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U.S. Aborted Raid on Qaeda Chiefs in Pakistan in '05
WASHINGTON - A secret military operation in early 2005 to capture senior members of Al Qaeda in Pakistan's tribal areas was aborted at the last minute after top Bush administration officials decided it was too risky and could jeopardize relations with Pakistan, according to intelligence and military officials.
The target was a meeting of Qaeda leaders that intelligence officials thought included Ayman al-Zawahri, Osama bin Laden's top deputy and the man believed to run the terrorist group's operations.
But the mission was called off after Donald H. Rumsfeld, then the defense secretary, rejected an 11th-hour appeal by Porter J. Goss, then the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, officials said. Members of a Navy Seals unit in parachute gear had already boarded C-130 cargo planes in Afghanistan when the mission was canceled, said a former senior intelligence official involved in the planning.
Mr. Rumsfeld decided that the operation, which had ballooned from a small number of military personnel and C.I.A. operatives to several hundred, was cumbersome and put too many American lives at risk, the current and former officials said. He was also concerned that it could cause a rift with Pakistan, an often reluctant ally that has barred the American military from operating in its tribal areas, the officials said.
The decision to halt the planned "snatch and grab" operation frustrated some top intelligence officials and members of the military's secret Special Operations units, who say the United States missed a significant opportunity to try to capture senior members of Al Qaeda.
Their frustration has only grown over the past two years, they said, as Al Qaeda has improved its abilities to plan global attacks and build new training compounds in Pakistan's tribal areas, which have become virtual havens for the terrorist network.
In recent months, the White House has become increasingly irritated with Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, for his inaction on the growing threat of the Taliban and Al Qaeda.
About a dozen current and former military and intelligence officials were interviewed for this article, all of whom requested anonymity because the planned 2005 mission remained classified.
Spokesmen for the Pentagon, the C.I.A. and the White House declined to comment. It is unclear whether President Bush was informed about the planned operation.
The officials acknowledge that they are not certain that Mr. Zawahri attended the 2005 meeting in North Waziristan, a mountainous province just miles from the Afghan border. But they said that the United States had communications intercepts that tipped them off to the meeting, and that intelligence officials had unusually high confidence that Mr. Zawahri was there.
Months later, in early May 2005, the C.I.A. launched a missile from a remotely piloted Predator drone, killing Haitham al-Yemeni, a senior Qaeda figure whom the C.I.A. had tracked since the meeting.
It has long been known that C.I.A. operatives conduct counterterrorism missions in Pakistan's tribal areas. Details of the aborted 2005 operation provide a glimpse into the Bush administration's internal negotiations over whether to take unilateral military action in Pakistan, where General Musharraf's fragile government is under pressure from dissidents who object to any cooperation with the United States.
Pentagon officials familiar with covert operations said that planners had to consider the political and human risks of undertaking a military campaign in a sovereign country, even in an area like Pakistan's tribal lands, where the government has only tenuous control. Even with its shortcomings, Pakistan has been a vital American ally since the Sept. 11 attacks, and the militaries of the two countries have close ties.
The Pentagon officials said tension was inherent in any decision to approve such a mission: a smaller military footprint allows a better chance of a mission going undetected, but it also exposes the units to greater risk of being killed or captured.
Officials said one reason Mr. Rumsfeld called off the 2005 operation was that the number of troops involved in the mission had grown to several hundred, including Army Rangers, members of the Navy Seals and C.I.A. operatives, and he determined that the United States could no longer carry out the mission without General Musharraf's permission. It is unlikely that the Pakistani president would have approved an operation of that size, officials said.
Some outside experts said American counterterrorism operations had been hamstrung because of concerns about General Musharraf's shaky government.
"The reluctance to take risk or jeopardize our political relationship with Musharraf may well account for the fact that five and half years after 9/11 we are still trying to run bin Laden and Zawahri to ground," said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at Georgetown University.
Those political considerations have created resentment among some members of the military's Special Operations forces.
