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Raymond Davis Incident Shows How Tangled U.S.-Pakistan Web Is
Was American CIA agent Raymond Davis secretly working with the Taliban and al-Qaeda to destabilize Pakistan and lay the groundwork for a U.S. seizure of that country’s nuclear weapons? Was he photographing sensitive military installations and marking them with a global positioning device? Did he gun down two men in cold blood to prevent them from revealing what he was up to? These are just a few of the rumors ricocheting around Islamabad, Lahore and Peshawar in the aftermath of Davis’s arrest Jan. 27, and sorting through them is a little like stepping through Alice’s looking glass.
But one thing is certain: the U.S. has hundreds of intelligence agents working in Pakistan, most of them private contractors, and many of them so deep in the shadows that Pakistan’s intelligence agency, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), doesn’t know who they are or what they are up to. “How many more Raymond Davises are out there?” one ISI official asked Associated Press.
Lots, it would appear. Five months ago, the Pakistani government directed its embassies in the U.S. to issue visas without letting the ISI or Pakistan’s Interior Ministry vet them. According to the Associated Press, this opened a “floodgate” that saw 3,555 visas for diplomats, military officials and employees issued in 2010.
Many of those visas were for non-governmental organizations and the staff for the huge, $1 billion fortress embassy Washington is building in Islamabad, but thousands of others covered consular agents and workers in Lahore (where Davis was arrested), Karachi and other cities. Some of those with visas work for Xe Services (formally Blackwater), others for low-profile agencies like Blackbird Technologies, Glevum Associates, and K2 Solutions. Many of the “employees” of these groups are former U.S. military personnel—Davis was in the Special Forces for 10 years—and former CIA agents. And the fact that these are private companies allows them to fly under the radar of congressional oversight, as frail a reed as that may be.
How one views the incident that touched off the current diplomatic crisis is an example of how deep the differences between Pakistan and the U.S. have become.
The Americans claim Davis was carrying out surveillance on radical insurgent groups, and was simply defending himself from two armed robbers. But Davis’s story has problems. It does appear that the two men on the motorbike were armed, but neither fired their weapon and, according to the police report, one did not even have a shell in his pistol’s firing chamber. Davis apparently fired through the window of his armored SUV, then stepped out of the car and shot the two men in the back, one while attempting to flee. He then calmly took photos, called for backup, climbed into his car, and drove off. He was arrested shortly afterwards at an intersection.
The Pakistanis have a different view of the incident. According to Pakistani press reports, the two men were working for the ISI and were trailing Davis because the intelligence agency suspected that the CIA agent was in contact with the Tehrik-e-Taliban, a Pakistani group based in North Waziristan that is currently warring with Islamabad. As an illustration of how bizarre things are these days in Pakistan, one widespread rumor is that the U.S. is behind the Tehtik-e-Taliban bombings as part of a strategy to destabilize Pakistan and lay the groundwork for an American seizure of Islamabad’s nuclear arsenal.
The ISI maintains close ties with the Afghan Taliban based in Pakistan’s Baluchistan Province, as well as its allies, the Hizb-e-Islami and the Haqqani Group. All three groups are careful to keep a distance from Pakistan’s Taliban.
Yet another rumor claims that Davis was spying on Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group with close ties to the ISI that is accused of organizing the 2008 massacre in Mumbai, India. The Americans claim the organization is working with al-Qaeda, a charge the Pakistanis reject.
When Davis’s car was searched, police turned up not only the Glock semi-automatic he used to shoot the men, but four loaded clips, a GPS device, and a camera. The latter, according to the police report, had photos of “sensitive” border sites. “This is not the work of a diplomat,” Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah told the Guardian (UK), “he was doing espionage and surveillance activities.”
The shooting also had the feel of an execution. One of the men was shot twice in the back and his body was more than 30 feet from the motorbike, an indication he was attempting to flee. “It went way beyond what we define as self-defense, “ a senior police official told the Guardian (UK). “It was not commensurate with the threat.” The Lahore Chief of Police called it a “cold-blooded murder.”
The U.S. claims that Davis is protected by diplomatic immunity, but the matter might not be as open and shut as the U.S. is making it. According to the Pakistani Express Tribune, Davis’s name was not on a list of diplomats submitted to Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry on Jan. 25. The day after the shooting the embassy submitted a revised list that listed Davis as a diplomat.
Washington clearly considered Davis to be important. When he asked for backup on the day of the shooting, another SUV was dispatched to support him, apparently manned by agents living at the same safe house as Davis. The rescue mission went wrong when it ran over a motorcyclist while going the wrong direction down a one-way street. When the Pakistani authorities wanted to question the agents, they found that both had been whisked out of the country.
