Sunday, May 1, 2011

BIN LADEN'S REPORTED DEATH IN ISLAMABAD: WHAT I WROTE ON JUNE 28,2010

B.RAMAN

In connection with news that Osama bin Laden has been killed in a missile strike---possibly in or near Islamabad--- I am reproducing below an article written by me on June 28,2010, on the hunt for him. As I am travelling to Hyderabad this afternoon and will be returning only tomorrow night, I may not be able to write anything more till I return. Pity he chose to die when I will be travelling!!!

2. I wrote, inter alia, as follows:

"The fact that neither the interested reward-seekers nor the CIA Drones have been able to get any inkling of the whereabouts of bin Laden would once again bring to the fore the question which I had raised from time to time in the past. That is, is he really hiding in the tribal areas as assessed by the CIA or is he hiding in the non-tribal areas with the help of Pashtun migrants in those areas. The Drones cannot reach him in the non-tribal areas. There will be many non-tribals interested in the huge cash rewards, but they may not have access to information about him. It is easier to get information in the sparsely-populated tribal areas than in the densely-populated non-tribal areas. In the past, some top-guns of Al Qaeda were found hiding in the non-tribal areas---- Abu Zubaidah in Faislabad in Punjab, Ramzi Binalshibh in Karachi and Khalid Sheikh Mohammad in Rawalpindi. Many Afghan Taliban leaders were found hiding in Karachi and other places and not in Balochistan as used to be assumed.

"While continuing to maintain the present hunt for bin Laden in the tribal areas, it is, therefore, important to extend it to the non-tribal areas too. Karachi, which has more Pashtuns than even Peshawar, needs attention. So too Quetta in Balochistan, which has a large Afghan refugee population, who have given shelter to the leaders of the Afghan Taliban. The strong-holds of the anti-Shia Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ) and the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) in the Punjab and Gilgit-Baltistan are other areas calling for search. Of all the Punjabi Taliban organizations, the LEJ and the JEM are the closest to Al Qaeda. "



ANNEXURE
Smoking Out Bin Laden From His “Deep Hiding” - International Terrorism Monitor---Paper No. 660 (28-6-2010) http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/%5Cpapers39%5Cpaper3895.html

By B. Raman

In an interview to ABC TV channel’s “This Week” Programme on June 27, 2010, Mr. Leon Panetta, Director of the USA’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), is reported to have stated as follows: “Osama bin Laden remains in very deep hiding but consistent pressure will flush him out. While hard data on him has been slight since the 2001 attacks, the CIA and US forces have killed or captured at least half the leadership of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. We took down the No. three in their leadership (Mustafa Abu al-Yazid) a few weeks ago. We continue to disrupt them. We continue to impact on their command and control. We continue to impact on their ability to plan attacks in this country. Al Qaeda’s depleted numbers had shrunk dramatically. The pressure is definitely on bin Laden and Al Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri. I think at most, we’re looking at maybe 50 to 100 (Al Qaeda members), maybe less. If we keep that pressure on, we think ultimately we can flush out bin Laden and Zawahiri and get after them. President Barack Obama had made going after Al Qaeda the fundamental purpose of the Afghan military mission. We’ve got to disrupt and dismantle Al Qaeda and their militant allies so they never attack this country again. Bin Laden remains in very deep hiding in a tribal area in Pakistan surrounded by tremendous security. The terrain is probably the most difficult in the world. It has been years since the United States has had good intelligence on the whereabouts of bin laden, although he is thought to be in Pakistan.”

2. It is nine years since the US intelligence agencies and military forces in the Af-Pak area started their hunt for Osama bin Laden after he was believed to have escaped into Pakistan’s tribal areas through the Tora Bora area of Afghanistan. They have had no success in getting at him. At least in the case of al-Zawahiri, his No.2, there was a report in January 2006 of a near miss in the Bajaur agency, but in the case of bin Laden there have been no reports of even a near miss. Neither the periodically enhanced cash reward offers nor stepped-up attacks by the Drones (pilotless planes) of the CIA have got him. The Drone strikes---helped by improved human and technical intelligence--- have been increasingly successful against leaders and cadres of the Taliban, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, the Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkestan and the Punjabi Taliban organizations. There have been some successful hits against other leaders of Al Qaeda too, but not against bin Laden.

3. The Drone strikes have been largely confined to North and South Waziristan and occasionally the Bajaur agency. If bin Laden is in one of these agencies, he is most likely to be hit one of these days if the US keeps up its Drone strikes because Al Qaeda and its alles do not have a wide choice of hide-outs. The fact that there has not even been a speculation that bin Laden was anywhere near the areas which have so far been hit by the Drones would give rise to questions as to whether he could be in one of the Waziristans, where he is often placed by the US intelligence. Other likely tribal areas of his hiding are in the Chitral area of Pakistan and in the Nuristan area of Afghanistan. There has been no concrete indication from those areas either.

