected" for so long, do we really need to ask who shielded him?? Of course there was government involvement. How high we can't be certain, but it wasn't so low level commander. T …

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, terrorism, al-qaida, osama-bin-laden, featured, abbottabad, amna-nawaz
  • 20
    Jan
    2012
    1:02pm, EST

    After drone attack on al-Qaida planner, is Zawahiri next? Before the election?

    AFP - Getty Images file

    Ayman al Zawahiri, the longtime No. 2 to Osama bin Laden.

    By Robert Windrem
    NBC News

    With the successful Predator attack on al-Qaida operative Aslam Awan inside Pakistan, al-Qaida has lost, in the words of a senior U.S. official last night, "a senior external operations planner who was working on attacks against the West. His death reduces al-Qaida's thinning bench of another operative devoted to plotting the death of innocent civilians."

    Awan is believed to have been somewhat close to Ayman al Zawahiri, the leader of al-Qaida since shortly after Osama Bbn Laden's death on May 1. Although U.S. officials would not place a number on Awan's rank within al-Qaida, he was believed to have been involved in planning attacks, putting him in the high command.

    But what of Zawahiri? The U.S. pursuit of him remains a high priority. (And his killing or capture would be regarded as a political coup for the Obama administration in a campaign year.) The U.S. has targeted Zawahiri five times by his own count, going back to the days after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.


    A U.S. counterterrorism official tells NBC News that there's limited information on the status of U.S. planning against Zawahiri. "It's certainly not impossible" for an attack on Zawahiri to be attempted. "But he has clearly hung very low since May, with fundamentally no communications," said the official.

    Evan Kohlmann, MSNBC analyst and counterterrorism consultant, reports that since bin Laden's death, al-Qaida's media arm has released eight recordings of al-Zawahiri, not all of which can be easily dated. At least one and possibly two of them were probably recorded prior to bin Laden being killed, then released after his death. The most recent one came out on December 1. In that video, Zawahiri boasted that al-Qaida had seized aid worker Warren Weinstein, a 70-year-old American, in Lahore last August. There's been no proof of life regarding Weinstein since then.

    Those recordings are often hand-carried through a network of couriers to ensure Zawahiri's security.

    From the archives: Bin Laden dead: Who will lead al-Qaeda?

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    235 comments

    He is most certainly aware that there is no statute of limitations on his crime. Regardless of how many years pass, or who is President his relentless pursuit by the USA will carry on. Unless he dies a natural death he is essentially a dead man walking.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, terrorism, al-qaida, featured, windrem
  • 22
    Nov
    2011
    1:49pm, EST

    Pakistan's 'Memogate' triggers U.S. ambassador's resignation

    Afp / AFP/Getty Images

    Husain Haqqani, shown at a memorial service for Pakistan's Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti in Washington on March 9.

    By Amna Nawaz

    Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S., has resigned amid controversy surrounding a memo he allegedly drafted shortly after U.S. forces killed Osama bin Laden in May.

    The memo requested U.S. intervention to prevent a military coup and protect the civilian government in exchange for granting the U.S. heavy influence on matters of national security in Pakistan. 

    Dubbed “Memogate,” the affair has dominated headlines in Pakistan for weeks before apparently claiming its first victim on Tuesday.

    A statement issued by Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani's office said Haqqani has been asked "to submit his resignation so that the investigation can be carried out properly." 


    Haqqani flew back to Islamabad this weekend to explain his involvement – if any -- in the scandal to President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Gilani and military and intelligence officials, tweeting on Nov.  19th that he was "Heading back to the motherland."  He reportedly offered his resignation then, but it was not accepted at the time. 

    "Memogate" is centered on a memo that Pakistani-American businessman Mansoor Ijaz says he delivered to then-chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, at the behest of Ambassador Haqqani in the days immediately following the U.S. raid that killed bin Laden in Pakistan. The memo, which is unsigned, states that there had been “a significant deterioration in Pakistan’s political atmosphere” and indicated that the civilian government feared that factions within the military were planning a coup.

    Read the full memo 

    Retired U.S. Gen. Jim Jones, President Barack Obama’s former national security adviser, has confirmed that the memo was delivered to Mullen.

