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India-Pakistan
Civil-military divide in Pakistan deepening over Osama killing linked memo
2011-11-19
[One Pakistan] A secret memo is laying bare the profound division between Pakistain's powerful army and its civilian government, and the nation's relationship with the United States is once again at the center of the gulf.

According to a Washington Post report, at issue are allegations that the Pakistain Government asked for U.S. help to prevent a military coup after the Navy SEAL raid in May that killed the late Osama bin Laden
... who no longer has to waste time and energy breathing...
in Pakistain.

The claim is thought to have enraged Pakistain's army, and the resulting controversy prompted Pakistain's ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani, to offer his resignation this week.

Zardari's government has nominally been leading Pakistain since 2008. But real power remains in the hands of the military, which has ruled the South Asian nation for half its 64-year existence and was livid after the U.S. operation against bin Laden.

Though both the army and the civilian government receive billions of dollars in American assistance, the military views the United States, and its support for Zardari's unpopular administration, with deep distrust.

That attitude is widespread in Pakistain, where patriotism is equated with support for the military and the United States is often seen more as bully than friend.

Against that backdrop, a column published last month in the Financial Times has proved explosive.

In it, Pak American businessman Mansoor Ijaz asserted that a senior Pak diplomat -- whom he identified Thursday as Haqqani -- asked him to help relay a request to the then-chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, to stop the military from staging a coup.

The memo, a copy of which was provided by Ijaz to The Washington Post, warns that a military takeover would result in "potentially the platform for far more rapid spread of al Qaeda's brand of fanaticism and terror."

The upheaval in the wake of the bin Laden killing, it said, provided "a unique window of opportunity" for "civilians to gain the upper hand over army and intelligence directorates."

It said that in exchange for U.S. "direct intervention" to convey a strong no-coup message to Gen. Ashfaq Kayani
... four star general, current Chief of Army Staff of the Mighty Pak Army. Kayani is the former Director General of ISI...
, leader of Pakistain's military, a newly appointed civilian national security team would shepherd an independent investigation of the bin Laden matter and terminate any "active service officers" found to have been complicit in concealing the al-Qaeda leader.

Pakistain, it said, would also move to hand over all remaining al-Qaeda leaders on its soil, as well as Taliban leader Mohammad Omar and Sirajuddin Haqqani of the Haqqani hard boy network.

Alternatively, it could give "U.S. military forces a 'green light' to conduct the necessary operations to capture or kill them on Pak soil," the memo said.

It said the civilian government would eliminate "Section S" of Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence agency, a unit that handles relations with hard boy groups; bring to justice the perpetrators of the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai; and implement new measures to secure Pakistain's nuclear arsenal.
Posted by:Fred

#3  I recall that Mansoor Ijaz often appeared as a commentator on Fox News a few years ago.

In 2006, in an interview with Gulf News, he made the world exclusive claim that Iran already had a nuclear bomb and that US think-tanks were already formulating strategies to overthrow the Iranian Government.

Ijaz was a little premature in his assessment.

Posted by: JohnQC   2011-11-19 18:55  

#2  I don't think there's any close relation. I think it's a clan name, rather than a family name.
Posted by: Fred   2011-11-19 08:50  

#1  Is Pakistain's ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani any relation to the much-maligned Sirajuddin Haqqani of the Haqqani hard boy network I wonder?

Or are the first names the family name?
Posted by: Bobby   2011-11-19 08:32  

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