4. The announcements of huge cash rewards for information leading to his capture or death amounting to millions of US dollars have been widely disseminated all over the tribal areas in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan and in its Khyber-Pakhtoonkwa province (formerly known as the North West Frontier Province ). The absence of any leads about him from the Pashtun areas could be attributed to the loyalty of large sections of Pashtuns to him and to their aversion to helping the US in getting rid of him. But not all Pashtuns like bin Laden or are loyal to him to that extent. The Shias among the Pashtuns particularly in the Kurram Agency of the FATA and in parts of Khyber-Pakhtoonkwa and the Pashtun members of the Awami National Party, which is a member of the ruling coalition in Islamabad and is the head of the coalition in Peshawar, dislike him. They have no interest in protecting him.

5. The fact that neither the interested reward-seekers nor the CIA Drones have been able to get any inkling of the whereabouts of bin Laden would once again bring to the fore the question which I had raised from time to time in the past. That is, is he really hiding in the tribal areas as assessed by the CIA or is he hiding in the non-tribal areas with the help of Pashtun migrants in those areas. The Drones cannot reach him in the non-tribal areas. There will be many non-tribals interested in the huge cash rewards, but they may not have access to information about him. It is easier to get information in the sparsely-populated tribal areas than in the densely-populated non-tribal areas. In the past, some top-guns of Al Qaeda were found hiding in the non-tribal areas---- Abu Zubaidah in Faislabad in Punjab, Ramzi Binalshibh in Karachi and Khalid Sheikh Mohammad in Rawalpindi. Many Afghan Taliban leaders were found hiding in Karachi and other places and not in Balochistan as used to be assumed.

6. While continuing to maintain the present hunt for bin Laden in the tribal areas, it is, therefore, important to extend it to the non-tribal areas too. Karachi, which has more Pashtuns than even Peshawar, needs attention. So too Quetta in Balochistan, which has a large Afghan refugee population, who have given shelter to the leaders of the Afghan Taliban. The strong-holds of the anti-Shia Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ) and the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) in the Punjab and Gilgit-Baltistan are other areas calling for search. Of all the Punjabi Taliban organizations, the LEJ and the JEM are the closest to Al Qaeda.

7. The question of Drone strikes in the non-tribal areas does not arise. The CIA cannot expect the Pakistani intelligence and Police to co-operate in the search in the non-tribal areas. The CIA has to organize its own search operations with the help of anti-Al Qaeda communities such as those of the Mohajirs in Karachi, the Balochs in the Quetta area and the anti-LEJ Shias in Punjab and Gilgit-Baltistan.

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and also Associate of the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventy-one2@gmail.com)

5 comments:

Ramanujam said...

Dear Mr Raman,

I would like your views on the following clarifications about the incident.

1. Do you believe this is a joint operation (or) a unilateral operation by US.

The text of the US statement appears to hint that the US-Pak collaboration led to the hide-out, though it does not say whether it was the overall collaboration or was it any specific intelligence from Pakistan that led to the hide-out.

The statement also has an ominous phrase that it would be good for Pakistan to collaborate in the future. Is it a hint that Pakistan did not collaborate in this instance. The statement also says that US determined by itself that the hide-out was indeed of Osama. If Pakistan has collaborated, there would not have been any need to make this statement.

I also suspect that is Pakistan had provided the lead, it would have also extracted a price by asking US to declare the incident as within Afghanistan. There may not have been any need for an airborne assault, since the ground troops of Pakistan may have been adequate.

The style of operation and the statement of US appears to indicate that it was an entirely US intelligence and operation. US statement appears to caution Pakistan without actually placing the responsibility on them for the hide-out.

2. Reports indicate that this mansion was constructed in 2005. If this was the case, it is highly unlikely that Pakistan intelligence did not track this obvious construction. The only possibility appears that Pakistan actively assisted in the construction of this hide-out.

3. The number of people reportedly living with Osama also indicates that there was a well organised local logistics support to this mansion, which again should have come in the radar of Pakistan, if it was seeking such information.

4. If Osama was actually living in urban isolation, who is running and co-ordinating Al-qaeda-Taliban,jihadi operations in the tribal regions, as well as in Afghanistan. Do you believe that the manner of his living indicates that he had already abdicated operational aspects to others.

5. In many of the recent speeches, only an audio of Laden was shared. Does this indicate that Osama was living in this hide-out for a fairly long period.

Regards

Ramanujam

br said...

Dear Raman Sir,
One thing is that they never showed any pictures of Osama and its cited his body is already disposed... Im curious as to why?

ambi said...

finally ISI ditched him! US election are just round the cornner, pasha uncle had no other option. What really surprised me that how come osama really got in the trap of ISI, was he really that idiot?

ambi said...

What made pasha uncle ditch osama?

Some how i feel that more than american it was saudi pressure that made pasha uncle ditch osama. osama was a sworn enemy of saudi royal family. after this current arab uprising, definately sauds did not want to take any kind of chances,

i may be wrong though....

Kautilya said...

HAHAHA ...Pity he chose to die when I will be travelling!!!...i can sense etch in your hand...bravo Sir