Almost immediately the Obama administration sent Sen. John Kerry, chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, to Islamabad to apologize and pressure Pakistan to release Davis. But the incident has stirred up a hornet’s nest in Pakistan, where the CIA’s drone war has deeply alienated most Pakistanis. Opposition parties are demanding that the CIA agent be tried for murder. A hearing on the issue of whether Davis has diplomatic immunity is scheduled for Mar. 14.
In the meantime, Davis is being held under rather extraordinary security because of rumors that the Americans will try to spring him, or even poison him. Davis is being shielded from any direct contact with U.S. officials, and a box of chocolates sent to Davis by the Embassy was confiscated.
The backdrop for the crisis is a growing estrangement between the two countries over their respective strategies in Afghanistan.
The U.S. has stepped up its attacks on the Afghan insurgents, launched a drone war in Pakistan, and is demanding that Islamabad take a much more aggressive stance toward the Taliban’s allies based in the Afghan border region. While Washington still talks about a “diplomatic resolution” to the Afghan war, it is busy blowing up the very people it will eventually need to negotiate with.
This approach makes no sense to Pakistan. From Islamabad’s point of view, increasing attacks on the Taliban and their allies will only further destabilize Pakistan, and substitutes military victory for a diplomatic settlement. Since virtually every single independent observer think the former is impossible, the current U.S. strategy is, as terror expert Anatol Lieven puts it, “lunatic reasoning.”
Pakistan wants to insure that any Afghan government that emerges from the war is not a close ally of India, a country with which it has already fought three wars. A pro-Indian government in Kabul would essentially surround Pakistan with hostile forces. Yet the Americans have pointedly refused to address the issue of Indian-Pakistan tension over Kashmir, in large part because Washington very much wants an alliance with India.
In short, the U.S. and Pakistan don’t see eye to eye on Afghanistan, and Islamabad is suspicious that Americans like Davis are undermining Pakistan’s interests in what Islamabad views as an area central to its national security. “They [the U.S.] needs to come clean and tell us who they [agents] are, what they are doing,” one ISI official told the Guardian (UK). “They need to stop doing things behind our back."
There are a lot of unanswered questions about the matter. Was the ISI onto Davis, and was he really in contact with groups the Pakistani army didn’t want him talking to? What did Washington know about Davis’ mission, and when did it know it? Did Davis think he was being held up, or was it a cold-blooded execution of two troublesome tails?
Rumor has it that the CIA and the ISI are in direct negotiations to find an acceptable solution, but there are constraints on all sides. The Pakistani public is enraged with the U.S. and resents that it has been pulled into the Afghan quagmire. On the other hand, there are many in Washington—particularly in Congress—who are openly talking about cutting off the $1.5 billion of yearly U.S. aid to Pakistan.
What the incident has served to illuminate is the fact that U.S. intelligence operations are increasingly being contracted out to private companies with little apparent oversight from Congress. At last count, the U.S. Defense Department had almost 225,000 private contractors working for them.
The privatization of intelligence adds yet another layer of opacity to an endeavor that is already well hidden by a blanket of “national security,” and funded by black budgets most Americans never see. The result of all this is a major diplomatic crisis in what is unarguably the most dangerous piece of ground on the planet.




16 Comments so far
Show AllHallinan has failed to mention a few other issues here.
One that will make it much harder for the US to extricate Davis from the murder charges he faces is that he was operating in Punjab, which is the only province in Pakistan that is in the hands of the main opposition party, headed by former Pakistani leader Nawaz Sharif. It is certainly in no way in Sharif's interest to spring Davis, since public opinion, especially in Lahore and in Punjab province favors trying him--or lynching him for that matter. The fact that the Davis case has put president Zardari on the spot can only make Sharif and his party happy. Furthermore, Sharif has the backing of the courts, which have no love for the central government of Pakistan, and would resent any effort to prevent a trial from occurring.
It should be added that the Pakistani Taliban has issued a warning that any judge who frees Davis will pay a price--which the organization is well known for extracting in the form of assassinations and bombings. That threat could also focus judicial attention mightily.
Hallinan might also have mentioned that a lot of this is not rumor. the NY times, which first withheld information it had confirming that Davis was a contractor for the CIA and that he had worked for Blackwater, is now admitting those two facts to be true. Also true is that Davis when arrested was carrying a current Dept. of Defense Contractor ID. The photos in his camera included not just military sites, but also pictures of schools, including a Montessori school in Lahore--just the kinds of locations that have been being regularly bombed in the city.