    The existence of the memo was revealed in an October op-ed by Ijaz for the Financial Times. Ijaz told NBC News he typed the memo as dictated by Haqqani, and only revealed its existence in the article to lend credibility to the policy case he was making. Haqqani has denied any involvement in requesting or drafting the memo. But opposition leaders in Pakistan pounced, equating the memo to "treason" and demanding that heads roll.

    Members of the Pakistani press have been digging into the scandal for the last few weeks, including publishing Blackberry messages allegedly exchanged by Haqqani and Ijaz as the memo was being drafted, and afterward.  

    U.S. officials tell NBC News they are watching with "great interest" how this is being handled by the Pakistani government, but say they are not involved in the investigation.

    Haqqani, who has been described as a "seasoned political operator," is well-liked within U.S. government circles, and enjoys a strong reputation for managing to remain effective in a treacherous political climate. He remains in Islamabad at this writing.

    In Tuesday’s statement, Gilani ordered an investigation to be "carried out fairly, objectively and without bias."

    “As a result of controversy generated by  the alleged memo, which had been drafted, formulated and further  admitted to have been received by Authority in USA, it has become  necessary in the national interest to formally arrive at the actual and  true facts,” the statement said. 

    Haqqani turned back to his Twitter account following the announcement of his resignation, writing, "I have much to contribute to building a new Pakistan free of bigotry & intolerance. Will focus energies on that."

    Fakhar Rehman of NBC News contributed to this report from Islamabad.

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    119 comments

    Pakistan is a nightmare! Until they figure out which side they are on, we should leave them alone, and certainly NOT give them money! The bi-polar nature, of Pakistan's power players, means they are ineffective at either being the USA's friend.... OR foe!!!

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  • 29
    Sep
    2011
    11:54am, EDT

    Will Pakistan ever go after the Haqqani Network?

    FBI via Reuters

    FBI wanted poster for Sirajuddin Haqqani, leader of the so-called Haqqani Network on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

    By Amna Nawaz, NBC News producer, Islamabad

    Over the last two weeks, increased U.S. pressure on Pakistan to go after the Haqqani network has laid bare the complicated relationship that Islamabad maintains with this particular militant group – a link some Pakistani officials argue is necessary for their national interests. 

    The U.S. request that Pakistan crack down on the Haqqanis – believed to be operating from the tribal agency of North Waziristan and attacking U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan – has long been understood to be a fundamental point of disagreement in private discussions. 

    In June 2011, following the raid on Osama Bin Laden’s compound in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad and subsequent flurry of high-level meetings between the two stated allies, press speculation was rampant that a Pakistan military operation in North Waziristan was imminent. Pakistan’s army commander in the region, Lt. Gen. Asif Yasin Malik, denied that, maintaining that Pakistan “will undertake operations when we want to do it, when it is militarily and otherwise in the national interest to undertake such operations.” 

    To this day, North Waziristan remains the only one of the seven tribal agencies in which the Pakistan military has yet to carry out any operation against Islamic militants. But the Sept. 13 attack on the U.S. embassy in Kabul pushed the Haqqani issue back to the headlines, and forced the debate out into the public.

    NBC News' Richard Engel joins Chris Jansing to discuss the attack in Kabul on the U.S. Embassy. American and Afghan officials blamed a Taliban group, the Haqqani network, for the attack.

    State Department officials said the attack “changed the nature of the meeting” between U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar when the two met on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly this month. The Haqqanis, they said, were the first and last issue discussed. 

    Just days after the attack, in an interview with Radio Pakistan, U.S. Ambassador to Islamabad Cameron Munter claimed the U.S. had “evidence linking the Haqqani network to the Pakistan government,” but did not share specifics.  

    Less than one week later, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff and long characterized by Pakistani officials as “a friend of Pakistan,” dealt what many here saw as the harshest blow, when he testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee that the Haqqani network acts as a “veritable arm” of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Agency, known as the ISI. 

    Mullen’s comments sparked a firestorm in Pakistan. The country’s powerful Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, denied the accusations as “unfortunate” and “not based on facts,” and Pakistani politicians struck back, accusing the U.S. of making Pakistan a scapegoat for its failures in Afghanistan. 