"The Special Operations guys are tearing their hair out at the highest levels," said a former Bush administration official with close ties to those troops. While they have not received good intelligence on the whereabouts of top Qaeda members recently, he said, they say they believe they have sometimes had useful information on lower-level figures.
"There is a degree of frustration that is off the charts, because they are looking at targets on a daily basis and can't move against them," he said.
In early 2005, after learning about the Qaeda meeting, the military developed a plan for a small Navy Seals unit to parachute into Pakistan to carry out a quick operation, former officials said.
But as the operation moved up the military chain of command, officials said, various planners bulked up the force's size to provide security for the Special Operations forces.
"The whole thing turned into the invasion of Pakistan," said the former senior intelligence official involved in the planning. Still, he said he thought the mission was worth the risk. "We were frustrated because we wanted to take a shot," he said.
Several former officials interviewed said the operation was not the only occasion since the Sept. 11 attacks that plans were developed to use a large American military force in Pakistan. It is unclear whether any of those missions have been executed.
Some of the military and intelligence officials familiar with the 2005 events say it showed a rift between operators in the field and a military bureaucracy that has still not effectively adapted to hunt for global terrorists, moving too cautiously to use Special Operations troops against terrorist targets.
That criticism has echoes of the risk aversion that the officials said pervaded efforts against Al Qaeda during the Clinton administration, when missions to use American troops to capture or kill Mr. bin Laden in Afghanistan were never executed because they were considered too perilous, risked killing civilians or were based on inadequate intelligence. Rather than sending in ground troops, the Clinton White House instead chose to fire cruise missiles in what became failed attempts to kill Mr. bin Laden and his deputies - a tactic Mr. Bush criticized shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Since then, the C.I.A. has launched missiles from Predator aircraft in the tribal areas several times, with varying degrees of success. Intelligence officials say they believe that in January 2006, an airstrike narrowly missed killing Mr. Zawahri, who hours earlier had attended a dinner in Damadola, a Pakistani village.
General Musharraf cast his lot with the Bush administration in the hunt for Al Qaeda after the 2001 attacks, and he has periodically ordered Pakistan's military to conduct counterterrorism missions in the tribal areas, provoking fierce resistance there. But in recent months he has pulled back, prompting Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney to issue stern warnings in private that he risked losing American aid if he did not step up efforts against Al Qaeda, senior administration officials have said.
Officials said that mid-2005 was a period when they were gathering good intelligence about Al Qaeda's leaders in Pakistan's tribal areas. By the next year, however, the White House had become frustrated by the lack of progress in the hunt for Mr. bin Laden and Mr. Zawahri.
In early 2006, President Bush ordered a "surge" of dozens of C.I.A. agents to Pakistan, hoping that an influx of intelligence operatives would lead to better information, officials said. But that has brought the United States no closer to locating Al Qaeda's top two leaders. The latest message from them came this week, in a new tape in which Mr. Zawahri urged Iraqis and Muslims around the world to show more support for Islamist insurgents in Iraq.
In his recently published memoir, George J. Tenet, the former C.I.A. director, said the intelligence about Mr. bin Laden's whereabouts during the Clinton years was similarly sparse. The information was usually only at the "50-60% confidence level," he wrote, not sufficient to justify American military action.
"As much as we all wanted Bin Ladin dead, the use of force by a superpower requires information, discipline, and time," Mr. Tenet wrote. "We rarely had the information in sufficient quantities or the time to evaluate and act on it."
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
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20 Comments so far
Show AllI don't care about that. If you don't want to worry about AQ, then change your international policy that destroys the lives and livelihood of billions of poor people; and arrest the ones who you know are around, like the couple in the white house right now. I'm sure some ignorant, stupid people in this administration sit around drooling all day about the possibility of killing people, but they should look to themselves for targets.
This nonsense gets dredged up every time some 'official' decides to come clean and write a book. This has gotta be the most open secret in the history of the last 100 years that Al-Qaeda is in Pakistan and we can get them any time we want. So why the surprise/outrage/exclamations ?