Davis was also found to have masks and makeup in his vehicle, as well as night-vision equipment, a second semi-automatic pistol (a beretta), multiple large-capacity clips, bucketloads of killer bullets for a variety of guns, including an M-16, multiple phones as well as a cell-phone locator, wire clippers, etc.
Not standard diplomatic equipment, for sure.
Those who want to follow this story should go to www.thiscantbehappening.net. where I have a published a number of stories on the case.
Dave Lindorff
editor
ThisCantBeHappening!
www.thiscantbehappening.net
Dave,
It's all here by one of those people that helped in these horrors.
He makes it clear that the USA MO of lying to our citizens and violating every law in the book about the sovereignty of foreign nations came from the nazis. He reveals how more than 60,000 people were assassinated in Laos with drug trafficing for financing during the Viet Nam war. And you'll never guess who was in charge of that. Oliver North! Long before Iran-Contra.
The USA through the CIA is the number one culprit in creating all the international conflict and Arab fundamentalism we have today.
http://www.counterpunch.org/anderson02282011.html
By the way. I do read your web site and I thank you for being a true patriot and putting a spotlight on people like Davis.
"Not standard diplomatic equipment, for sure."
The whole issue of diplomatic immunity has been grossly distorted by the press (among others) many of whom seem almost entirely ignorant of the specific provisions of the governing Vienna (not Geneva) convention.
Full diplomatic immunity is enjoyed only by "diplomatic agents". Those are defined at article 1 (e) of the Vienna convention as "the head of the mission or a member of the diplomatic staff of the mission". Helpfully the diplomatic staff are further defined in the preceding article as "having diplomatic rank". Those ranks are an ascending series of concrete titles from third secretary through to ambassador or high commissioner. Davis did not have a diplomatic rank.
I would urge anyone considering the issue to refer either to the governing documents themselves, or at least to some slightly authoritative source on the subject. The U.K. Guardian has published a reasonably good write-up entitled "This CIA agent is no diplomat" at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/feb/28
Looks like we both like the Anderson article. Here is something that is developing that may open up another can of worms.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Awaiting-Pak-reply-to-send-team-on-26-11-attack-Govt/H1-Article1-668213.aspx
This situation is now spinning out of control. I sincerely hope that Mr. Lindorff and others take a moment to see this as it may very well be as important as the Cuban Missile Crisis.
https://civiliancontractors.wordpress.com/2011/02/25/pakistan-arrests-us-security-contractor-aaron-dehaven-as-rift-with-cia-deepens/
Bill from Saginaw
Assuming the accuracy of the figures in Hallinan's story about the big spike in Pakistani visas issued to American diplomats, military officials, contractors, and consular employees during 2010, this reminds me more of the Bay of Pigs.
With Petraeus's formal military surge surging in Afghanistan and the tribal areas, are there really hundreds or even thousands of US paramilitary spooks - Special Forces in civvies, CIA black ops specialists, and private contractor employees funded by the State Department, Defense Department, USAID, or other federal agencies - fanning out across Pakistan? If so, whose bright idea was it to escalate the US ground presence on Pakistani soil without the knowledge or cooperation of the ISI? Moreover, who in their right mind imagines that clandestine US operatives will be able to successfully gather intelligence across cultural lines, identify and locate "bad" jihadi factions or individual terrorists inside Pakistan, and then eliminate the bad guys with extreme prejudice (as the euphemism goes) without the Pakistani ISI going utterly ballistic?
As a tactic or strategy that's supposed to help achieve ostensible US goals in the region, this makes as much sense as believing that an amphibous landing of hundreds or even thousands of Cuban expatriots back on the island would trigger a popular uprising against Castro by the locals. Pakistani intelligence will win any such US versus Pakistan black ops campaign played out in Pakistan's home ball park hands down, in the process destabilizing the civilian government and pissing off the people over there even more.
Who dreamed up this idea?
Who sold it to Obama as a coherent policy option?
Allen Dulles must be smiling in his grave.
Bill from Saginaw
I Had Ray Davis's Job, in Laos 30 Years Ago
Same Cover, Same Lies
By ROBERT ANDERSON
http://www.counterpunch.org/anderson02282011.html
I was a demolitions technician with the Air Force who was reassigned to work with the CIA’s Air America operation in Laos. We turned in our military IDs cards and uniforms and were issued a State Department ID card and dressed in blue jeans. We were told if captured we were to ask for diplomatic immunity, if alive. We carried out military missions on a daily basis all across the countries of Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam....
Dave, Thanks for the added info.
Destabilization of other people's countries and their governments in pursuit of imperial interests is hardly a new or mysterious phenomenon. It has been a staple of geopolitical strategies and tactics throughout the entire history of imperial endeavors. The U.S. version of the game often does, however, seem more blatant and clumsy than most of its predecessors. Almost as if they no longer care much about exposure. What are you foreign non-entities gonna do about it anyhow?