    Though Pakistan’s military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, denied that the spy agency facilitated or supported the Haqqani network, he did acknowledge his country’s contact with the group, saying, “Any intelligence agency would like to maintain contact with whatever opposition group, whatever terrorist organization … for some positive outcome.” 

    Privately, Pakistani military and intelligence officials tell NBC News that means protecting their country’s national interests for stability in the region and good relations across the western border. While they do not rule out targeted military operations in North Waziristan to clear our elements deemed a threat to the state, specific action targeting the Haqqani network, they say, is not necessarily a mission they share with the U.S. 

    “We have strategic convergence with the Americans on two points -- a stable, safe Afghanistan and the eradication of al-Qaida in the region,” said one Pakistani intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “That’s it.” 

    The Haqqanis, officials here say, do not pose an immediate internal threat, and attacking them would only force the group to turn their sights on the Pakistani state. 

    “Why would we shoot ourselves in the foot?” said the intelligence official. “After 2014 (and the U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan), we’ll be left right where we were after the Afghan jihad.” 

    Pakistani officials base that approach on the widely held belief that the Haqqanis are simply too powerful a group for any future government in Kabul to ignore. But besides wanting to maintain a good relationship with forces in power in Afghanistan, they are also reluctant to lose one of their strongest links to the myriad militant groups operating in North Waziristan. 

    The Haqqanis first established themselves as key players in the region during the war against the Soviet Union after the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan, when the strength of Jalaluddin Haqqani’s relationships at a geographically strategic point allowed the group to operate as a nexus player. Jalaluddin’s son, Sirajuddin, today operates on the strength of his father’s credibility as operational commander of the group, playing the same influential role, tying together diverse actors in the region. 

    According to a recent report by The Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) at West Point, “For the past three decades, the Haqqani network has functioned as an enabler for other groups and as the fountainhead of local, regional and global militancy.” 

    In an area largely abandoned by the Pakistani state, maintaining a link with the Haqqanis provides Pakistan’s agencies a conduit to groups that actually do carry out attacks within their own borders, like the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). 

    The Haqqani network, according to the CTC, has played the role of “local conflict mediator over multiple decades,” and now functions as “a central diplomatic interface between the TTP and the Pakistani state when important issues need to be discussed.” 

    Former Ambassador Ayaz Wazir, who established Pakistan’s consulate in Mazar-i-Sharif during Taliban rule in Afghanistan and has met with the Haqqanis, says that bringing the group into the reconciliation process is the only way forward. 

    “I don’t know why this big difference between the Taliban and the Haqqani network is being drawn,” said Wazir. “Jalaluddin Haqqani was part of the Taliban right from Day One, I would say. Haqqani and Taliban are one and the same thing.” 

    In an interview with Reuters last week, Sirajuddin Haqqani echoed that sentiment, pledging allegiance to the Afghan Taliban leadership, and saying he “would support whatever solution” they suggested “for the future of Afghanistan.” 

    U.S. officials, however, argue that the group is separate and distinct, and remains among the most dangerous threats to both the U.S. and Pakistan. A series of high-level meetings have been held in recent days in an attempt to defuse tensions and ensure cooperation on this issue between the two countries. 

    In an interview Wednesday night with an English-language Pakistani news channel, the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Ambassador Marc Grossman, hailed those meetings as a sign of strength and resilience in the relationship, but reiterated the U.S. request for “joint action” against the Haqqani network.  

    “It’s very, very important that the government of Pakistan and the government of the United States and the people of the two countries recognize that terrorism – and that includes the Haqqani Network – is a threat to both of us,” said Grossman. “The question is not whether we will work together, but how we’ll work together to try to deal with these issues.” 

     Mushtaq Yusufzai contributed reporting from Peshawar, and Fakhar Rehman, from Islamabad. 

    284 comments

    So let me get this straight. We need the Pakistanis so we can wage war against "terrorists" in Afghanistan. The Pakistanis are in bed with the Haqqanis and don't want us in their country because we caught bin Laden under their noses.

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  • 3
    Aug
    2011
    7:00am, EDT

    US prepares for worst-case scenario with Pakistan nukes

    By Robert Windrem
    NBC News Investigative Producer for Special Projects 

    As U.S.-Pakistani relations spiral downward, the specter of a showdown between the increasingly antagonistic allies is garnering more attention, including the worst-case scenario of the U.S. attempting to “snatch” Pakistan’s 100-plus nuclear weapons if it feared they were about to fall into the wrong hands.

