Pakistan Today

Haqqani says facilitated presence of CIA men in Pakistan

Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S., speaks during an interview in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2011. Haqqani, a trusted advisor of late Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, is a professor at Boston University and co-chair of the Hudson Institute's Project on the Future of the Muslim World. Photographer: Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg via Getty Images *** Local Caption *** Husain Haqqani

WASHINGTON: Former Pakistani ambassador to Washington Hussain Haqqani admits that he had helped the United States station a large number of CIA operatives on the ground in Pakistan with the authorisation of the then civilian government.

Haqqani, who had served as Pakistan’s ambassador to the US from April 2008 to Nov 2011 before being forced to resign in the wake of the memogate scandal, made the disclosure in his piece published in The Washington Post.

“The relationships I forged with members of Obama’s campaign team led to closer co-operation between Pakistan and the United States in fighting terrorism over the 1/2 years I served as ambassador,” he wrote. “These connections eventually enabled the United States to discover and eliminate bin Laden without depending on Pakistan’s intelligence service or military, which were suspected of sympathy toward Islamist militants.

“Friends I made from the Obama campaign were able to ask, three years later, as National Security Council officials, for help in stationing US Special Operations and intelligence personnel on the ground in Pakistan. I brought the request directly to Pakistan’s civilian leaders, who approved,” he added.

He said that from Obama’s public positions and from his meetings with his aides, it was clear that a democratic, civilian government in Pakistan could join with him to help attain his objectives in Afghanistan in exchange for support of consolidation of democracy with greater US economic assistance.

“I sent this message to my bosses in Islamabad and told Obama’s campaign team that we would be willing to play ball. Once Obama took office, this is exactly what happened: Civilian aid to Pakistan was enhanced to record levels in an effort to secure greater co-operation in defeating the Taliban.”

Haqqani said that Pakistan was kept out of loop about the operation which led to the killing of Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

“Although the United States kept us officially out of the loop about the operation, these locally stationed Americans proved invaluable when Obama decided to send in Navy SEAL Team 6 without notifying Pakistan,” he said.

“Unfortunately, the United States did not attain victory in Afghanistan, and the Pakistani government’s behaviour toward militant Islamists did not change on a permanent basis. But for the period I was in office, the two nations worked jointly toward their common goals – the essence of diplomacy.”

The former Pakistani envoy said that he was forced to resign as ambassador after Pakistan’s military-intelligence apparatus gained the upper hand in the country’s perennial power struggle.

“Among the security establishment’s grievances against me was the charge that I had facilitated the presence of a large numbers of CIA operatives who helped track down bin Laden without the knowledge of Pakistan’s army – even though I had acted under the authorisation of Pakistan’s elected civilian leaders.”

Exit mobile version