See the article "Same Cover, Same Lies" by Robert Anderson
http://www.counterpunch.org/anderson02282011.html
In the summer of 2007, Barack Obama said "I will not hesitate to use military force to take out terrorists who pose a direct threat to America."
Part of a statement, for which, then senator Biden, called Obama a "Johnny-come-lately."
That is why they call Davis a diplomat.
This sort of behavior is their version of diplomacy.
By that I mean, in their twisted minds, Davis was showing restraint.
Obama could have called in the military forces to destroy the area where the killings occurred because, to them, this was a direct attack against America.
They probably think the people of Pakistan are ungrateful and rude for not saying thank you.
We are governed by criminals. I used to scoff at the term "great satan" used to describe the USA foreign policy by Arab fundamentalists. Now I realize they were right all along. Somebody needs to deep six the CIA as an organization and it's Rand corporation Nazi philosophy. They learned how to self finance their thuggery with the drug trade back in Nam in order to bypass congress and the law. They have since perfected it and are now a rogue government using alphabet agency status as a cover for continued and growing criminality. The CIA is eating the USA alive!
http://www.counterpunch.org/anderson02282011.html
From the article:
"As an illustration of how bizarre things are these days in Pakistan, one widespread rumor is that the U.S. is behind the Tehtik-e-Taliban bombings as part of a strategy to destabilize Pakistan and lay the groundwork for an American seizure of Islamabad’s nuclear arsenal."
Bizarre? I don't think so. It's 9/11 all over again. The CIA loves to fabricate excuses for our military to get more tax payer funded murder and mayem while the Cheneys laugh all the way to the bank and we the people are accused of creating a deficit with our social security and medicare entitlements!
The Cheneys along with the CIA have declared war on the people of the USA. If they are not stopped, there won't be a USA. And we will deserve our fate for being blind, deaf and dumb to murder, fraud and theft on a massive scale.
And I would be remiss if I did not point out that Israel has continual heartburn with Pakistan, a muslim nation, having nuclear weapons. So yeah, the Mossad is cheering this crap on with everything they've got.
Hallinan's foray into the crime scene particulars and the cross currents of political intrigue surrounding the Raymond Davis shooting incident exposes a good portion of the tip of a very nasty iceburg if he's anywhere near correct.
The most newsworthy nugget to my way of thinking is that CIA operatives (with or without cover as "diplomats", "independent contractors" or not) are engaged in black ops espionage missions on Pakistani soil without the knowledge of the Pakistani ISI. Can you imagine the shitstorm that would have transpired if, during the height of the Cold War, a US spy had gunned down two Soviet KGB agents on a public street in Moscow or Kiev in broad daylight, host country spooks who were tasked to tail the American operative? The fact that an unidentified ISI official gets quoted by the Associated Press saying that Pakistani intelligence doesn't know "how many more Raymond Davises are out there" suggests to me that the fat is really in the fire.
There has been a tense, mistrusting, dysfunctional working relationship between the CIA and the ISI for years. If our spooks are now gunning down their spooks amidst claims of everybody double crossing everybody, an already dangerous working relationship has deteriorated to the point of no return.
Time to take the toys away from the boys, and bring all the soldiers and all the spies back from the aptly-termed Afghan theatre of war.
Bill from Saginaw
Please look at this. It's short and very revealing. It seems the fellow who trained the 7/7 England bombers in Pakistan was working for the (guess).
http://sundayupdate.blip.tv/
Also there is some hot stuff about the Oklahoma city bombing coming out now there too.
Seemingly unrelated but get this..
>>The sanctions call on the ICC to investigate top Libyan officials for their roles in crimes against humanity at the Hague, but the US insisted that an additional clause be inserted that would forbid the ICC from prosecution of people from non-ICC member nations.
http://news.antiwar.com/2011/02/27/us-measure-ensures-gadhafi-mercs-immune-from-war-crimes-prosecution/
The US is a NOT an ICC member.
Why would the USA protect Mercenaries that are committing war crimes in Libya..Unless the US Involved in hiring the same?
Is the USA using mercenaries in other countries which they seek to protect from war crime trials such as Pakistan?
.
Rumors in the Suk wisper that Davis is part of a major covert MOSSAD operation. Mossad Agents running over a hundred mercenaries in the Capital and 3 provinces.
Do both the CIA and the DoD, feel threatened by the exposure of this Israeli activity ??????????????????
Is the target Taliban; or Pakistani Nuclear Weapons of Mass Destruction ??????????????
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