    That would be a disastrous miscalculation, former Pakistani President and army chief Pervez Musharraf told NBC News, saying that such an incursion would lead to “total confrontation” between the United States and Pakistan.

    Ispr / EPA

    A Medium Range Ballistic Missile Hatf V (Ghauri) missile takes off during a test fire from an undisclosed location in Pakistan on Dec. 21 in this photo distributed by the Pakistani military. The liquid-fuel missile can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads and has a range of more than 800 miles.

    Privately, current and former U.S. officials say that ensuring the security of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons has long been a high national security priority, even before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and that plans have been drawn up for dealing with worst-case scenarios in Pakistan.


    The greatest success of the U.S. war on terrorism – the military operation that killed Osama bin Laden in his safehouse in Pakistan in May – has fueled the concerns about Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, increasing suspicions among U.S. officials that he had  support within the ISI, Pakistan’s intelligence service, and emboldening those in Washington who believe an orchestrated campaign of lightning raids to secure Pakistan’s nukes could succeed.

    It’s no secret that the United States has a plan to try to grab Pakistan’s nuclear weapons -- if and when the president believes they are a threat to either the U.S. or U.S. interests. Among the scenarios seen as most likely: Pakistan plunging into internal chaos, terrorists mounting a serious attack against a nuclear facility, hostilities breaking out with India or Islamic extremists taking charge of the government or the Pakistan army.

    In the aftermath of the bin Laden raid, U.S. military officials have testified before Congress about the security of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons and the threat posed by “loose nukes” – nuclear weapons or materials outside the government’s control. And earlier Pentagon reports also outline scenarios in which U.S. forces would intervene to secure nuclear weapons that were in danger of falling into the wrong hands.

    But out of fear of further antagonizing an important ally, officials have simultaneously tried to tone down the rhetoric by stressing progress made by Islamabad on the security front.

    Such discussions of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, now believed to consist of as many as 115 nuclear bombs and missile warheads, have gotten the attention of current and former Pakistani officials. In an interview with NBC News early this month, Musharraf warned that a snatch-and-grab operation would lead to all-out war between the countries, calling it “total confrontation by the whole nation against whoever comes in.”

    Michael Thomas / AP

    Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf met with Texas Gov. Rick Perry on July 12 in Austin to exchange ideas about improving the economy and discuss the strained relationship between the U.S. and Pakistani governments. Musharraf has been critical of the White House's recent suspension of $800 million in U.S. aid to the Pakistani military, saying the decreased aid will hurt his country and hinder its fight against terrorism.

    “These are assets which are the pride of Pakistan, assets which are dispersed and very secure in very secure places, guarded by a corps of 18,000 soldiers,” said a combative Musharraf, who led Pakistan for nearly a decade and is again running for president. “… (This) is not an army which doesn't know how to fight.  This is an army which has fought three wars.  Please understand that.”

    Pervez Hoodboy, Pakistan’s best known nuclear physicist and a human rights advocate, rarely agrees with the former president. But he, too, says a U.S. attempt to take control of Pakistan’s nukes would be foolhardy. 

    “They are said to be hidden in tunnels under mountains, in cities, as well as regular air force and army bases,” he said. “A U.S. snatch operation could trigger war; it should never be attempted.”

    Despite such comments, interviews with current and former U.S. officials, military reports and even congressional testimony indicate that Pakistan’s weaponry has been the subject of continuing discussions, scenarios, war games and possibly even military exercises by U.S. intelligence and special operations forces regarding so-called “snatch-and-grab” operations.

    “It’s safe to assume that planning for the worst-case scenario regarding Pakistan nukes has ready taken place inside the U.S. government,” said Roger Cressey, former deputy director of counterterrorism in the Clinton and Bush White House and an NBC News consultant. “This issue remains one of the highest priorities of the U.S. intelligence community ... and the White House.” 

    Carefully worded assurances
    Mindful of the growing distrust and suspicions between Washington and Islamabad, U.S. officials have publicly tried to defuse concerns that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal could be compromised. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress two weeks ago that Pakistan’s atomic arsenal has become “physically more secure” and the U.S. has seen “training improve” for personnel charged with securing the weapons. 