Bin Laden has provided years of faithful public service, working closely with key allies in the US and Pakistan. His name is a brand that concisely colors subject matter in any policy directive on public display. The collision of different competitive interests in the world marketplace always makes for entertaining theater. Tenet was a great pasty faced greaseball with flag pin, we'll miss him.
This very good news indeed that Rummy was able to put sense into insanity of "snatch and grab" operation a la Jimmy Carter. The more such consideration with regard to safety of American military, a.k.a. safe brass's ass, is on display, the less chances for doomed American Project for 21st Century to survive any longer.
$$$ ain't Almighty, my fella right-wing Americans, as OSB pointed out decade ago and that is GOOD! Now we know beyond any reasonable doubts that money do not buy virtue. That will be very BAD thing for the GOP project indeed and I'm happy.
The idea is for this "war on terror" to never end. If it were to end they would risk losing their stranglehold on the American public. So an opportunity to capture Qaeda leaders is "aborted" because it did not serve their psychopathic plan at the moment.
These lunatics in power are as the Buddhist literature describes "hungry ghosts" insatiable in their appetite for power, money, status....
The sad part is that these men and women who willfully destroy Mother Earth and all that she holds dear will probably skirt serious consequences for their criminal behavior in this life. But Karma will play out somewhere, someday.
Well, this should convince even the staunchest supporters of this administration that the White House has been protecting bin Laden and Al-Qaeda since its inception. In fact, the Mujahadeen, the pre-curser to Al-Qaeda, was created by our very own CIA. I wonder if the folks there have any comment on the outing of Valerie Plame? I digress. Remember Tora Bora? The Marines 10th Mountain Div had Osama and crew surrounded and someone, we never found out where the order came from, but it was very high up, gave the command for the 10th to stand down. Once the news was leaked to the public, albeit in small non-major media publications, the claim was that we wanted the new Afghan government to use their new "troops" from the newly created Afghan army to visibly show Afghan support for Georgies war on terror. We knew then it was a crock of shit, but now we have repeated attempts on record of Bushies sheltering of bin Laden and crew. Remember Michael Moore's Farenheit 9-11? He was lambasted for being unpatriotic? He mentioned in his film 2 facts that cannot be denied by the Bushies; 1- Salem bin Laden was George Bush's financier in Harken Energy Company which was his first business venture and it failed. The day after 9-11 without so much as a question from the FBI, the entire bin Laden clan in the US, about 100 people were ferried by private jet out of the country while ALL other civilian air traffic was grounded. Do the math. al-Qaeda is in Pakistan, where we support a military dictator who would be hung in public if free elections were held in Pakistan today. Oh, and btw, Pakistan sent all of its miltary nuclear scientists to school in the US. Are you starting to connect the dots yet? If not, if you still think this war on terror is anything but a power grab then you should join the military and request service in Iraq, they need you there, the Bush's and bin Laden's that is.
This is a stale news. This has already been reported by European media. Al-Qaeda is an asset to US and its national interests in the world. Didn't Musharaf's interview with Charlie Rose give that impression? If Al-Qaeda is eliminated how can US invade other countries? In order to convince its people and the world to kill innocent people and control natural resources in other countries, it needs Al-Qaeda alive. It did work in Iraq and Somalia. Majority of Americans supported the invasion of Iraq. Opposition to war in Iraq started only when they have started seeing their own fellow citizens dying and knowing the TRUTH. Until then there was not much opposition, even though thousands of innocent Iraqis, women and children, were being killed by Americans and their allies. The world knows that Al-Qaeda is a creation of US (and Pakistan) for its own selfish-interests.
SO IT IS NOT A SURPRISE THAT US DID NOT WANT TO ELIMINATE THE LEADERS OF AL-QAEDA.
Smells more like Nazi Germany by the minute.... Who pardoned Rumsfled.... German courts? As many Germans point out, Hitler (and Mussolini) flourished with the help of US-Republican) oligarchs (including Prescott Bush). This time America does the dirty work and puts itself on the line to be the target of scorn, while the same American and German/Austrian corporate family players are pulling the strings and funding the war chaos. What happened to the German-American Bund? Research it, and look near the old pro-Mussolini families.
