July 30, 2008
The International Herald Tribune today reports on a recent CIA mission to
The CIA assessment specifically points to links between members of the spy service, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, and the militant network led by Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani, which American officials believe maintains close ties to senior figures of Al Qaeda in
The CIA has depended heavily on the ISI for information about militants in
This is not new, but is useful when juxtaposed with the conclusions of the new and very useful Rand Corporation report on how to end terrorism.
While the central argument of the study is to make police work and intelligence the backbone of the counterterrorism efforts, it also argues strongly for a greatly reduced
Make policing and intelligence the backbone of
Minimize the use of
The problem with that approach, particularly in
The CIA’s often less than careful involvement with the ISI, and cooperation with local police and intelligence agencies simply provides information to the enemy.
The solution often cannot be the liaison relationships with other services. For many, the groups we consider to be hostile are heroes, martyrs and allies to those services. Establishing something in common, and building trust, is virtually impossible.
I am not arguing against the basic thrust of the report on the need, in a broad sense, to rely less on the military to do the vast bulk of counterterrorism work.
The fact is that the military has often been thrust into roles it is not equipped and does not want to handle. They get the job because they are on the ground where few other
The solution, in part, has to be to get others out there, including the intelligence community, so the ability to understand and counter al Qaeda comes from a broader breadth of experience than simply the military.
But this is not possible as long as US embassies are largely shells of their former selves, with greatly reduced staffs and the inability of diplomats to actually get out and do their jobs. And this includes the station chiefs and agents in many instances.
The military does what it does, and it does it well. But it has been asked to do too much. A shift in policy toward more intelligence and police work, however, is extremely problematic, given the history of human rights abuses and internal terror of many of those with whom
It would also require a significant shift in resources, something that is unlikely as long as the war in
It seems to me unlikely another warning from the CIA to the ISI will be productive. The warnings have come and gone, and at the end of the day, the ISI remains an unreliable ally, if an ally at all.
posted by Douglas Farah
1.
To me, it seems you have commensense.
— rich Jul 30, 13:32 #
2.
Common sense,yes, but an answer, Mr.Farah does not have.
Where will the embassies find all the people they need everywhere?
There are many resources that the agencies can use, but choose not to use.
— Ahmed Haenni Jul 30, 14:39 #
3.
Juxtapose the following two comments by Mr. Farah in his colum, and then giggle:
”... many of those who are classified as allies in combating radical Islamist are, in fact, not allies at all.”
“But this is not possible as long as US embassies are largely shells of their former selves, with greatly reduced staffs and the inability of diplomats to actually get out and do their jobs. And this includes the station chiefs and agents in many instances.”
The State Department and Central Intelligence Agency are not our allies in the war on terror any more than the ISI is.
Kenneth Timmerman made that point in his Shadow Warriors: The Untold Story of Traitors, Saboteurs, and the Party of Surrender.
Source: douglasfarah.com
URL: https://newageislam.com/war-terror/pakistan-intelligence-ties-say-ending/d/364