    But does “more secure” and “improved” training mean the Pakistanis have met U.S. standards?

    Jeffrey T. Richelson, an intelligence historian, has written extensively about the possibility of a U.S. military operation aimed at Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, notably in his 2009 book “Defusing Armageddon.” The book focuses on the U.S. Nuclear Emergency Search Team (NEST), which might play leading a role in disarming Pakistani weapons along with elements of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). 

    The nuts-and-bolts of how such an operation would work – such as whether teams would attempt to disarm or destroy the weapons – remain highly classified.

    But Richelson notes that without referring to Pakistan by name, Gen. Peter Pace, then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,  in 2006 discussed two types of operations where  in which the U.S. military would seek to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of al-Qaida or other militants. 

    Detailed in a military policy document titled “National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction,” the two scenarios were: “elimination operations” – defined as “operations systematically to locate, characterize, secure, disable and/or destroy a State or non-State actor’s WMD programs and related capabilities” – and “interdiction operations” – finding and seizing nuclear devices or nuclear material it has been removed from a nation’s storage bunkers but not yet delivered to a terrorist group.

    Richelson also obtained an unclassified PowerPoint presentation titled “Detecting, Identifying and Localizing WMD” by the Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict (SOLIC).  In it were slides referring to “clandestine or low-visibility special operations taken to: locate, seize, destroy, capture, recover or render safe WMD,” either on land or sea.  He said such a mission has been a special operations forces priority since 2002.

    Neither the report nor the PowerPoint presentation specify where such operations would be considered, but Richelson says that both were prepared with Pakistan in mind.

    “The focus on Pakistan,” he wrote, “is the result of its being both the least stable of the nine nuclear weapons states and the one where there has been significant support for Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida, not only among the general population but also within the military and intelligence forces.”

    Publicly, U.S. officials don’t want to embarrass or infuriate Pakistani officials by suggesting such an operation would be possible, a point brought home in a White House press conference on April 29, 2009.  After President Barack Obama spoke of the confidence he had in the Pakistani Army’s ability to secure the nuclear weapons, NBC News’ Chuck Todd began to ask if the U.S. military would step in and seize weapons that were at risk.

    Obama quickly cut him off.  “I’m not going to engage in hypotheticals of that sort.  I feel confident that nuclear arsenal will remain out of militant hands, OK?”

    'All nuclear matters are controlled by the army'
    While the U.S. has a non-proliferation policy that aims for the elimination of Third World weaponry, it also has been working with Islamabad to minimize the current threat, sending an estimated $100 million to Pakistan since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to improve the safety and security of the Pakistani nukes.

    But Pakistan never permitted U.S. officials to visit the weapons bunkers or see how the U.S.-purchased equipment was working. In fact, Richelson writes, the Pakistanis have gone so far as to set up decoy bunkers to throw off anyone trying to keep track of the arsenal.

    And physical security and protection from terrorists only addresses one aspect of the threat, Hoodboy said.

    “Technology determines safety, but only partly,” he told NBC News. “Ultimately it depends upon the men who have control over nuclear weapons. … Governments come, governments go. But all nuclear matters are controlled by the army. The important question is whether the army has total, absolute control over its nukes. I have no idea whether this control is absolute, and doubt how anyone can know for sure.”

    There are additional reasons to be concerned. In July 2009, for example, the journal of the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point reported that “home-grown terrorists” had tried to enter Pakistani nuclear facilities three times between 2007 and 2008, when Pakistan was wracked by rioting and a series of destructive suicide bombings.

    Shaun Gregory, director of the Pakistan Security Research Center at the University of Bradford in England, wrote of the attacks.

    “These have included an attack on the nuclear missile storage facility at Sarghoda on Nov. 1, 2007, an attack on Pakistan’s nuclear air base at Kamra by a suicide bomber on Dec. 10, 2007, and, perhaps most significantly, the Aug. 20, 2008, attack when Pakistani Taliban suicide bombers blew up several entry points to one of the armament complexes at the Wah cantonment, considered one of Pakistan’s main nuclear weapons assembly sites.”

    Pakistani officials have played down the seriousness of such attacks, noting that the attackers were unable to enter what are large military bases, much less penetrate the inner defenses. 