The RepubliCIA, the new Gestapo that Harry Truman feared, is organized crime with a government agency label as disguise -- of, for, and by the cold-blooded oligarchs. To them, a self-styled elite Master Race, the rest of us, regardless of our nationality, are ants with disposable gladbag lives. All the Bushes are part and parcel of that machine, along with Rumsfled and Cheney, and much of the highly deceptive Republican Party hierarchy.
Nothing will change, domestically or overseas, until we get to the core, the RepubliCIA, the Bush's pitbull-trained pet, and thoroughly open it up, and dismantle it. The small number of legitimate functions that it serves should be distributed to other carefully-selected democratically-administered government agencies, with No More Secrecy privileges (the breeding ground for crime).
Yes, Majikblend, hungry ghosts driven on by the twelve links of dependent origination (greed, desire, attachment, aversion, hate etc.). We pray daily for their enlightenment. So far...no cigar.
Bin Lauden is the "Goldstein" that drives Big Brother Bush's manipulation of public opinion; someone he cannot afford to eliminate. People are starting to wake up to this but whether it is in time or not is questionable. It does not matter. All die, all come face to face with Yama, king of hell...pay now or pay later, one must still pay. Alas, how needing of compassion are they!!! Pray for the emptying of this ocean of suffering.
Let me just quote the news in Agence France Presse:
"CIA Closes Unit Assigned to Hunt Bin Laden
Agence France Presse
WASHINGTON, 5 July 2006 — The CIA has closed a unit tasked with capturing Osama Bin Laden and his top deputies, the New York Times reported yesterday.
Members of the unit, formed in 1996, have been reassigned to other duties, although hunting top Al-Qaeda leaders remains a priority, officials told the daily.
"There are still people who wake up every day with the job of trying to find Bin Laden," one official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, was quoted as saying.
The decision was taken because US officials believe Al-Qaeda is no longer as "hierarchical" as it once was, and amid growing threats from Al-Qaeda-inspired groups acting independent of Bin Laden and his number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Times said.
It reflects a belief that the agency can better deal with high-level threats by focusing on regional trends rather than on specific organizations or individuals," the daily wrote.
Bin Laden claimed responsibility for ordering the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States that killed close to 3,000 people."
Recently ABC News has reported that US is "helping" a Pakistan-based "militant" (read "terrorist") group called Jundullah. Its leader Abdel Malik Regi used to fight for Taliban (an ally of Al-Qaeda) and is also a drug smuggler. US is aiding such groups to conduct terrorist acts inside and against Iran.
THIS IS US "WAR AGAINST TERRORISM".
This,
"In recent months, the White House has become increasingly irritated with Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, for his inaction on the growing threat of the Taliban and Al Qaeda."
and this,
"where General Musharraf's fragile government is under pressure from dissidents who object to any cooperation with the United States."
are the keys to the matter, I believe. The US wants to have it's cake and eat it too by compelling Musharraf to start cracking down on those segments of the Pakistani general population, military forces and intelligence services that are allied or sympathetic to the radical Islamist cause - the Taliban and Al-Qaeda in particular - while at the same time helping shore up his position of power in an increasingly unsettled political landscape. Musharraf's position is uncertain enough as it is without his government starting to allow the US more latitude to operate militarily in the country, or better yet, without him doing a lot of the heavy lifting himself at the behest of the US, especially when such campaigns can only stir up anger amongst the population.
The more the US presses Musharraf for a knockout, or the more they themselves take unilateral action and raise their military profile in a hostile country, the more pressure will build against Musharraf's regime. Should Musharraf's government be shown the same door as the Shah of Iran's, it will be to the benefit of the radical, hostile Islamist elements who would then be at the helm of a nuclear-armed country. Whoops!