    Musharraf, who was president of Pakistan during the three reported attacks, dismissed the threat in talking with NBC News. Asked if terrorists were targeting Pakistan’s nuclear assets, he replied, “I don't think so.  I don't think they are trying actively to get to our nuclear assets.  And we have no such intelligence. Never.” 

    His statement is, at best, a disingenuous and narrow reading of the intelligence, according to former senior U.S. intelligence officials, who like the others quoted in this article spoke on condition of anonymity. These officials point to an August 2001 campfire meeting between bin Laden and his successor, Ayman al Zawahiri, and two Pakistani nuclear scientists, part of a so-called Islamic charity called UTN, on the other. With planning for the 9/11 attacks nearly complete, the two al-Qaida leaders wanted a tutorial on nuclear weapons development, according to U.S. intelligence reports. 

    Tenet's tense meeting
    Then-CIA Director George Tenet, in fact, wrote in his memoir, “At the Center of the Storm,” of a tense discussion he had with Musharraf in Islamabad shortly after the U.S. found out about the meeting.

    “After a few pleasantries … I launched into a description of the campfire meeting between (O)sama bin Laden, al-Zawahiri and the UTN leaders,” Tenet wrote. “‘Mr. President,’ I said, ‘you cannot imagine the outrage there would be in my country if it were learned that Pakistan is coddling scientists who are helping bin Laden acquire a nuclear weapon. Should such a device ever be used, the full fury of the American people would be focused on whoever helped al-Qaida in its cause.”

    In a testimony before Congress four months ago, the CIA’s new director, Gen. David Petraeus, left little doubt the U.S. still fears the worst. “There are certainly elements in Pakistan, the Pakistani Taliban and several other varieties of elements who generally have symbiotic relationships, the most extreme of which might, indeed, value access to nuclear weapons or other weapons that could cause enormous loss of life,” said Petraeus, then commander of NATO and U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

    Like others in the U.S. government, however, Petraeus felt duty bound to note, “There is considerable security for the Pakistani nuclear weapons.”  But he appeared to choose his words with care. “Considerable” does not mean “state of the art,” for example.

    Not everyone thinks the U.S. is very worried about Pakistan’s nukes falling into the wrong hands. Zia Mian, a colleague of Hoodboy’s and director of the Project on Peace and Security in South Asia at Princeton, said war gaming and exercising for dire situations is something the Pentagon and CIA do all the time.

    “The U.S. exercised global nuclear war. They’ve exercised attacking Iran. You’ve got to be ready,” Mian argues. “It suggests to me there are people whose job is to be worried. So when someone asks you, you say you’re worried. But when you’re reading the WikiLeaks disclosure, when you read embassy talking points, the nuclear weapons barely figure.”

    Of course, the main question is if, in the last resort, the U.S. did attempt to “snatch” Pakistan’s weapons, would it work? Hoodboy thinks it’s unlikely to have the intended effect and could very well lead to one of two scenarios, both with potentially disastrous outcomes.

    “An American attack on Pakistan's nuclear production or storage sites would be extremely dangerous and counterproductive,” he said. “By comparison the bin Laden operation involved only minor risks. Even if a single Pakistani nuke (out of roughly 100) escapes destruction, that last one could be unimaginably dangerous.” Hoodboy added that no seems to have thought through another scenario, one where there is confusion about who snatched the bomb. “The situation is more uncertain than even this. For one, it might trigger nuclear war with India, even if India was not involved in the snatch.”

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    542 comments

    Publishing this article does nothing positive. It inflames our enemies and reinforces the Arrogance of the US around the world. Some things are better left unsaid and within the confines of very few minds. Tell me one good thing that can come from this article.

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  • 27
    May
    2011
    3:45pm, EDT

    CIA team searches bin Laden compound

    By Michael Isikoff
    NBC News National Investigative Correspondent

    A CIA forensic team entered into Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbotabad on Friday and spent several hours looking for evidence that had been left behind during the May 2 raid that killed the al-Qaida leader, U.S. and Pakistani officials said.

    "They did not leave empty-handed," one U.S. official told NBC News.

    The unpublicized search took place about the same time that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was in Islamabad meeting with Pakistani officials to express mounting concerns about that country's lack of cooperation on counter-terrorism. 