This quote in particular cracks me up, "But in recent months he has pulled back, prompting Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney to issue stern warnings in private that he risked losing American aid if he did not step up efforts against Al Qaeda." Oh no, the US might strip Pervez Musharraf of it's Good Countrykeeping Seal of Approval and give it instead to...uh...um...well, nobody actually. As long as the US intends to throw it's weight around in the Middle East and western Asia, upsetting growing numbers of folks in the process, it really has no choice but to be content with whatever actions Musharraf chooses to take or not to take. When you play cynical geopolitical games decade after decade, you will eventually be hoisted by your own petard.
If you've planned on a very long war on "tur", you're not supposed to destroy or eliminate your boogeyman, the casus belli for the war. Hence, the decision to cancel the attack.
If only Al Qaeda was the real problem...
Wow. Nice bout of self-sabotage and treason there CIA.. good going. Salia, great point, and Neoconned "In fact, the Mujahadeen, the pre-curser to Al-Qaeda, was created by our very own CIA." Too true, and Al-Quaeda too, and all the other well financed, well dressed, and well armed 'opposition' forces in the horn of Africa (Somalia, Ethiopia is the new front). Due to these kinds of facts about our govt's active and enthusiastic complicity in causing terrorism and chaos it always surprises me that people don't get comepletely outraged when they hear things like this. We're pretty much completely desensitized to the horror of what that really means anymore.. We know the CIA is the goon squad that does all kinds of dirty work on the behalf of our 'great leaders' and behind the backs of the people, financed by drug money and public monies, and it's just crazy that we continue to allow them to operate. These agents are doing horrible things right now somewhere in this world dividing and conquering for the Elite who are themselves likely too inbred and physically weak to do it themselves...
Rumsfeld said he was concerned about the potential for lost American lives? Bullshit!
I'd bet it was called off because bin Ladens dad was afraid his troubled son might be killed. Dad is a high roller business partner of GWB and blood is thicker than water. Then too, Arab blood is a lot more important than that of any Infidels.
The Bushies and the terrorists feed on each other. Al-Qaeda is Bush&Co's greatest asset--an asset they can hardly afford to lose. Remember the death of al-Zarqawi? It was probably a miscalculation.
http://www.intergate.com/~daniel41/2006/06/death-of-terrorist.html
Interesting reading !
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/IG10Df02.html
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/IG10Df04.html
The last thing Bush wants is for Bin Laden to be found and put on trial. Could you imagine what he'd tell the world about his connections to the Bush family?
It's one reason why I still feel that Bush let 9/11 happen on purpose. You'd think that Bin Laden would have been brought to justice by now, but as Dubbya sez, "I don't know where he is. I don't care."
A staunch defender of America that Dubbya is.
Bush didn't know about 9-11 iwarrior.
The only ones that knew were the terrorists and the people who were backing them___ and that "was" bin Laden. Remember the unbelievable reaction of Bush when he was notified? He was in shock. He sat there for thirty minutes in stunned silence while someone read a children's story about a duck to a group of little kids. "Thirty minutes"___ Jeeze, he just sat there like a brain dead moron. He was the President of the United States for god's sake.
He didn't know, it was a secret plot and the terrorists made it look easy. And it was.
Nope, we can blame Bush for a lot of stupid mistakes and for being a puffed up, egotistical, spoiled brat who doesn't care for anthng but himself. But 9-11 was no plot devised by anyone in our government.
It was not Americans for just "one" of many good reasons, there was too much wealth in the Twin Tower building complex. There were tons of gold and silver bars, negotiable bonds and precious gems banked in the basement vaults of some of those buildings. It is unreasonable to believe our government would attempt to destroy that. It was bin Laden___ and he didn't need anyones help. He well knew we were vuneralble and if he is still alive, he knows we still are. And we are.
Homeland Security is a big expensive joke, just like almost all of our government agencies are. The only decent government agencies we have left in this country, are most local police and all fire departments and many health care people. Washington DC is a damn mess and we need a real leader with a big stick and full backing of we the people. If not, it will be the same damn song.