    Access  to the bin Laden compound had been negotiated by CIA Deputy Director Michael M. Morell during a trip to Pakistan last week. The agreement was cited by one Pakistani official as a sign that, at senior levels, both sides are working hard to move past their differences.   

    The CIA team arrived by helicopter about noon in Pakistan and was accompanied by Pakistani ISI officers as they looked for any remaining evidence at the compound, the officials said. In particular, CIA officials were looking for vaults or other items that might be hidden behind walls or inside floors, as well as any possible tunnels that could allow visitors to leave and enter undetected. The search ended about 6 p.m. and the helicopter flew the CIA team from the compound.

    U.S. officials are not overly optimistic that the search will produce major pieces of evidence. Since the May 2 raid, the compound has been under the control of the Pakistani military and the assumption is local authorities would have already searched through and removed any important items that the Navy SEALs had left behind. "The odds are that a lot of good stuff might be left are pretty low," said a U.S. official.

    71 comments

    There will be nothing left at that compound as the ISI has already taken everything of importance! Waste of Time!

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  • 26
    May
    2011
    4:09pm, EDT

    CIA to search bin Laden compound

    Pakistan has agreed to let the CIA send a forensic search team into the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed by Navy SEALS to search for any al-Qaida materials that might have been left behind.

    By Robert Windrem
    NBC News investigative producer for special projects

    U.S. officials confirm the Washington Post report that Pakistan has agreed to allow the CIA to send a forensics team to examine the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed as Islamabad tries to repair relations with its largest benefactor.

    Under the agreement, the CIA has "permission to use sophisticated equipment in a search for al-Qaeda materials that may have been hidden inside walls or buried at the site," the Post reported.

    The U.S. apparently also will get access to any materials gathered by Pakistani security forces after the May 2 raid in Abbottabad. NBC News has reported that "operational logs" of al-Qaeda were retrieved by the Pakistanis in the days after the assault on the compound. Most, if not all, of the materials seized by the Navy SEALs that morning were grabbed from bin Laden's bedroom office. The SEALS simply didn't have time to conduct a more thorough search.

    There is speculation that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton may visit Pakistan this weekend. So, it's not a bad thing for Pakistan to grant this another access in advance of her rumored trip.

    64 comments

    Gee... Pakistan is allowing the CIA into the compound where the terrorist they protected for five years lived after having a month to sanitize the place and hide anything incriminating. Let Pakistan do something really helpful... how about choosing ONE side in this fight and let the US Military get  …

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  • 11
    May
    2011
    5:42pm, EDT

    US officials: Pakistan hasn't shared detailed bin Laden logs left behind

    By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News chief Pentagon correspondent, and Robert Windrem, NBC News investigative producer for special projects

    The U.S. Navy Seals who killed Osama bin Laden recovered a number of the former al-Qaida leader’s journals at the Pakistan compound where he was hiding, but they were forced to leave behind detailed logs of bin Laden and al-Qaida activity that the Pakistanis have not yet shared, senior U.S. officials told NBC News on Wednesday.

    It was not clear how much material was left behind when the Seals evacuated the compound in Abbottabad on May 1, but senior U.S. military officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it could have been a substantial amount. 

    Senior U.S. intelligence officials, also speaking on condition of anonymity, described the journals that were retrieved by the Seals as showing that bin Laden was active in planning al-Qaida operations. 

    "It shows he had a clear focus on attacking the United States, and a clear interest in how he might be able to insert operatives into the United States without alerting authorities,” one said. 

    In a previous Open Channel post, another U.S. intelligence official described the journals as showing that bin Laden was “fully engaged to carry out other 9-11 attacks.”

    The second official said the Seals als recovered correspondence between bin Laden and senior al-Qaida officials concerning ideas for attacks.

     The official said the correspondence was both one-way --  directives for the other al-Qaida leaders and affiliates – and two-way -- responses to suggestions made by his subordinates.

     In the correspondence, bin Laden would often discuss places he would like attacked, the best times to attack and even which personnel he thought would be best for particular jobs. 

     "He was always trying to refine his approach," said the official.

    The official also said that bin Laden would correspond through a chain of command, that the messages would be sent via courier to the organization's No. 3, its operations director, most recently Abu Atia, a North African who took over a year ago when longtime bin Laden aide Sheikh Sayed was killed in a drone attack. Atia would then distribute the message using his own courier network, the official said. 

    The official said there was little if any material in the journals in which Bin Laden reflected on his role or his "meaning of life" other than some poetry. 

    113 comments

    My best guess is that Pakistan has to review and redact any mention of themselves, their actions, etc before they release the documents. It is called CYA.

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    1:13am, EDT

    Where bin Laden wasn't: in Pakistan, according to Pakistani PM

    By Bill Dedman
    Investigative Reporter, msnbc.com

    It's worth noting where Pakistan's prime minister, Yusaf Raza Gillani, had said Osama bin Laden definitely was not hiding: in Pakistan.

    "Osama bin Laden is not in Pakistan," Gillani said on CNN in April 2010.

    CNN's Wolf Blitzer asked Gillani, "How do you know for sure he's not in Pakistan?"

    "Because our military actions are very successful," Gillani said. "And we have a very successful operation in Malakand and Swat, and now in South Waziristan and elsewhere. If there would have been any chance, he would have been arrested or maybe -- I even don't know whether he is alive or not."

     

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    16 comments

    Bin Laden is dead brought live by an Afro american President with a Classic special ops mission. This Pressident allowed the military to out there mission without any Political nor Presidential interference. This equated the success of the mission. Oh , let me not forget they had orders to shoot to …

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Rich Gardella

Rich Gardella is an investigative producer, off-air reporter and digital journalist with NBC News, based in Washington, DC at the NBC News Washington Bureau. He joined NBC News in 1991. His work has appeared on NBC Nightly News, the TODAY Show, MSNBC and MSNBC.com.

Michael Isikoff

Michael Isikoff joined NBC News in July 2010 as national investigative correspondent. He had been at Newsweek since 1994 as an investigative correspondent. He has written extensively on the U.S. government's war on terrorism, the Abu Ghraib scandal, campaign-finance and congressional ethics abuses, presidential politics and other national issues.

Amna Nawaz

Amna Nawaz is a producer and video journalist with NBC News, based in the network's Washington bureau. She has worked in the Middle East, South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Europe and her work has appeared on "NBC Nightly News," "The Today Show," "Dateline NBC," and MSNBC.

Mike Brunker

Mike Brunker is the Projects Team editor at msnbc.com. He's worked for the site as a reporter and editor since August 1996. Before that, he was an editor at the San Francisco Examiner and Hayward Daily Review in California.

Mike Brunker Blogroll

  • White Collar Crime Prof blog
  • The Volokh Conspiracy: Legal news now
  • Frederick Lane Blog -- legal news
  • Social Networking Law Blog
  • Sports Law Blog
  • Business of Horse Racing Blog
  • The Long War Journal
  • The Red Tape Chronicles -- consumer/tech news

Azriel James Relph

Azriel James Relph is a researcher for NBC News Investigations. He is a graduate of the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, and was a reporter for several years at the Hunts Point Express -- a South Bronx newspaper serving the poorest Congressional District in the United Sates. He has written for Newsweek, The Daily Beast, and MSNBC.com.

Robert Windrem

Robert Windrem is investigative producer for special projects at NBC Nightly News. He is also a Fellow at the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School. He has worked at NBC News for more than three decades, focusing on issues of international security, strategic policy, intelligence and terrorism.

M. Alex Johnson

M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for msnbc.com specializing in national affairs, technology and data analysis. He joined msnbc.com in 1999 from The Washington Post.

M. Alex Johnson Blogroll

  • Alex Johnson — Journalist at Large
  • Ars Technica
  • Krebs on Security
  • GetStats
  • Technolog
  • Sophos Security Trends
  • Muckety
  • Pew Internet Research
  • Investigative Reporters and Editors
  • Fund for Investigative Journalism
  • Data Journalism Blog
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Most Commented

  • Gov. Christie's pension issue: N.J. probe looks at running mate, double-dipping (888)
  • Spy who uncovered underwear bomb plot is British national, sources say (194)
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  • 'Puppet' and 'Stooge': al-Qaida chief al-Zawahiri issues message on Yemen (77)
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